Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2019-02-10 Thread Steve Timko
He is back and opens the show with a direct broadside against Saudi Arabia.

On Wed, Jan 2, 2019, 9:13 PM Kevin M.  Semi related, inasmuch as it pertains to the state of social critics in
> Saudi Arabia, is this recent Twitter thread purportedly from someone who
> used to work on American Dad, and his encounter with a Saudi comic... now
> missing, his wife in a Saudi jail
>
> https://twitter.com/krudell/status/1080591286959132672?s=21
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 9:29 PM Steve Timko  wrote:
>
>> Netflix drops episode in Saudi Arabia critical of government for
>> journalist's murder.
>>
>>
>> https://www.npr.org/2019/01/01/681469011/netflix-drops-hasan-minhaj-episode-in-saudi-arabia-at-governments-request
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018, 7:46 PM Steve Timko >
>>> Hah! Phineas and I agree on something. Maybe there's hope for
>>> Republicans and Democrats.
>>>
>>> .
>>> .
>>> .
>>> Nah...
>>>
>>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:24 PM PGage  wrote:
>>>
 I am not trying to put words in your mouth or pick a fight - just
 trying to understand your point. I thought you were saying his show was
 intentionally only enjoyable by South Asians and Muslims (and those who for
 some reason already were knowledgable about those cultures). THat does not
 seem plausible to me. But if all you mean is that he is hoping that South
 Asians and Muslims, who have been long ignored by US pop culture, will be
 attracted to his show in a special way, along with as many other people as
 possible, then - well, yes I’m sure that’s true.

 On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:14 PM Steve Timko 
 wrote:

> I never said exclusively. That's setting up a strawman to knock down.
> But it seems to be a deliberate effort to target an audience not
> addressed by other media. A south Asian addressing Arab culture seems to 
> be
> a stretch.
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:06 PM PGage  wrote:
>
>> You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US
>> aimed exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?
>>
>> Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically
>> based on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way 
>> that
>> non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves 
>> with
>> elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, 
>> white
>> Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
>>> understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.
>>>
>>> Not sent from an iPhone
>>> On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:

 Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.

 On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
 wrote:

> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although
> he’s a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely
> resembles John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be
> targeting south Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an
> especially young audience.
> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that 
> has
> kids dropping F bombs.
> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close
> to the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a 
> laugh
> track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown 
> faces in
> the crowd.
> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
> behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
> iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix 
> shows
> were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few 
> episodes.
> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that 
> almost
> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia 
> presentation, the
> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS 
> fades
> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>
> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>
>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive
> credits. I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough 
> start
> and it took months for him to figure it out.
> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem 

Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2019-01-02 Thread Kevin M.
Semi related, inasmuch as it pertains to the state of social critics in
Saudi Arabia, is this recent Twitter thread purportedly from someone who
used to work on American Dad, and his encounter with a Saudi comic... now
missing, his wife in a Saudi jail

https://twitter.com/krudell/status/1080591286959132672?s=21



On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 9:29 PM Steve Timko  wrote:

> Netflix drops episode in Saudi Arabia critical of government for
> journalist's murder.
>
>
> https://www.npr.org/2019/01/01/681469011/netflix-drops-hasan-minhaj-episode-in-saudi-arabia-at-governments-request
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018, 7:46 PM Steve Timko 
>> Hah! Phineas and I agree on something. Maybe there's hope for Republicans
>> and Democrats.
>>
>> .
>> .
>> .
>> Nah...
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:24 PM PGage  wrote:
>>
>>> I am not trying to put words in your mouth or pick a fight - just trying
>>> to understand your point. I thought you were saying his show was
>>> intentionally only enjoyable by South Asians and Muslims (and those who for
>>> some reason already were knowledgable about those cultures). THat does not
>>> seem plausible to me. But if all you mean is that he is hoping that South
>>> Asians and Muslims, who have been long ignored by US pop culture, will be
>>> attracted to his show in a special way, along with as many other people as
>>> possible, then - well, yes I’m sure that’s true.
>>>
>>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:14 PM Steve Timko  wrote:
>>>
 I never said exclusively. That's setting up a strawman to knock down.
 But it seems to be a deliberate effort to target an audience not
 addressed by other media. A south Asian addressing Arab culture seems to be
 a stretch.


