Tag Archives: television

Bill Keller: Fox News Viewers ‘Among The Most Cynical People On Planet Earth’

Amen…

From The Huffington Post:

“I think if you’re a regular viewer of Fox News, you’re among the most cynical people on planet Earth,” Keller said. “I cannot think of a more cynical slogan than ‘Fair and Balanced’ ”

It’s the second time this year that Keller has made critical comments about Fox News. At the end of January, he spoke to veteran journalist Marvin Kalb, and said that Fox News and its owner, Rupert Murdoch, had made American political discourse more “cynical,” “strident” and “polarized.”

via Bill Keller: Fox News Viewers ‘Among The Most Cynical People On Planet Earth’.

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“The President’s Speech”

You know how they like to remake British films with an American angle?

How about “The Kings Speech” remade with Mike Tyson and George Bush by Tyler Perry?

Here goes….

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Cable News Ratings | Rachel Maddow Has Stellar Numbers-Beats Glenn Beck

Nice to see one of the Good Guys/Gals winning…

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, without the benefit of a buzz-booster like Charlie Sheen, quietly jumped to the elite levels of cable news ratings, outperforming everyone at CNN and MSNBC, and even beating Fox’s Glenn Beck. Maddow hit 452,000 viewers 25-54, easily dominating CNN’s Piers Morgan, who had 208,000. Maddow, who was without any Charlie Sheen-like celebrity guest, even came close to Fox’s Sean Hannity, who won the time period with 561,000.

via Cable News Ratings | Rachel Maddow – MSNBC | Mediaite.

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Source: Anne Hathaway, James Franco “Hate Each Other” – UsMagazine.com

The endless night begets an endless chain of stories…

I still love them both…

But friends don’t let friends work with bad writers…

Someone should have stopped them!

I still expect them to each be winners one day…

No winners here!

A source tells Us Weekly that Anne Hathaway, 28, and James Franco grew to “hate each other” as they rehearsed to host the Oscars Feb. 27.

“She had to provide all the energy — he was just phoning it in,” says a second insider. (“James seemed in his own little world,” during the Oscar telecast, says another source. “Producers were pissed.”)

In fact, as UsMagazine.com reported Monday, after the awards, Franco, 32, skipped his own party at L.A.’s The Writer’s Room.

“He went immediately back to NYC because he was pissed about how the show went,” adds a third source.

Franco’s rep responds, “This is absolutely not true,” while Hathaway’s rep says, “Anne had a wonderful experience with him.”

Still, fans should expect a new MC in 2012. Insiders say both Hugh Jackman and Billy Crystal want the gig again.

More:  Source: Anne Hathaway, James Franco “Hate Each Other” – Movies, TV & Music – UsMagazine.com.

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Regulators Reject Proposal That Would Bring Fox-Style News to Canada

Canada is so sensible…

They really are making us here in the U.S. look bad…

From Robert F Kennedy, Jr at The Huffington Post:

As America’s middle class battles for its survival on the Wisconsin barricades — against various Koch Oil surrogates and the corporate toadies at Fox News — fans of enlightenment, democracy and justice can take comfort from a significant victory north of Wisconsin border. Fox News will not be moving into Canada after all! The reason: Canada regulators announced last week they would reject efforts by Canada’s right wing Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, to repeal a law that forbids lying on broadcast news.

More:   Robert F. Kennedy Jr.: Regulators Reject Proposal That Would Bring Fox-Style News to Canada.

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Is Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes Going to Jail? | | AlterNet

Please, let one of my dreams come true!

In short, the Times report has managed to shock everyone. It’s shocked media insiders for the sheer recklessness of Ailes’ behavior. It has startled Fox News critics (like myself) who are amazed how cavalierly Ailes would counsel an employee to break the law. And the report has shaken Ailes loyalists who can’t believe the Machiavellian Fox News chief was so sloppy in his execution.

So yeah, this story is kind of a big deal and it has immediately been pushed to the head of the line in terms of pending Fox News troubles for 2011, right in front of Glenn Beck’s ongoing caliphate conspiracy madness and the conservative attacks it has sparked on him,

Indeed, the Times report would mean that Ailes and Beck, Fox News’ fiercest lightning rods, have quickly morphed from assets to liabilities.  We know Beck’s increasingly a liability because, thanks to his incendiary, hateful rhetoric, he’s unable to retain virtually any nationally recognized advertisers. And that’s been the case for almost a year-a-half now. No only are advertisers steering clear of Glenn Beck, but ratings continue to decline. That is not a formula for cable news success.

But even more scandalous is the specter of Ailes, who runs Fox News as his personal fiefdom, being thrust into the spotlight for potentially breaking the law; for allegedly telling an employee to lie to federal investigators.

via Is Fox News Chairman Roger Ailes Going to Jail? | | AlterNet.

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Scott Mendelson: Oscar 2011: Don’t Blame James Franco and Anne Hathaway, Blame the Writers

Excellent article on Sunday’s Oscar fiasco…

This is exactly what I was saying during the show…

All the writers and producers of this year’s show should be bared for life from participating in future Oscar telecasts….

James Franco and Anne Hathaway did what they could with what they had where they were, to paraphrase Teddy Roosevelt.

They just didn’t have much to work with….

