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Title: Is fake news now the standard? :TV journalism is increasingly playing to the Colberts and Stewarts to attract younger viewers
Source: LA Times
URL Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion ... oll=la-util-opinion-commentary
Published: Nov 7, 2007
Author: Jonah Goldberg
Post Date: 2007-11-07 22:01:11 by Zipporah
Keywords: None
Views: 186
Comments: 8

TV journalism is increasingly playing to the Colberts and Stewarts to attract younger viewers. November 6, 2007

'Pat Philbin, the man who staged a fake FEMA news conference on the California wildfires last week, has lost his promotion because of the event, which begs the question: What does it actually take to get fired from FEMA?" That was the lead story on the latest installment of Weekend Update, the faux news broadcast on "Saturday Night Live."

Something bothered me about this, and not just Amy Poehler's misuse of the phrase "beg the question." Nor was it the idea that FEMA's staged news conference was scandalous simply because reporters, listening by phone, weren't able to ask questions while FEMA bureaucrats lobbed "fake" questions. There's no such thing as fake questions, after all, only fake answers. Was FEMA's fabrication any more fraudulent than, say, press releases written like real news stories?

Click here to find out more! Yes, FEMA's fakery was foolish. But -- and here's what really bugs me -- what isn't in the TV news business these days?

Poehler, for instance, was co-anchoring a fake news broadcast denouncing a fake news conference. All the while, the guest host of "Saturday Night Live" was NBC's real news anchor, Brian Williams.

Or take Stephen Colbert, host of a fake cable news show, "The Colbert Report," itself a spinoff from the fake newscast "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart." Colbert was recently a guest on "Meet the Press" -- the Thunderdome of real news -- as he was trying to mount a bogus campaign for president (abandoned Monday). Colbert stayed in character. So did Tim Russert, grilling Colbert as if he were a real candidate, of sorts.

The exchange vexed Ana Marie Cox, Washington editor of Time.com, who rightly ridiculed the stunt as "painfully so-ironic-it-was-unironic." Cox has a good ear for such things: Her own meteoric rise started with her tenure as the founding Wonkette blogger, where she mocked newsmakers the way robots mocked bad movies on "Mystery Science Theater 3000." Cox sized up the Colbert-Russert show as cringe-worthy -- bad journalism because it was bad entertainment.

Williams fared better at "Saturday Night Live," successfully showing off his lighter side. But, as with Russert's stunt, it was another naked attempt by NBC to lure younger viewers back to real news. Indeed, while the network news broadcasts are sustained by the consumers of denture cream, adult diapers and pharmacological marital aides, it's "The Daily Show" and "The Colbert Report" that have a grip on the hip, iPhone crowd. And plenty of those younger viewers seem to believe that they can deduce what's going on in the real world from jokes on a fake newscast. It's no longer funny because it's true. It's true because it's funny.

Now that's begging the question.

The problem of parsing fact from fiction, news from entertainment, has been inherent to broadcast journalism from the beginning. Radio newsman Walter Winchell got his start in vaudeville. But in the modern era, I blame "Murphy Brown," the show about a fictional TV newswoman who talked about real newsmakers as if they were characters on her sitcom. When Brown had a baby out of wedlock, Vice President Dan Quayle criticized the writers of the show. Liberals then reacted as though Quayle had insulted a real person. Ever since, journalists and politicians have been playing themselves in movies and TV series, perhaps trying to disprove the cliche that Washington is Hollywood for ugly people.

TV news is, and always has been, the shallowest branch of journalism. This is why TV journalism in particular operates like a trade guild -- not because it's so hard to do but because it's so easy. (The Brits more forthrightly call their TV anchors "news readers.") For instance, in 2000, Sam Donaldson led a successful internal revolt over a plan to have Leonardo DiCaprio interview President Clinton for ABC News. The essence of the complaint was that viewers wouldn't be able to tell the difference between DiCaprio and a "real" TV reporter. Let's face it, that's true. Even DiCaprio can read questions off an index card or TelePrompTer.

"Yes, it's a changed business," Donaldson said at the time, "and we ought to recognize that. But we also all have to recognize that we have to do things according to the standards that will help us retain our credibility."

I think Donaldson was right, but I also don't mind that TV news is trying to be relevant to viewers not on the AARP's mailing list. What I find dismaying is that "relevance" is literally coming at the expense of reality.


Poster Comment:

Hes an idiot if he cant see that Colbert et al are comedians and what they're doing is called satire..