 On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:06 PM PGage  wrote:

> You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US aimed
> exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?
>
> Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically
> based on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way that
> non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves 
> with
> elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, white
> Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko 
> wrote:
>
>> Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
>> understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.
>>
>> Not sent from an iPhone
>> On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:
>>>
>>> Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.
>>>
>>> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
 Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although
 he’s a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely
 resembles John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be
 targeting south Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an
 especially young audience.
 In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
 affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
 Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that 
 has
 kids dropping F bombs.
 They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close
 to the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a 
 laugh
 track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces 
 in
 the crowd.
 The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
 behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
 iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix 
 shows
 were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few 
 episodes.
 “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that 
 almost
 seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia 
 presentation, the
 monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS 
 fades
 in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.

 [image: minajmbs.jpg]

  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive
 credits. I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough 
 start
 and it took months for him to figure it out.
 A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
 comic stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his 
 jokes
 seem good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a 
 John
 Oliver, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, 

Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2019-01-01 Thread Steve Timko
Netflix drops episode in Saudi Arabia critical of government for
journalist's murder.

https://www.npr.org/2019/01/01/681469011/netflix-drops-hasan-minhaj-episode-in-saudi-arabia-at-governments-request


On Thu, Nov 1, 2018, 7:46 PM Steve Timko  Hah! Phineas and I agree on something. Maybe there's hope for Republicans
> and Democrats.
>
> .
> .
> .
> Nah...
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:24 PM PGage  wrote:
>
>> I am not trying to put words in your mouth or pick a fight - just trying
>> to understand your point. I thought you were saying his show was
>> intentionally only enjoyable by South Asians and Muslims (and those who for
>> some reason already were knowledgable about those cultures). THat does not
>> seem plausible to me. But if all you mean is that he is hoping that South
>> Asians and Muslims, who have been long ignored by US pop culture, will be
>> attracted to his show in a special way, along with as many other people as
>> possible, then - well, yes I’m sure that’s true.
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:14 PM Steve Timko  wrote:
>>
>>> I never said exclusively. That's setting up a strawman to knock down.
>>> But it seems to be a deliberate effort to target an audience not
>>> addressed by other media. A south Asian addressing Arab culture seems to be
>>> a stretch.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:06 PM PGage  wrote:
>>>
 You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US aimed
 exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?

 Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically
 based on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way that
 non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves with
 elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, white
 Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.

 On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko 
 wrote:

> Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
> understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.
>
> Not sent from an iPhone
> On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:
>>
>> Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although
>>> he’s a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely
>>> resembles John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be
>>> targeting south Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an
>>> especially young audience.
>>> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
>>> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
>>> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that 
>>> has
>>> kids dropping F bombs.
>>> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close
>>> to the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a 
>>> laugh
>>> track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces 
>>> in
>>> the crowd.
>>> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
>>> behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
>>> iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix 
>>> shows
>>> were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
>>> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that almost
>>> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia presentation, 
>>> the
>>> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS 
>>> fades
>>> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>>>
>>> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>>>
>>>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive
>>> credits. I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough 
>>> start
>>> and it took months for him to figure it out.
>>> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
>>> comic stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his 
>>> jokes
>>> seem good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John
>>> Oliver, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a 
>>> full
>>> half hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
>>> Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural
>>> items. Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of
>>> toiletry tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis
>>> not owning dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, 
>>> the
>>> dog-walking web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a 

Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2018-11-01 Thread Steve Timko
Hah! Phineas and I agree on something. Maybe there's hope for Republicans
and Democrats.

.
.
.
Nah...

On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:24 PM PGage  wrote:

> I am not trying to put words in your mouth or pick a fight - just trying
> to understand your point. I thought you were saying his show was
> intentionally only enjoyable by South Asians and Muslims (and those who for
> some reason already were knowledgable about those cultures). THat does not
> seem plausible to me. But if all you mean is that he is hoping that South
> Asians and Muslims, who have been long ignored by US pop culture, will be
> attracted to his show in a special way, along with as many other people as
> possible, then - well, yes I’m sure that’s true.
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:14 PM Steve Timko  wrote:
>
>> I never said exclusively. That's setting up a strawman to knock down.
>> But it seems to be a deliberate effort to target an audience not
>> addressed by other media. A south Asian addressing Arab culture seems to be
>> a stretch.
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:06 PM PGage  wrote:
>>
>>> You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US aimed
>>> exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?
>>>
>>> Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically
>>> based on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way that
>>> non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves with
>>> elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, white
>>> Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.
>>>
>>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko  wrote:
>>>
 Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
 understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.