Last year, I wrote a post-Oscar essay that got me quoted in Time Magazine. This year I have no such profundities to offer. But let me simply say that while this truly was the worst Oscar telecast in at least as long as I’ve been watching (since I was just short of 12-years-old in 1992), the blame lies not with the hosts, but with the material. Many have commented that James Franco all but started the show with a stunning display of apathy and disinterest. While we can all joke about whether he was stoned, or whether he was thinking about one of the 6,000 other activities he is currently involved in, the truth may be much simpler: Franco probably saw the material that had been written for him and Ms. Hathaway, and he damnwell knew he was in for a rough ride. So while Franco seemingly tuned out, Hathaway did the opposite, going absolutely for-broke, refusing to go down without a fight. But while Anne Hathaway and James Franco are excellent actors (and their hosting last night does not change that), not everyone can make lemonade out of lemons.

For whatever reason, the writers of Sunday night’s events seemed to think that everyone’s favorite part of an awards show is the part where two mismatched presenters ramble through poorly-scripted banter and make painful attempts to appear charming and flirtatious. Because, with few exceptions, the entire show was one piece of awkward banter after another. The whole show reeked of older writers attempting to appeal to younger viewers, with little-to-no idea how to do that. Because if there is anything that young kids love, it’s being pandered or condescended to. No, awkward references to smart-phone apps, Auto-Tunes, Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, and “the Internet” are not going to appear hip/cool to the young kids. And bringing Halle Berry onstage to memorialize Lena Horne is only to make it that much more noticeable that not a single minority was nominated for a major award last night. And spoiling the finales of several nominated films (True Grit, Toy Story 3, The King’s Speech) doesn’t inspire viewers to check those films out later. You want to try appealing to the young kids, first of all, try not leaving Corey Haim off your “In Memoriam” tribute. Second of all, and this gets me back to my original point, try giving the kids an entertaining show with jokes that were actually clever and reward those who actually followed the movie business with any amount of verve.

MORE:   Scott Mendelson: Oscar 2011: Don’t Blame James Franco and Anne Hathaway, Blame the Writers.

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Dixie Carter: Goodnight to Moonlight and Magnolias

Dixie Carter, best known for her role as Julia Sugarbaker on “Designing Women”, died yesterday.  Her passing made me sad for many reasons.

I have long struggled with my Southern Heritage–how to keep the good and throw out the bad.  Her portrayal of Julia really helped me with that journey.

All the ugliness coming out of Virginia this week, where the Governor failed to recognize the importance of Slavery as part of “Confederate History Month”, made me address that struggle again.  Dixie Carter and “Designing Women” helped put this in perspective and I thought of them more than once.

We all need to let go of the myth of the Old South.  God knows I have and so had Julia Sugarbaker.  Dixie Carter’s Julia knew we needed to keep the good, but recognize and address the bad.

All Southerners need to face the fact that Slavery was the cause of the Civil War.  I can’t believe I still have to say this 150 years after that horrible war.  States’ Rights and the other catch phrases were merely propaganda terms used to entice the poor Southerners to fight to protect the socio-economic needs of the few rich Southerners.  A myth of the Old South grew from this that some of us are still trying to dispel 150 years later.  The war wasn’t about States’ Rights.  It was about one group of people owning another group of people and making their life hell for their own benefit.  Let’s finally put that to rest.

However, I never wanted to throw out the baby with the bath water.  There are certain Southern characteristics we need to keep.  Our justifiable reputation for hospitality and casual elegance.  Our concern for our family, friends and neighbors.  Our appreciation of honesty and a sense of personal honor.  We need to keep these parts of our heritage–whether we are black or white.  Or Hispanic.  Or Asian.  There are many kinds of Southerners now.

We do need to lose our traditions that held down and held back women.  Julia Sugarbaker and Dixie Carter knew this.  There was no Southern Belle Simple for these women.  No pretending to be dumber than they were.  They were educated, forthright and honest.  They were straight shooters, not manipulative Southern Belles.  They were Southern Women– not girls–as my friend Robin made me aware last week.  Dixie Carter put Scarlette O’Hara, or more precisely her sister Suellen,  in her place– as part of historical fiction, not modern fact.

Dixie Carter’s Julia Sugarbaker gave a new face to the Southern woman.  And it was one face, not two.

Steve and I had the privilege to meet Ms. Carter briefly once.  In person, she was exactly what you would expect.  She was beautiful, smart, gracious and classy.  She was a modern Southern Lady.

I’ve been privileged to know a few other women like her of her generation.  My friend Shakey’s mom, Betty, welcomed a house full of W&L boys- and we were boys then, not men- into her home for every dance weekend at Sweet Briar.  I can’t imagine how different my college life might have been had I not known this Great Lady.  She made us welcome, fed us-both food and bourbon- and entertained us in the most gracious manner imaginable.  I’ll never forget visiting her in college right after she had cancer surgery.  She received us with a grace and sense of humor that only a Southern Lady could have after such an ordeal.  My friend Deane’s mother, Nancy, always welcomed us into her home in Danville and we spent many entertaining evenings in her company. These women always seemed, at least, to be thrilled to see us and made us comfortable, amused and enchanted by their company.

Dixie Carter’s Julia Sugarbaker made these women visable to the rest of the country.  She demystified the South and showed us how Southern Women really were and should be seen.  She knew we needed to keep the Magnolias, but lose a little of the Moonlight.  She showed how great these women could be in the light of day- when the Klan didn’t march, lynchings didn’t happen and lesser women weren’t focused on manipulating their men.

Dixie Carter will be missed.  The world is a sadder, less elegant place without her.  Just as it would be without the women she personified and publicized.

Thankfully, I see the Southern Women-by birth and by choice- of my generation carrying on her example.

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