On Mon, Aug 17, 2015 at 3:57 PM, 'David Bruggeman' via TVorNotTV <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I think it might be a defensible position that it has become no longer
> funny/productive to satirize the lunatic fringes, whether you are doing it
> through a character or not.  But I am just guessing.
>
> That has sort of been the point I've been making to friends about Trump's
candidacy. I liken his popularity in the polls to when Charlie Sheen went
off the rails a couple years ago and nearly everybody followed him on
Twitter, not because they liked him, but because they wanted to be witness
to the train wreck. Trump is a joke to his own party, and as long as he
remains a punchline, people can ignore actual issues. If he was treated
like any other candidate, he wouldn't even be polling at 1%, but as long as
the news reports every insignificant thing he says or does, and as long as
pundits can snark about him, it allows the other candidates to fly below
the radar, which is where they want to be over a year before the election.
Right now, if a Republican candidate other than Trump were to be caught on
tape the way Romney was during the last election saying something
outrageous and offensive, thanks to Trump it wouldn't even make headlines.

The jokes. The satire. The punchlines. None of it is helping.



-- 
Kevin M. (RPCV)

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