 Not sent from an iPhone
 On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:
>
> Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.
>
> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although
>> he’s a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely
>> resembles John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be
>> targeting south Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an
>> especially young audience.
>> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
>> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
>> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that has
>> kids dropping F bombs.
>> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close to
>> the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a laugh
>> track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces in
>> the crowd.
>> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
>> behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
>> iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix 
>> shows
>> were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
>> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that almost
>> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia presentation, 
>> the
>> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS 
>> fades
>> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>>
>> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>>
>>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive
>> credits. I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough 
>> start
>> and it took months for him to figure it out.
>> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
>> comic stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his 
>> jokes
>> seem good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John
>> Oliver, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a 
>> full
>> half hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
>> Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural
>> items. Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of
>> toiletry tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis
>> not owning dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, 
>> the
>> dog-walking web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a mental 
>> search
>> of the four Arab families I know. Two own dogs. One, in fact, own a dog 
>> as
>> a substitute for falconry, a sport they are too poor to pursue. (The dogs
>> point and flush and they shoot). On the other hand, of the south Asian
>> families I know, none own any pets.
>> New episodes drop weekly. Out of the chute Minaj’s show 

Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2018-11-01 Thread PGage
I am not trying to put words in your mouth or pick a fight - just trying to
understand your point. I thought you were saying his show was intentionally
only enjoyable by South Asians and Muslims (and those who for some reason
already were knowledgable about those cultures). THat does not seem
plausible to me. But if all you mean is that he is hoping that South Asians
and Muslims, who have been long ignored by US pop culture, will be
attracted to his show in a special way, along with as many other people as
possible, then - well, yes I’m sure that’s true.

On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:14 PM Steve Timko  wrote:

> I never said exclusively. That's setting up a strawman to knock down.
> But it seems to be a deliberate effort to target an audience not addressed
> by other media. A south Asian addressing Arab culture seems to be a stretch.
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:06 PM PGage  wrote:
>
>> You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US aimed
>> exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?
>>
>> Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically
>> based on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way that
>> non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves with
>> elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, white
>> Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko  wrote:
>>
>>> Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
>>> understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.
>>>
>>> Not sent from an iPhone
>>> On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:

 Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.

 On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
 wrote:

> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although
> he’s a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely
> resembles John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be
> targeting south Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an
> especially young audience.
> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that has
> kids dropping F bombs.
> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close to
> the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a laugh
> track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces in
> the crowd.
> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
> behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
> iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix 
> shows
> were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that almost
> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia presentation, 
> the
> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS fades
> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>
> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>
>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive
> credits. I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough 
> start
> and it took months for him to figure it out.
> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
> comic stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his jokes
> seem good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John
> Oliver, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a 
> full
> half hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
> Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural
> items. Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of
> toiletry tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis
> not owning dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, the
> dog-walking web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a mental 
> search
> of the four Arab families I know. Two own dogs. One, in fact, own a dog as
> a substitute for falconry, a sport they are too poor to pursue. (The dogs
> point and flush and they shoot). On the other hand, of the south Asian
> families I know, none own any pets.
> New episodes drop weekly. Out of the chute Minaj’s show doesn’t seem
> to be as solid as Michelle Wolf’s, but perhaps targeting a different
> audience will make it more desirable to Netflix. I will watch one or two
> more, but I don’t seem to be in the target audience.
>
> --
> You received this message because 

Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2018-11-01 Thread Steve Timko
I never said exclusively. That's setting up a strawman to knock down.
But it seems to be a deliberate effort to target an audience not addressed
by other media. A south Asian addressing Arab culture seems to be a stretch.


