On Tue, Nov 24, 2009 at 10:58 AM, Joe Hass <[email protected]> wrote:
> Last summer's The Daily Show series in which Jason Jones went to Iran
> shortly before the Iranian election rioting exploded may have lead to
> the kidnapping of at least three people, including a Newsweek
> reporter.
>
> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/23/daily-show-to-blame-for-n_n_367978.html
>
> I am a big fan of differentiating between correlation and causation,
> but I do recall a little bit of handwringing at the time the series
> aired (after the rioting began), and this story is strongly enough
> relating to the latter that Stewart et al need to have some time for
> contemplation before their next on-location shoot.
>
> Let me add my personal opinion that I find the on-location stuff for
> TDS to be frequently (but not always) unwatchable, for the same reason
> that I have never enjoyed Candid Camera: there's a sense that the
> people with the camera are punching down instead of up. Listening to
> The Bugle last night, John Oliver told the story of reading "Going
> Rogue" to a group of six-year-olds, and an uproar occurred when the
> kids realized they were being suckered into something that clearly
> wasn't. Oliver and Andy Zaltzman were almost in tears as the story was
> told, And I thought, "I look forward to skipping past this segment
> completely."

I am not sure what the lesson is that should be learned here. Is it
that TDS should not make jokes about anything or anybody who might be
so stupid or concrete as to take them seriously? That would rule out a
lot of the prime targets of satire, and is along the lines of Nancy
Pelosi telling her caucus to stay off of the CR. I thought the Jason
Jones stuff in Iran was good, and at the time quite touching. I think
the Iranians are quite capable of using just about anything, either
sincerely or as a pretext, to repress free speech and the press, and
if it had not been TDS with this reporter it would have been something
else with him or another one.

I also disagree about their remote pieces - I think they are mostly
hilarious. When Ed Helms was on Kevin Pollak he said that he did very
little editing to make the subjects sound stupid or ridiculous, and
most of what they did was in editing in his reaction shots and
questions. I would like to hear the piece you reference with Oliver
about reading the book to the kids, because that was one of the few
that made me uncomfortable (though I am not sure what you mean by the
uproar being caused by the kids realizing they were "being suckered
into something that wasn't"). If TDS is looking for places to draw
lines, children and others who for whatever reason may not be
competent to make independent judgments might be a good place to
start.

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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