Infotainment and Modern Satire

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Pop Culture Shen Name: Infotainment and Modern Satire The Daily Show What is Stewart doing on his program, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, that might cause people to consider him a journalist? How is the show similar to, and different from, what people get from the mainstream press? Viewers of The Daily Show see the show as a very important source of both news and comedy. In fact, Young people who watch the show on a regular basis tested higher on political knowledge than people who do not watch the show. According to research conducted by East Carolina University, those who regularly tuned into The Daily Show were more confident in their understanding of politics. Regular viewers of The Daily Show and the Colbert Report were also most likely to score in the highest percentile on knowledge of current affairs. How popular is The Daily Show? According to a survey by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press in April 2007, 16% of Americans said they regularly watched The Daily Show or the Comedy Central spin-off, the Colbert Report. Those numbers are comparable to some major news programs. For instance, 17% said they regularly watched Fox News The O Reilly Factor, and 14% watched PBS News Hour with Jim Lehrer regularly. Preview: Baltimore on Fire (7:33) How is Baltimore on Fire an example of infotainment? What was the info vs. the tainment? INFO (What facts are provided? What makes this feel newsy?) TAINMENT (What is entertaining about the clip? Where s the fun in it?) DEFINE: Infotainment

John Stewart on Crossfire (2:50-8:45 / 13:24-13:56) 1. What criticism did Stewart make of shows like Crossfire? How, in his estimation, is Crossfire hurting America? 2. What responsibility do journalists have to creating civilized public discourse? What does this include? Is there anything to be said about truth in advertising? How important is it for shows like The Daily Show or the Colbert Report to report the truth? Do they have any journalistic obligations to unbiased reporting?

Directions: With a partner, choose ONE of the following clips to watch. Clips: The Fresh Prince of Ball Air (7:13) Dad Bods (5:36) The Future of Gender Wage Equality (4:51) The Redskins Name, Catching Racism (7:30) NFL: They Don t Know What the F*ck They re Doing (8:36) While you watch, take notes on BOTH the information/facts presented AND the elements of the clip that qualify it as entertainment. INFO (What facts are provided? What makes this feel newsy?) TAINMENT (What is entertaining about the clip? Where s the fun in it?) ANALYZE: What does the popularity of fake or satirical news sources say about American society and culture?

Pop Culture Shen Name: The Campaign of a Comedian: Jon Stewart's Fake Journalism Enjoys Real Political Impact Howard Kurtz, Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, October 23, 2004; Page A01 Jon Stewart, fake journalist and proud of it, keeps insisting he's just a comedian. Night after night, "The Daily Show" host lampoons President Bush as a tongue-tied bumbler, Donald Rumsfeld as a mad ranter who resembles "Pete the crazy guy outside my apartment," the war in Iraq as a giant "Mess O' Potamia" and the reporters who cover the presidential race as self-important clods. Such sharp-edged skewering has turned the Comedy Central funnyman into a cultural phenomenon who, despite his protestations, seems to be having some undefined, irony-drenched influence on how the campaign is perceived. He's been on the cover of Newsweek and now graces the cover of Rolling Stone. His "America (The Book)" is the nation's top seller. He has analyzed the media as Ted Koppel's guest, dissected the party conventions as Tom Brokaw's expert and ripped into his hosts on "Crossfire" for presiding over "theater" and "partisan hackery." "There's a difference between making a point and having an agenda," Stewart says. "We don't have an agenda to change the political system. We have a more selfish agenda, to entertain ourselves. We feel a frustration with the way politics are handled and the way politics are handled within the media." "Stewart has pretty much painted a target on his chest with his 'Crossfire' appearance. To say his is just a comedy show is a cop-out in a way. He's gotten so much power. So many people look to him that you can't really be the kid in the back throwing spitballs." But with a program that more than doubles the audience of "Hardball" with 1.2 million viewers -- many of them in the hard-to-reach younger generation -- Stewart's comedic spitballs are leaving their mark. Half of 18- to 29-year-olds say they regularly or sometimes learn things from late-night comedy shows, a Pew Research Center survey found. Fourteen percent of "Daily Show" viewers say they are liberal and just 2 percent conservative. Only 17 percent of the program's audience is over 50. Stewart disputes the notion that younger viewers turn to him for news, and the Annenberg Public Policy Center backs him up. "Daily Show" fans are more knowledgeable about current events than those of other comedy shows, the center found, rivaling newspaper readers and network news viewers. "It's not fake news," Stewart says. "We are not newsmen, but it's jokes about real news. We don't make anything up, other than the fact we're not actually standing in Baghdad.... The appeal of doing the show is that it's cathartic." Stewart provides an ideal venue for politicians -- especially Democrats -- looking to demonstrate hipness. Kerry was happy to appear because Stewart "has got a big audience that is different from the audience that watches 'Meet the Press' or 'Nightline,' " says spokesman Joe Lockhart. "Jon Stewart has a huge following on college campuses," and the format is "not as confrontational" as on hard-news shows. Why do you think that politicians choose to appear on The Daily Show? How might it benefit them?