On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:06 PM PGage  wrote:

> You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US aimed
> exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?
>
> Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically based
> on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way that
> non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves with
> elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, white
> Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.
>
> On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko  wrote:
>
>> Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
>> understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.
>>
>> Not sent from an iPhone
>> On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:
>>>
>>> Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.
>>>
>>> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
 Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although he’s
 a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely resembles
 John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be targeting south
 Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an especially young
 audience.
 In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
 affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
 Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that has
 kids dropping F bombs.
 They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close to
 the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a laugh
 track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces in
 the crowd.
 The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
 behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
 iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix shows
 were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
 “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that almost
 seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia presentation, the
 monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS fades
 in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.

 [image: minajmbs.jpg]

  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive credits.
 I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough start and it
 took months for him to figure it out.
 A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
 comic stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his jokes
 seem good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John
 Oliver, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a full
 half hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
 Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural
 items. Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of
 toiletry tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis
 not owning dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, the
 dog-walking web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a mental search
 of the four Arab families I know. Two own dogs. One, in fact, own a dog as
 a substitute for falconry, a sport they are too poor to pursue. (The dogs
 point and flush and they shoot). On the other hand, of the south Asian
 families I know, none own any pets.
 New episodes drop weekly. Out of the chute Minaj’s show doesn’t seem to
 be as solid as Michelle Wolf’s, but perhaps targeting a different audience
 will make it more desirable to Netflix. I will watch one or two more, but I
 don’t seem to be in the target audience.

 --
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 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send
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Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2018-11-01 Thread PGage
You really think his plan is to develop a Netflix show in the US aimed
exclusively at Indian, Pakistani and Bengali Muslims?

Seems more likely he is trying to do a show that is unapologetically based
on his experience. Perhaps he is confident that in the same way that
non-white, non-Christian Americans are expected to acquaint themselves with
elements of WASP culture to consume many products of US Pop culture, white
Christians (at least young ones) will be motivated to do the same.

On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 7:16 AM Steve Timko  wrote:

> Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to
> understand it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.
>
> Not sent from an iPhone
> On Nov 1, 2018, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:
>>
>> Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko < steveti...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although he’s
>>> a fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely resembles
>>> John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be targeting south
>>> Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an especially young
>>> audience.
>>> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
>>> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
>>> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that has
>>> kids dropping F bombs.
>>> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close to
>>> the stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a laugh
>>> track. In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces in
>>> the crowd.
>>> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
>>> behind him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of
>>> iPads. They seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix shows
>>> were plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
>>> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that almost
>>> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia presentation, the
>>> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS fades
>>> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>>>
>>> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>>>
>>>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive credits.
>>> I think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough start and it
>>> took months for him to figure it out.
>>> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
>>> comic stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his jokes
>>> seem good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John
>>> Oliver, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a full
>>> half hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
>>> Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural
>>> items. Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of
>>> toiletry tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis
>>> not owning dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, the
>>> dog-walking web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a mental search
>>> of the four Arab families I know. Two own dogs. One, in fact, own a dog as
>>> a substitute for falconry, a sport they are too poor to pursue. (The dogs
>>> point and flush and they shoot). On the other hand, of the south Asian
>>> families I know, none own any pets.
>>> New episodes drop weekly. Out of the chute Minaj’s show doesn’t seem to
>>> be as solid as Michelle Wolf’s, but perhaps targeting a different audience
>>> will make it more desirable to Netflix. I will watch one or two more, but I
>>> don’t seem to be in the target audience.
>>>
>>> --
>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
>>> Groups "TVorNotTV" group.
>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send
>>> an email to tvornottv+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>>>
>> --
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Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2018-11-01 Thread Steve Timko
Chris Rock does not make jokes so obscure you need to Google it to understand 
it. Clearly this is a calculated effort on Minaj's part.

