Entries in Politics (4)
Immodest Proposal: Enter...The B-Team!
As the Senate sends the Health Care Reconciliation Bill back to the House to make minor adjustments/vote on it, I find myself expectantly looking to Comedy Central at 11pm, but finding only the emptiness and bitterness that comes with a rerun of The Daily Show. But some part of me keeps hoping against all rational thought that Jon Stewart and his team have randomly decided to come back to comment on the insanity of the situation, the dickishness of all involved and the hyperbole of the media. But instead, I find only week-old jokes about Chris Dodd's wattle. And then I realize how often it seems that The Daily Show goes on a break and some large news story happens that gets the media abuzzing and falling overthemselves to declare things in the most superlative and unsubstantiated ways possible. Some of these news events seem planned to coincide with the infotaining show's leave of absence, while others are just bizarre coincidences. It seems like it's quite often that Stewart and his crew are unable to lend their rational, deflating voice to the partisan squabbling that clogs up much of the airwaves.
I'm not one of the large demographic of people that gets his news from The Daily Show. I tend to frequent New York Times and Huffington Post for that. However, I am someone who turns to The Daily Show's invaluable army of interns and media libraries as they expose all the various instances of hypocrisy that I tend to miss while I avoid cable news channels. And it seems I'm not the only one who deeply misses Stewart's clarifying call for accountability and civility. The Huffington Post generated this list of the 12 largest news stories that occurred while Daily Show was on a break. And so, in light of this collective longing for the humorous and insightful critique of our government and media, I humbly propose that The Daily Show develops...The B Team!
Verbiage - March 4, 2010
Today's word of the day is Snollygoster:
Snollygoster
n. Slang
One, especially a politician, who is guided by personal advantage rather than by consistent, respectable principles.
Hate to get all political and stuff...
Below is a petition to start having regular "question time" between the President and members of Congress. I think whatever one's political party, this has the potential for being incredibly helpful and could force politicians to stand behind their accusations and broad talking points. Or it could just devolve into this. Either way - good television!
Take A Second to Remember
Martin Luther King's final speech before his assassination: