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March 16, 2012
Déj- vu in Afghanistan?
By Bob Patterson
Going forward into the past with President Obama
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The conflict in
On Tuesday, Rick Santorum won two more primaries and thus underscored the sourceless contention that Mitt Romney is not a member of the Herrenvolk and thus ineligible to receive his Party's Presidential nomination.
The Republicans believe in a Republic which means that only eligible people (men who own land according to the Founding Fathers) can vote and thus they will have no philosophical objections if the Party elite perform an intervention and deliver the Party's Presidential nomination to someone who is a member of the Herrenvolk and is obviously qualified to reestablish the Republican domination of the White House. (A Republican has been in the White House for 28 of the last forty-four years or 36 of the last sixty years.)
During the week we saw an item online that asserted that in
The Porngate scandal in
On Tuesday, Uncle Rushbo fresh from a day off for golfing, started his program with a meticulous examination of the meaning of the numbers for oil prices and oil production. Since there had been an item online reporting that a Canadian study asserted that Conservatives tended to be less educated and more insecure than Liberals, we marveled that the man who flatly stated that there is no Republican war on women, was able to mesmerize his audience, reputed to number 20 million, with facts and figures that might tend to bore all but a very specific college classroom full of students ready and eager to join the BP assault on undersea oil reserves around the globe.
Does Uncle Rushbo's disk jockey have permission from the artist to play the old hit "I'm the Pied Piper"? We ask that quesiton because, apparently, he has the magic touch and can lead his vast audience into some very arcane and esoteric facts and figures and not suffer any perceptible amount of listener defections.
On Thursday, Uncle Rushbo was mesmerizing his millions of listeners with a discourse on the history and purpose of the strategic oil reserves. That, in turn, made us wonder what would Lenny Bruce have said about Limbaugh's "slut" slur?
Speaking of adventuresome college radio, this week we heard a well done report on KALX (the UCB student radio station) from North Gate Radio about fecal transplants. It was one of those unusual bits of news that usually shoots to the top of the list on odd news websites such as Fark and/or Obscure Store.
The World's Laziest Journalist has noticed that using a photo to illustrate the columns usually means a better chance of catching the reader's eyes, but the challenge (and time consuming nature of the task) of finding an appropriate still shot and then getting the photographer's permission to use it is very daunting, and so (after struggling with learning to include the photos with the posting) we often resort to taking an appropriate photo and using that.
The World's Laziest Journalist missed such a photo op in
Wasn't there some concern in the early days of the Internet media revolution that quality content would be accorded diminished value as "bells and whistles" graphics were added to various web sites?
Here is a hypothetical example of how an item without a very noticeable graphics can loose reader appeal. Recently we picked up a copy of "The New Journalism" by Tom Wolfe ("an anthology edited by Tome Wolfe and E. W. Johnson" [Harper and Row paperback edition]) and began to assemble some information for writing a column about the 50 th anniversary of the start of the "New Journalism" branch of news reporting. The publication of "Joe Louis the King as Middle-aged Man" in Esquire magazine in 1962, is cited by Wolfe as a significant milestone in the demarcation of the birth of the trend.
The anthology includes all of the essential examples of the New Journalism (called "Gonzo Journalism" by Hunter S. Thompson) but it also piqued our curiosity. Does You Tube offer a hilarious obscure example of "Parajournalism" (as Wolfe dubbed it) that consisted of video of Hunter S. Thompson interviewing Keith Richards? We learned that several versions have been posted there and a still shot from that tsunami of mumbled unintelligible syllables would serve as bait for luring unsuspecting new readers into the latest example of this columnist's attempt to preserve the traditions of "thee dot journalism" . . . if we could figure out how the heck to insert such a still shot touting that interview before the (self imposed) Friday morning deadline.
In the past, the World's Laziest Journalist has made efforts to draw attention to the idea that Philip K. Dick, in his speculative history work of fiction titled "The Man in the High Tower/Castle," seemed to accurately predict Hunter S. Thompson's life and writings.
Our efforts to draw attention to that coincidence have been just as successful as our Hans Brinker-ish efforts to warn Liberals that Karl Rove will use delegate gridlock at the Republican National Convention as a smoke and mirrors diversion to hand the nomination to JEB Bush.
The Conservative pundits will ignore the JEB angle because they don't want to tip Rove's hand and the Liberal commentators can't or won't acknowledge that scenario because . . . they receive their generous paychecks from media owners who don't want any spoiler material put into the national debate . . . until it's too late.
Perhaps some folks who have a rare form of diarrhea and are in need of some therapeutic bacteria are not the only ones who qualify for fecal transplants? Could that concept be used as a metaphor for the Liberal voices employed by Conservative media owners?
The topic of objectivity vs. a reporter's emotional involvement with a news story got an example of the inherent dangers on Thursday night when a KALX reporter on the evening newscast became overcome with emotion and had to hit the cough button. The story was about an event at a zoo in
In "The New Journalism," Wolfe describes the task facing subservient "wordproles" (on page 44): "The reporter . . . (manifests) behavior that comes close to being servile or even beggarly. . . . They supply mainly "vivid description' plus sentiment." Then they are free to (as Liberace once put it) "cry all the way to the bank." (Do you honestly think that any on-air personality at Fox would dare show any sign of disapproval if JEB gets the Republican nomination?)
Now the disk jockey will play
BP graduated from college in the mid sixties (at the bottom of the class?) He told his draft board that Vietnam could be won without his participation. He is still appologizing for that mistake. He received his fist photo lesson from a future Pulitzer Prize winner. (Eddie Adams in the AP lunch room told him to get rid of the everready case for his new Nikon F). A Pulitzer Prize winning reporter broke BP in on the police beat for a small daily in Pa. By 1975, Paul Newman had asked for Bob's Autograph.
(Google this: "Paul Newman asked my autograph" and click the top suggested URL.)
His co-workers on the weekly newspaper in Santa Monica,(in the Seventies) included a future White House correspondent for Time magazine and one of the future editors high up on the Playboy masthead. Bob has been to the Oscar ceremony twice before Oscar turned 50.
He is working on a book of memoirs tentatively titled "Paul Newman Asked for my Autograph." In the gold mining area of Australia (Kalgoorlie), Bob was called: "Col. Sanders."