New CBS Reality Show Sends Kids to Guantanamo

Network Set to Launch 'Kid Detention'

Fresh on the heels of their reality show "Kid Nation," in which
children are sent to perform hard labor on a ranch with no adult
supervision, CBS announced today that it was readying a new reality
show in which children are sent to the federal detention camp at
Guantanamo.

The new program, called "Kid Detention," is expected to be ready for
broadcast in time for November sweeps, with the following promotional
slogan: "One detention camp. Forty kids. No lawyers."

CBS said that filming would begin as soon as forty children are
"randomly rounded up."

Within hours of its announcement, CBS found itself under fire from the
organization Amnesty International, who warned of possible human
rights violations if the children are sent to Guantanamo.

In an attempt to rebuff such criticism, CBS spokesperson Carol Foyler
told reporters, "Nothing worse is going to happen to those kids than
if they were on 'Two and a Half Men.'"

Ms. Foyler also attempted to dismiss Amnesty International's complaint
that the kids at Guantanamo would not be permitted to have lawyers.

"We want to recreate the experience of being detainees, and of course
that means no lawyers," Ms. Foyler said. "Besides, just like the other
detainees, these kids haven't been charged with any crime."

If "Kid Detention" takes off in the ratings as expected, Ms. Foyler
said, the network was considering launching another series, "Kid
Rendition," in which the children are flown to Egypt for further
questioning.

-- by Andy Borowitz.
--
Jim Devine / "The truth is at once less sinister and more dangerous."
-- Naomi Klein.

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