Little wonder, then, that John Edwards announced his candidacy on "The Daily Show." Or that Stewart's guests -- when he's not chatting up Hollywood celebs about their new movies -- have included Bill Clinton, Bob Dole, former counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke, Bush adviser Karen Hughes and Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie. Stewart can tell sex jokes one minute and have a serious foreign policy discussion with Newsweek's Fareed Zakaria the next. "When I listen to Jon, he really is profoundly concerned and angry about real issues," Koppel says. "He is to television news what a really great editorial cartoonist is to a newspaper." But, Koppel says, "a satirist gets to poke and prod and make fun of other people, and when you say, 'What about you, dummy?,' he says, 'I'm just a satirist.' " Explain the comment that Jon Stewart " is to television news what a really great editorial cartoonist is to a newspaper." CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer, who has interviewed Stewart and appeared on "The Daily Show," is another fan. "There's no doubt he's an important fact of life in this current political environment," Blitzer says. "Off camera, he's a very politically aware news junkie." Jon Stuart Leibowitz, who grew up in suburban New Jersey, is a physicist's son who found himself tending bar and doing puppet shows for schoolchildren after graduating from Virginia's College of William and Mary. He dropped his last name when he started doing stand-up at Manhattan comedy clubs, waiting tables to get by. Stewart landed gigs on MTV and Comedy Central and in 1993 wound up a finalist to replace David Letterman on NBC's "Late Night," losing out to Conan O'Brien. After his syndicated "Jon Stewart Show" was canceled after a single season, he popped up on programs such as "The Nanny" and HBO's "Larry Sanders Show." When Stewart succeeded Craig Kilborn on "The Daily Show" in 1999, he transformed it into what Newsweek calls "the coolest pit stop on television." His program won Emmys this year and last. He will be profiled tomorrow on "60 Minutes." "Even I'm sick of us," says Ben Karlin, the show's executive producer. But "the media beast must be fed," he added, amused that the show is being hyped by the "pack journalism" it regularly ridicules. Stewart's humor is clearly fueled by anger. He's the guy at home "yelling at the TV," he says. Karlin say staffers come to morning meetings ticked off about various outrages and spend the day honing their insults into lighter material. Stewart, who has called the Iraq war a mistake, is more likely than Jay Leno or David Letterman to ridicule Bush while going easy on Kerry, the Project for Excellence in Journalism found. "He's an outstanding comedian, but clearly he does comedy from the Democratic left perspective," says Republican strategist Mike Murphy. "A lot of people who watch Stewart and howl at the jokes already have their minds made up in the presidential race." The secret of Stewart's appeal is that he mocks the conventions of journalism, with self-aggrandizing correspondents like Stephen Colbert and Rob Corddry standing in front of phony backdrops or making faces while interviewing unsuspecting citizens. In a sound-bite culture, Stewart uses video clips to highlight the absurdity of political spinners and media talking heads. After playing a clip of Bush hitting Kerry on taxes by saying "the rich hire lawyers and accountants for a reason, to stick you with the tab," Stewart said, "Let me get this straight: Don't tax the rich because they'll get out if it? So your policy is, tax the hardworking people, because they're dumb-asses and they'll never figure it out?"

"Politics is funny, hilarious and stupid," says Jeff Jarvis, who oversees Conde Nast's online publications and maintains a blog called BuzzMachine.com. "But do you get that sense from networks and daily newspapers? Not really -- we get pompous about it. Stewart brings the humor back to it. He calls politicians bozos. And then he went over the next line on 'Crossfire' and called media guys bozos." [Stewart] is fed up with a process in which "people who are giving talking points come on these shows and are questioned by people on the other talking-pointed side. 'Crossfire' is the crack cocaine, the purest distillation of it." Some journalists have rallied to his defense. "Jon Stewart never said he was going to renounce his standing as a smart guy who went to William & Mary and as a sharp social critic," says NBC anchor Brian Williams, a past "Daily Show" guest. "Sure he has an impact. The din of our media has reached the point where we could use a have-you-no-sense-ofdecency-sir-at-long-last moment." Koppel takes issue with Stewart's insistence that journalists should put forth the "truth." "Jon feels people like me in particular should be more opinionated, not less. He feels I have a responsibility to get in there and tell the public, 'Look, this guy is lying' -- maybe not quite that blatantly. I disagree with that only in part.... In a live interview you can say, 'That doesn't sound right,' but you don't automatically have all the facts at your disposal." "It's not that young people don't like politics," says Cox, of Wonkette.com. "The way politics is talked about in the media is alienating. They're seeing Jon Stewart as a kind of hero who will lead us out of the darkness." Of course, she adds, "that's not his job." What role does The Daily Show play with respect to current events and the way in which modern journalists, in particular cable news reports on them?