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Mass media and elections
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Mass media and elections
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"Liberal and conservative have lost their meaning in America. I represent the distracted center." proclaimed Jon Stewart (Nordquist 1). The liberal would be the Democrats while the conservative is referring to the Republicans. As the citizens of the United States continue to be frustrated by the government due to the Iraq/Afghanistan wars, the 2008 Recession, and the bipartisan deadlock in Congress, Stewart continues to criticize Democrats/Republicans alike in The Daily Show. To fully comprehend Jon Stewart’s role in the modern political landscape of the United States, one needs about his life, achievements/works, and his impact.
Jon Stewart had a pretty typical American childhood. Jon Stewart (born Jonathan Stuart Leibowitz) was born to Don Leibowitz, a physicist working for Princeton, and Marian Leibowitz, an educational consultant, on November 28, 1962 in Lawrenceville, New Jersey. Stewart was raised in a middle-class Jewish family. Stewart attended a yeshiva kindergarten in Trenton and later attended public school along with his brother. Stewart’s comedic abilities was obvious early on, “I was very little, so being funny helped me having big friends,” Stewart remarked (Gillick 2). At age eleven his parents separated which led Stewart’s father being estranged from Stewart. Stewart listed George Carlin and Richard Pryor as some of his early comedic influences early on (Bates 1). Stewart later gained a reputation as a class clown at Lawrence High School and also highly engrossed in politics (Gillick 3). Stewart described himself as “left-leaning” and an admirer of the 20th century American Socialist Eugene Debs. He graduated in 1980 and was described by his twelfth grade English teacher, Larry Nichol as “He was very ...
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Shapiro, Ari. "Jon Stewart's Latest Act: Sept. 11 Responders Bill." NPR. NPR, 26 Dec. 2010. Web. 06 Dec. 2013.
Wapshott, Nicholas. "Faking It: What Is Jon Stewart About? And Why Should We Welcome The Daily Show? Nicholas Wapshott Reports from New York." New Statesman [1996] 10 Oct. 2005: 42+. Student Resources in Context. Web. 6 Dec. 2013.
Carter, Bill. "CNN Will Cancel 'Crossfire' and Cut Ties to Commentator." Nytimes.com. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., 6 Jan. 2005. Web. 14 Dec. 2013.
Chinni, Dante. "Politics Counts: The Impact of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert."Blogs.wsj.com. Dow Jones & Company, 17 Feb. 2012. Web. 12 Dec. 2013.
Morin, Richard. "Jon Stewart, Enemy of Democracy?" Washingtonpost.com. Katharine Weymouth, 23 June 2006. Web. 14 Dec. 2013.
Ryals, Jimmy. "Art and Politics." Web.archive.org. The Internet Archive, 30 May 2006. Web. 8 Dec. 2013
On the turntable of American politics Dick Morris has established himself as a masterful disk jockey. However, his ability to artistically mix campaign messages has earned him a scratched personal reputation. The rhetoric of Dick Morris transcends partisan boundaries to such a degree that it lacks foundation. His career has earned him praise but at the expense of intense scorn. His political strategy and poll based campaigning have earned him a reputation as both a genius and amoral. In many ways the controversial aspects of his messages reflect contemporary discussion of American politics. The flaws of his character reveal some of the flaws in our representative system. The recent Impeachment Trial of President Clinton has also brought attention to flaws in our representative system. Dick Morris's political commentary on the Impeachment and the work of his career offers insight with which to examine a growing discontent among the American public towards our nation's politics.
A Bestselling author and co-host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” is a remarkably confident lady and TV-journalist Mika Brzezinski whose on-air protest between entertainment news & “hard news” received a large number of supports and fans’ responses on 26 June 2007 in which she had refused to read the news about a release of Paris Hilton from Jail rather she considered more important Senator Richard Lugar with President Bush on the war of Iraq breaking news. She stands on these issues rippled over the internet quickly and similar incidents continue on-air on July 7, 2010 on a report about Levi Johnston and Lindsay Lohan over hard news stories with the title “News you can’t use.”
Kurtz, Howard. "Jon Stewart and Kumar Go to the White House." The Washington Post 13 Apr. 2009: 1-2. Print.