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#1. To: Zipporah (#0)

yeah, stephen colbert is playing a role. if this guy doesn't know that, he hasn't watched and if he hasn't watched, why's he writing about it? as for jon stewart, he pretty much reports real news and jokes about it. some he doesn't even have to joke about - the news is absurd all by itself. the clips he shows aren't doctored. they're real, and if bush or whoever looks like an idiot, well.......I find his news no more "fake" than that on fox news.

kiki  posted on  2007-11-07   22:35:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Zipporah (#0)

Colbert was recently a guest on "Meet the Press" -- the Thunderdome of real news

Why doesn't it surprise me that a Beltway whore like Goldberg who desrcibes a horridly useless, disinformative, and utterly predictable DC propaganda broadcast like "Meet the Press" as "the Thunderdome of real news" doesn't get why people who hunger for reality watch shows like Colbert's and Stewart's.

The Daily Burkeman1

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-11-07   23:13:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: kiki, Burkeman1, Zipporah (#1)

......I find his news no more "fake" than that on fox news.

SN Live, Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Letterman etc. are a national treasure!

One of my favorite Stewart lines is "You can say almost anything you want to on real news as long as you pose it as a question - like - is Bush retarded?" Stewart ran a string of clips that showed "real" news talking heads asking all kinds of absurd questions, then going on to talk about their point as news.

"I've even suggested that we follow the constitution."
"I believe in spreading democracy, not with guns but rather by example."
- Dr. Ron Paul

tzf90  posted on  2007-11-08   8:34:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: kiki (#1)

yeah, stephen colbert is playing a role. if this guy doesn't know that, he hasn't watched and if he hasn't watched, why's he writing about it? as for jon stewart, he pretty much reports real news and jokes about it. some he doesn't even have to joke about - the news is absurd all by itself. the clips he shows aren't doctored. they're real, and if bush or whoever looks like an idiot, well.......I find his news no more "fake" than that on fox news.

Goldberg is a neocon shill..so of course he cant see the absurdity..

Speaking of absurdity, I was listening to of all things Hannity on the way home from work this evening.. How people can take that idiot at face value is beyond me.. he was speaking of racism and said we all need to pull together because those who are trying to kill us want to kill us all whether we are white or black .. he didnt use the term islamofacists.. of course Hannity cant see what he has been spewing is totally racist.

Zipporah  posted on  2007-11-08   18:35:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Burkeman1 (#2)

Why doesn't it surprise me that a Beltway whore like Goldberg who desrcibes a horridly useless, disinformative, and utterly predictable DC propaganda broadcast like "Meet the Press" as "the Thunderdome of real news" doesn't get why people who hunger for reality watch shows like Colbert's and Stewart's.

People know intrinsically that there is something wrong.. that is other than the 24% small minority that Fox News caters to.. so it's way over their heads.. and Goldberg fears as that they'll lose even more of their base.. the diehards if they watch these shows and awaken to the truth. It's been a long tradition in other countries that humor and satire is used to reveal to people what their government is up to often quite veiled .. so far it doesnt have to be veiled here but the day is coming..

Zipporah  posted on  2007-11-08   18:39:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Zipporah (#5)

It's been a long tradition in other countries that humor and satire is used to reveal to people what their government is up to often quite veiled .. so far it doesnt have to be veiled here but the day is coming..

I would say that day is here and has been for a while. Does "Meet the Press" discuss the real Washington DC or play the same stupid two party script over and over again every week? Does anyone learn anything about what is really going in DC watching that show? Nope. Stewart and Colbert cut through some of the layers of dis-info and easily mockable pieties of our DC ruling elite- and that is what people crave.

BTW- "Meet the Press" hasn't had a foreigner on in over a year. Not even a Brit much less, God Forbid, an Iraqi (about whose country that show "discusses" every week among their DC bound "journalists" who have never been there or been only in the Green Zone.)

You gotta feel sorry for reich wing pundits. To accept the lies, constantly shifting excuses, and conflicting rationales of this administration and the GOP in general- that assault one's common sense and logic on a daily basis- one has to be a retard and that is all that is left among the GOP- the die harding cool aiding retards and paranoids who mumble about the "muslims threat" like schitzo patients. Hardly the audience an East Side sissy like Goldberg wants to hang out with.

The Daily Burkeman1

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-11-08   20:49:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Burkeman1 (#6)

Youre correct ..but what I was referring to is that Stewart etc dont have to use veiled references to the government .. in the Soviet block countries they did .. the same has happened for centuries..

Ive not watched any TV in a very long time so I had no idea about who has or hasnt been on Meet the Press.. other than for reading comments occasionally.. online.

Zipporah  posted on  2007-11-08   20:54:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Burkeman1 (#6)

BTW- "Meet the Press" hasn't had a foreigner on in over a year. Not even a Brit much less, God Forbid, an Iraqi

Plenty of foreign lobbyists, though.

" Junk is the ideal product... the ultimate merchandise. No sales talk necessary. The client will crawl through a sewer and beg to buy." - William S Burroughs

Dakmar  posted on  2007-11-08   21:24:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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