Since time get away from me yesterday, I put up Thursday's post earlier today and am adding the News Satire Roundup now.
Sunday, June 25 – Naturally, John
opened on the news that the show’s being sued by a coal CEO he took to task
last week. He also broke down Trump’s
staggering justification of why he implied he had tapes of his conversations
with Comey when he didn’t and cautioned against the “on life support” quips
being made about the Senate healthcare bill, since the president is proof that
overconfidence in the outcome of a vote doesn’t always pan out. The main story was on vaccines. John examined the persisting theories/fears
about vaccines, especially the myth that they cause autism, and highlighted the
risks that parents put their kids through when they skip or delay vaccines. More than anything, he talked about the
near-impossibility of combating those myths when no amount of scientific evidence
will convince some people. (Apropos of
nothing, he also went off on a glorious rant about how stupid fish are – it was
fantastic.)
The Daily Show was off this week (and
will be next week, too.) After Trevor’s
excellent coverage of the recent Philando Castile verdict, I want to commend
the show on the way it addresses police shootings. Since he took over the show, Trevor has had
occasion to do so many of these
stories. In fact, I remember when the
shooting of Castile happened last summer, Trevor had to talk about both that and the Alton Sterling shooting in the
same story as they’d happened in such close conjunction. This is a pervasive problem that is occurring
around the country, and The Daily Show
doesn’t let up in its acknowledgment of how often it tears through another
community, devastates another family.
Every
time the show has discussed one of these shootings, Trevor has risen to the
occasion masterfully. It’s clear how
genuine his grief is for these Black bodies deemed expendable, how acute his consternation
is at seeing this injustice play out time and time again across America. These deaths take a psychic toll on the Black
community, and Trevor repeatedly allows his audience to look at the toll it
takes on him. He freely admits his hurt
and anger, his honest confusion at how a country can watch tragedies like this
occur again and again and still insist that there’s no systemic problem, that
it isn’t about race.
I
appreciate how much care Trevor takes in bringing new insights to each of these
stories. From out of those feelings of
loss, he constantly probes and interrogates these shootings, making new points
and examining different angles each time.
The stories on the Castile verdict, the latest in this long line,
condemned the NRA for not speaking out against the shooting of a legal gun
owner, highlighted the indignity of Castile’s girlfriend still having to call
the officer “sir” after he killed her boyfriend (in an attempt to protect her
and her daughter’s lives,) and mourned another Black dad forcibly removed from
his family in the most brutally-permanent way.
But he’s covered so many other aspects of this issue: what happens to someone’s perceptions when
they only see Black people in the context of crime, a cop responding in kind to
“shots fired” (even though it turns out the shots were fired by a fellow
officer, not the suspect,) the blithe willingness to dismiss video evidence, the
problem of Americans not batting an eye at the phrase “all-Black high school,”
and many others.
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