Showing posts with label political satire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label political satire. Show all posts

May 13 - Happy Birthday, Stephen Colbert

Posted on May 13, 2018

Funny, funny stuff. But also heart-rending.

Stephen Colbert is a comedian, a writer, a television host, and even an actor. But his often-hysterically funny comedy also seems deeply sad, because he is almost always talking about news and politics.

And because he's American, U.S. news and politics tend to be a pretty big focus.

And, let's face it, U.S. news and politics is super sad, of late!

Born on this date in 1964, in Washington, D.C., Colbert was the youngest child in a Catholic family that had 11 children!!! Most of his childhood was spent in South Carolina;  Colbert learned to talk like American news anchors at an early age, basically suppressing any Southern accent when he was very young. He is almost entirely Irish American, and although his comedy name is pronounced as if it were French (kole-bear), it's actually pronounced kole-burt.

As a 10-year-old child, Colbert's family endured a terrible tragedy: Colbert's father and two of his brothers died in a plane accident. It just so happened that the brothers he lost were the ones who were closest to Stephen in age, so his remaining siblings were probably all teens or young adults when this horrific event happened. His mom moved the family to a more urban location, and Stephen felt very much cut off from people at that point.

Still, he developed tons of interests: science fiction, fantasy role-playing games like Dungeons and Dragons, music. He wanted to be a marine biologist, but he had a problem with one ear and couldn't participate in a career that would require scuba diving. He ended up discovering a love of theatre, and eventually moved toward comedy. 


His career is pretty legendary, with the highlights being a long-running show on Comedy Central, 9 Emmy Awards, performing as the featured entertainer at the White House Correspondents Dinner, and now acting as host of the Late Show. He's had a Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream flavor named for him and at least five species named honoring him - plus, get this! - a treadmill at the International Space Station named for him! I mean, come on!! 



Is satire sharper than pointed political commentary?

For years, viewers were able to watch two sorts of comedy-news treatment, back to back: Jon Stewart's comedic commentary on The Daily Show and then Stephen Colbert's comedic commentary of the same news on The Colbert Report. Stewart sounded smart, well-informed, and progressive as he skewered conservatives (and even jabbed at liberals when they deserved it). But Colbert...

Well, Colbert was playing a character, rather than himself, as he made his political commentary. And his character was super-duper conservative. And somehow, the satirical skewering of conservatives by a conservative character was SO much sharper! The satirical jabs toward Fox News people were so much jabbier out of the mouth of someone playing the role of a Fox News aficionado! Jon Stewart always seemed to be a nice guy, even when he was going for the jugular, but Stephen Colbert - in character - juggled jugulars without mercy!

Satire is regarded as a high form of comedy. And that regard is well deserved!




Jason Richwine seems to have forgotten that
the United States is a nation of immigrants, and
that the "native" peoples are not considered
"white," but instead are called American Indians
or Native Americans.

Plus, whatever data Richwine thinks he's giving...
I'm going to go out on a limb and assume that
he is referencing no reliable data...


 

Also on this date:


November 28 – Happy Birthday, Jon Stewart

Posted on November 28, 2017

His parents divorced when he was just 11. His relationship with his dad was...well, shall we say "not good"? He even changed his last name, going by his first and middle name, to distance himself from his father.

He was bullied, to some extent, in school. Mostly because he was Jewish.

He didn't work all that hard in college, he claims (although his soccer coach reports that he had a lot of energy on the playing field). And after college, he had a ton of different jobs that don't require college degrees. From busboy to puppeteer, from caterer to bartender, from shelf-stocker to soccer coach...

None of that sets us up for the fact that Jonathan Stuart Leibowitz, aka Jon Stewart, would become an American icon, one of the most trusted people on television, a big-time award winner, and someone who could retire in his early 50s with a net worth of 80 million dollars!

But that's what happened.

Mostly known for hosting The Daily Show with John Stewart, on Comedy Central, Stewart is a comedian, writer, producer, actor, political commentator, and TV host. 

Wow!

Stewart has published two books, fathered two kids, and hosted two Academy Awards shows. 

(I bet the "two kids" part is by far-far-far-far most important to Stewart!)

I find it difficult to deal with the frustrations and agonies of the news without filtering it through someone like Jon Stewart, who reported and responded to news with humor and a sort of skeptical idealism.

Humor, satire, and informed skepticism are important for society, and it's wonderful that we reward comedians - especially intelligent comedians who binge-watch news - for their take on events and trends.

Check out some of the wit and wisdom of today's birthday celebrity:










April 4 – Anniversary of the Cancellation of the Smothers Brothers

Posted on April 4, 2015

The Smothers Brothers pushed the boundaries of TV, and they got canceled.

Today, we now can enjoy edgy political satire on television – and of course on the internet – but back in the 1960s, it was hard to find such content anywhere. The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour was pretty much the only place I heard anti-war stuff in my own living room. Criticism of the government and the President of the U.S. was rarely heard on TV, in those days, except on The Smothers Brothers.

The CBS network decided that the Smothers Brothers would have to deliver their shows finished and ready to air TEN DAYS before air time so the censors could edit controversial stuff out of the shows. The censors cut out a song sung by Harry Belafonte against the backdrop of protests and rioting during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. They took out lines of satire. They cut a satirical David Steinberg sermon about Moses. They ran a re-run, rather than a show – I guess, in that case, the censors had problems with the entire hour!

Some local station cut and edited and pruned, too.

In March of 1969, the show was picked up for another season. But then, suddenly, just a few weeks later (on this date in 1969) the network CEO canceled the show! The Smothers Brothers successfully sued for breach of contract – but that didn't bring their show back on the air. The Smothers Brothers won an Emmy Award for best writing – but that didn't bring their show back on the air, either.


I was so disappointed. It was my favorite show, at the time.

In recent years, of course, we have enjoyed almost-daily fake-news shows bringing us very funny and biting political commentary and satire – I'm speaking, of course, of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and The Colbert Report. I think that Stewart and Colbert have been national treasures, and I am (or will be) sad to see their particular shows end...but something new, something good, will surely rise again!


In addition to politics...

The Smothers Brothers did their act, including much of their political commentary, while making music and singing. But they also brought to television audiences some of the music that other shows never featured – music young people like me (at the time!) loved. Music by everyone from Cream and The Doors to Joan Baez and Janis Ian, Simon Garfunkel to Jefferson Airplane.

One time, The Who was performing. As usual with The Who, at the end of the song, the guitarist Pete Townshend destroyed his guitar and an amp. And there were mild explosives for pyrotechnics. Unfortunately, the small charge of explosives kept in the bass drum didn't go off during rehearsals. Not knowing that, a stage hand added another before the taping of the actual show. And not knowing that the first charge hadn't gone off OR that the stage hand had already restocked the drum, drummer Keith Moon added another charge.
So...now there were THREE charges in the drum, instead of just one. The resulting explosion was so intense that a piece of shrapnel flew off into Moon's arm, and Townshend's hair was singed and his hearing was possibly partially impaired.

The moral of the story is, always check your pyrotechnics several times, rather than restocking explosives several times!

If you want to see this...uh...explosive performance, the magic of YouTube can grant that wish.



Also on this date:


International Pillow Fight Day


















HolidayTime in Taiwan 























Independence Day in Senegal









Anniversary of the knighthood of Francis Drake









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