Ferrell had a rough start on SNL. However, he had gladly won the hearts of viewers as he did more impressions and skits (“Biography”). Some of his most famous spot-on impressions included James Lipton, Harry Caray, Alex Trebek, Neil Diamond, and perhaps most famously George Bush. His most famous sketches include “The Spartan Cheerleader,” “Celebrity Jeopardy,” and “More Cowbell.”
Greenhalgh, Paul. "Art, politics and society at the Franco-British Exhibition of 1908." Art History 1985 Dec., v.8, no.4, p.434-452
“Fake” news programs, such as The Daily Show, Zinser reasonably argues, have the potential to dilute mass media and deceive viewers. The Daily Show has been straightforward about its lack of legitimacy as a hard hitting news program, but “the show’s content and guest list suggest otherwise” (Zinser 367). Zinser indicates that The Daily Show should hold itself to higher standards because “people might well think they’re being fully or sufficiently informed while watching” (367). In other words, Zinser believes that if viewers tune in with the expectation of becoming informed and The Daily Show’s content consists of significant topics, the creators ...
The infamous 2016 election shined a great light on the undecided voters of America, television shows such as Saturday Night Live taking advantage of the obvious humor behind those who were unable to weigh the “lesser of two evils” out of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. In their segment of Weekend Update in October of 2016, Michael Che interviewed dysfunctional “Cathy Anne,” an undecided voter who, although clearly supporting Clinton more over Trump, had identified as undecided. Just as SNL had taken on the issue of addressing the Americans who simply claimed that they were undecided, David Sedaris, a writer for the liberal New Yorker, had written a piece, prior to the election of 2008 between Barack Obama and John McCain, detailing how undecided
The Presidential election followed a political campaign in which the weapons of choice were partisan criticism and attack ads rather than details that illuminate the character of the candidates. What troubled me about these partisan attacks is that reporters and columnists are governed by the tides of events tending to be too laudatory about candidates on the way up and too critical of politicians on the way down. For example; the coverage of Howard Dean's presidential race.
Goldwater, Robert and Marco Treves (eds.). Artists on Art: from the XIV to the XX Century. New York: Pantheon Books, 1945.
Satire is the most powerful democratic weapon in the arsenal of modern media. Sophia McClennen, the author of America According to Colbert: Satire as Public Pedagogy, describes it as the modern form of public pedagogy, as it helps to educate the masses about current issues (73). In fact, ”a Pew Research Center for the People & the Press survey in 2004 found that 61 percent of people under the age of thirty got some of their political news from late-night comedy shows” (McClennen 73). This statistic shows how influential satirical shows such as The Colbert Report or South Park can be.
Many Americans don’t trust the media, they rely on “on an array of outlets – with varying audience profiles – for political news. And many consistent conservatives and liberals hear dissenting political views in their everyday lives” (Political Polarization).
Stokstad, Marilyn. Art History. New York: Prentice Hall Inc. and Harry N. Abrams Inc. 1995.
Barnett, Peter. “The French Revolution in Art”. ArtId, January 7th 2009. Web. 5th May 2013.
For many people comedy simply means getting a laugh out of something, but in reality, comedy can be used for more than that. Due to its volatility, stand-up comedy tends to draw criticism for being offensive and for spreading negative stereotypes. This, however, is a sign of social progress because it means that comedians are pushing social boundaries. Stories and expressions that are normally unacceptable are met with laughter and agreement when they are told on stage (Cohen 2). The fact that the content is sugar-coated in humor makes it easier to digest matters that are often looked at as being taboo. When the audience laughs at such taboo subjects it leads them to seek out and explore those subjects. When thinking about a comedian that talk about controversial topics, one comedian stands out the most in my mind and that is Dave Chappelle. Chappelle used his voice to challenge audiences to see the world from his perspective and discuss the institutional racism that African Americans faced in American society. The Chappelle Show served as a channel for his audience to navigate racism and racial
Sabato, Larry J. Feeding Frenzy: Attack Journalism and American Politics. Baltimore: Lanahan Publishers, Inc., 1991.