Tagged with the daily show

The Daily Show shows up the ‘dumbed down’Gretchen Carlson

Stewart/Carlson

If you are at home this evening and have time to spare, watch The Daily Show at 8:30pm on More4 for Jon Stewart’s ‘expose’of Gretchen Carlson. For those who don’t know, of which I’m presuming there might be several, Carlson presents Fox & Friends on Fox News – think of it as something annoying like BBC Breakfast or GMTV but with a Fox News agenda and you’re there – and comes across as the ‘troubled mum, trying to make sense of the modern country’as Stewart put it. I would explain the rest but the Huffington Post have it pretty much covered:

Jon Stewart went after “Fox & Friends” host Gretchen Carlson last night. Saying she plays the “troubled mom, just trying to make sense of this modern country,” Stewart explained Carlson seems to be dumbing herself down in order to connect with an audience that sees intellect as an elitist flaw. After showing clips of Carlson talking about Googling the words “ignoramus” and “czar,” Stewart was flabbergasted:

“How do you get a job on television if you appear to be one of those people who need to pin their address to their coat so a stranger can help them find their way home?”

Determined to get to the bottom of it, Stewart conducted a Google search of his own. According to his findings, this “troubled mom” is a graduate of Stanford and a classically trained violinist. With this in mind, Stewart challenged Carlson: “I don’t want to have to turn you on tomorrow to see you’re actually surprised that the Interior Secretary is in charge of the outside stuff.”

The video, if you live in a country that allows you to watch this, is up on their story page. Once again I am wondering why the UK has nothing like this show.

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A sunday brain dump

Bill Bailey

A collection of thoughts about various things. I may do this more often.

Bill Bailey’s Remarkable Guide To The Orchestra:

I was looking forward to this having found out about it during yesterday’s Simon Mayo show on 5live. I was a bit disappointed but not surprised that I was. Jokes fell flat a few times, there were a few re-uses of older material (EastEnders theme tune, Doctor Who jazz theme, news themes etc) and I didn’t laugh nearly as much as I have done during previous stand-up shows. Then again, I don’t think that was the overall point. As a ‘guide’it was actually rather entertaining at points and the cowbell playing was to be admired. I was very impressed by that and a few other things.

Premier League:

As you were really. Manchester United win comfortably, Liverpool win comfortably and the rest of the fixtures don’t yield any real shock results. However, the big game is tomorrow when Middlesborough take on Newcastle United. I can’t tell you how much I want Middlesborough to win so that Shearer’s men go down but we’ll have to see. Either way, I’m still sticking with the notion that the teams in the bottom three at the moment will be the ones that go down.

The Great Escape:

On Thursday I received the glorious news that I have been accredited for The Great Escape this coming Thursday. For a person who is maintaining and writing material without any real help, that is some achievement. I’m very happy and I can’t wait to get stuck in on Thursday.

University:

I have one dissertation proposal and one batch of print work to finish off before the end of Wednesday. After this I am free of all uni work until September when I start the third year. It’s super scary that I’ve already gotten to this point in education life and am amazed that I have only one year of it left. I don’t know whether to be happy or sad.

Russell Howard:

He is getting a BBC3 show! Well, a pilot anyway. Apparently it isn’t going to be too dissimilar from what he does on Mock The Week in the sense that it is going to be topical news. He’s been one of my favourite new comedians of late and I hope the new show is a good showcase for his talent. Otherwise it seems like a wasted opportunity.

Books:

I’ve almost finished reading Charlie Brooker’s Dawn Of The Dumb. Compared to his other book, Screen Burn, this has had a lot more chucklesome lines in it though I would have preffered it if it was laid out in actual chronological order as oppossed to one section of TV columns followed by general opinion columns and then TV columns again and so forth. Once that’s done with I am going to start on America: The Book, which is written by the writers of The Daily Show. The bad news is that I can’t carry it on public transport because it’s a big ol’hardback. Dang.

Computer woes:

Strange things are happening. Sometimes my computer will not load at all. It gets to the loadup screen with the teasing green bar at the bottom and either doesn’t stop loading or freezes up once it has stopped. Annoying.

Spotify:

I finally caved in and downloaded it. It ain’t bad and could be useful for The Musical Chairs.

Tomorrow I’m going to catch up on Sonic Dice reviews I think and try and get the majority of it all done before I head down south.

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Donation

Donation Box

I don’t get paid for any of the writings I do on my own sites. Nearly everything on The Musical Chairs from the hosting to domain name to manual labour of updating is all put in by me and the domain name for this blog was bought by me. Obviously this takes money out of my account (hosting, domains, going to gigs etc) and now that I do not have a part-time job to live on I have to budget enormously, especially in this age of recession. But I don’t the quality of content to lower because of it.

For a while now, I’ve been thinking about adding an option to allow readers to donate money if they really like an article they read on it. However, I don’t want to do this in a way that sounded like either:

  1. Sounded like you must give me money for fear of feeling guilty.
  2. Sounded like it was a sympathy thing.

So in order to combat these issues, the donation box would simply be something on the sidebar, with a short explanation and a maximum donation limit of £1. This is done because, at the end of the day, that is nearly the price you would pay for a quality newspaper and under the price you would pay for a weekly magazine. So the option is there, if a reader wants to. I also find this way of money-making a lot more human and satisfactory than just dumping adverts.

This ultimately brings up the debate about paying for news on the Internet and Walter Isaacson was on The Daily Show recently to talk about his recent cover feature for Time, How To Save Your Newspaper, about whether or not we should pay for news on the internet.

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