Monday, April 30, 2012

WHCD

"WHCD" stands for White House Correspondents Dinner.  This is an annual event which allows members of the Washington Press Corps who cover the White House to dress up like Hollywood moguls and starlets and invite irrelevant people like Lindsay Lohan, George Clooney, and Donald Trump to a banquet and supposed comedy show.

The 2012 dinner was held this past Saturday night at the Washington Hilton.  CBS White House Correspondent Nora O'Donnell chose this gown for the event.





















Her White House reports should display such clarity.

At any rate this year's entertainment kicked off with President Obama's attempt at stand up comedy.  It was less comedy and more insulting your opponents and perceived enemies in a venue which supposedly allows the suspension of proper social behavior and commentary.

Jimmy Kimmel's comic comments, for the most part, fell flat and the audience several times indicated Kimmel's comments hit below the belt.  It's one thing to use human foibles for the purpose of adjusting personal behavior or philosophy.  It's a different approach to purposely hurt the feelings and belittle others in an attempt to make yourself  important.  Mark Twain and Will Rogers knew the right way  to use humorous commentary or satire  in the political realm.  Don Rickels could do it show business circles.  But Messrs. Obama and Kimmel come off as celebrities using  personal insults to settle differences.  Somehow the whole event was insulting to the country and diminished the Office of the President at the same time.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Continued Decline of TV Journalism

Recently, in the Wall Street Journal,  Peter Funt wrote about the lost art of the live interview.  Live interviews are handy time consumers especially for the 24 hour cable news channels.  Funt maintains the content of those interviews "is remarkably weak, due primarily to the personal agendas and sloppy efforts of the interviewers".  Funt also chastises interviewers for talking as much as the newsmaker being interviewed.  He points out two recent examples.  In the first, Lawrence O'Donnell of  MSNBC  was interviewing filmmaker Michael Moore.
Moore spoke 1,034 words while O'Donnell spoke 900, according to Funt.  In the second case Funt points to a Sean Hannity interview of Mitt Romney on FOX News.  According to Funt, Hannity asked ten questions, one of which was 172 words long and lasted 51 seconds.

In another opinion piece in the WSJ,  L. Gordon Crovitz recounts the results of a journalism class assignment at Yale University.  The students were asked to theorize how the Watergate scandal would be covered in this digital age.  The Yale professor who makes the assignment each year, Steven Brill, says "almost every student in the course writes that Watergate could now be reported without actual reporting", i.e. no talking to real live human sources.  Sources who are going to tell a reporter factual information in a confidential manner.  The students all think everything a source would tell a reporter can now be found out by a simple Google search.  Talk about your slippery slopes.

And then there's the problem of sloppy stupid writing.  One Kansas City TV station reported yesterday that a school bus disturbance was caused by one of the student's "female parent".  Now I submit a simple "mother" would have sufficed.


This morning another station's reporter told us that the witness who had just shown up told police the woman who lives in the house under investigation is her "female cousin".  I ask, could it be otherwise?