⁣Not sent from an iPhone​

On Nov 1, 2018, 5:43 AM, at 5:43 AM, PGage  wrote:
>Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.
>
>On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko 
>wrote:
>
>> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although
>he’s a
>> fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely
>resembles
>> John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be targeting
>south
>> Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an especially young
>> audience.
>> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
>> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about
>Saudi
>> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that
>has
>> kids dropping F bombs.
>> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close to
>the
>> stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a laugh
>track.
>> In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces in
>the
>> crowd.
>> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor
>behind
>> him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of iPads.
>They
>> seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix shows were
>> plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
>> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that
>almost
>> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia
>presentation, the
>> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS
>fades
>> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>>
>> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>>
>>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive
>credits. I
>> think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough start and
>it
>> took months for him to figure it out.
>> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or
>comic
>> stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his jokes
>seem
>> good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John
>Oliver,
>> Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a full
>half
>> hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
>> Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural
>items.
>> Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of
>toiletry
>> tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis not
>owning
>> dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, the
>dog-walking
>> web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a mental search of
>the four
>> Arab families I know. Two own dogs. One, in fact, own a dog as a
>substitute
>> for falconry, a sport they are too poor to pursue. (The dogs point
>and
>> flush and they shoot). On the other hand, of the south Asian families
>I
>> know, none own any pets.
>> New episodes drop weekly. Out of the chute Minaj’s show doesn’t seem
>to be
>> as solid as Michelle Wolf’s, but perhaps targeting a different
>audience
>> will make it more desirable to Netflix. I will watch one or two more,
>but I
>> don’t seem to be in the target audience.
>>
>> --
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
>Groups
>> "TVorNotTV" group.
>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it,
>send an
>> email to tvornottv+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>>
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>
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Re: [TV orNotTV] Review: "Patriot Act with Hasan Minaj" on Netflix

2018-11-01 Thread PGage
Chris Rock is not really targeting an African-American audience.

On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 9:42 PM Steve Timko  wrote:

> Two episodes of Hasan Minaj’s “Patriot Act” have dropped. Although he’s a
> fairly recent defector from “The Daily Show,” it most closely resembles
> John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight.” But Minaj seems to be targeting south
> Asians and Muslims with the show. Also, targeting an especially young
> audience.
> In the first episode. Minaj spends the whole episode talking about
> affirmative action. In the second episode, he talks mostly about Saudi
> Arabia before switching topics, finally closing with a taped bit that has
> kids dropping F bombs.
> They attempt a different look with the show. The audience is close to the
> stage. But in the first episode especially, they sound like a laugh track.
> In the second episode he calls attention to all the brown faces in the
> crowd.
> The other issue is instead of a green screen or a large TV monitor behind
> him, they build a wall of a monitors, Minaj calls it a wall of iPads. They
> seem to be working out the kinks. Letterman’s new Netflix shows were
> plagued with odd camera angles and cuts for the first few episodes.
> “Patriot Act” caught the same bug. There’s odd profile shots that almost
> seem to be shooting him from behind. In the Saudia Arabia presentation, the
> monitor goes dark, Minaj walks to his spot and then the photo of MBS fades
> in behind Minaj. Somehow it looked too rehearsed and lacked impact.
>
> [image: minajmbs.jpg]
>
>  The director is Richard A. Preuss. IMDB lists some impressive credits. I
> think he needs to smooth it out. Conan O’Brien had a rough start and it
> took months for him to figure it out.
> A bigger problem is that Minaj doesn’t seem to have the charisma or comic
> stamina or something to carry a whole half hour. Sometimes his jokes seem
> good but he steps on the punchline. It makes your appreciate a John Oliver,
> Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert, who can keep up the pace for a full half
> hour. The latter two benefit from commercial breaks.
> Minaj is also making references to south Asian and Muslim cultural items.
> Like some kind of test I guess Indian kids take, and some sort of toiletry
> tactic he feels is superior to toilet paper alone and to Saudis not owning
> dogs. He notes the Saudis have invested heavily in Wag.com, the dog-walking
> web site, and said Saudis don’t own dogs. I did a mental search of the four
> Arab families I know. Two own dogs. One, in fact, own a dog as a substitute
> for falconry, a sport they are too poor to pursue. (The dogs point and
> flush and they shoot). On the other hand, of the south Asian families I
> know, none own any pets.
> New episodes drop weekly. Out of the chute Minaj’s show doesn’t seem to be
> as solid as Michelle Wolf’s, but perhaps targeting a different audience
> will make it more desirable to Netflix. I will watch one or two more, but I
> don’t seem to be in the target audience.
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "TVorNotTV" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to tvornottv+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>
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