Tag: humor

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SNL Addendum - More Satire Promised - Humor News Coverage Continues

Saturday Night Live and the Cleveland presidential debatehave been driven from the news as the campaign's engage in another debate of sorts--dueling ads about 3 AM phone calls to the White House.

After tonight's SNL show, however, the fusion of comedy and politics may rejoin the March 4th calculus. As the Washington Times reports "should this week's sketches have an impact on the presidential race, Mr. Michaels couldn't be happier." (The possibilities are discussed in a prior post).

Who will be watching? Admittedly speculative on my part, the SNL's audience is younger, more upscale, informed; an audience that is Obama's demographic. But then again, the show emanates from the NY Senator's main base. Regardless, SNL's anticipated debate skit will aim at neutrality. Its subsequent use, however, may not be neutral.

Guessing what will be shown and how it will spin is obviously idle - by tomorrow we'll know. Thinking about the composition of the SNL audience however reminds me of another quality of comedy and politics, that is: for humor to work it requires familiarity with politics.

In the Washington Times piece impressionist Jim Morris observes:

. . . [G]reat political sketches demand an informed public. That's exactly what "Saturday Night Live" has.

"You're relying on the viewers to get the references. Political humor has to play to a somewhat educated audience," Mr. Morris says. "In this political season, everyone seems to be up to speed on what's going on."

Other Comedy Notes below fold:

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"Give Him a Pillow" - More Twists and Turns with S.N.L. and Debates

Saturday Night Live has a strong record of lampooning of presidential election debates, but Hillary Clinton's use of SNL to score political points in a debate may be a first.

In what the Washington Post referred to as Clinton's "postmodern touch" she took the opportunity in the Ohio debate to scold the media for their favorable treatment of Barack Obama, offering: "Maybe we should ask Barack if he's comfortable or needs another pillow."

The injection of SNL into the debate discourse may have opened Pandora's Box; the use of "satire-as-evidence" in a formal debate is likely to spiral in unanticipated ways. David Bauder's AP article--"SNL Writer Surprised By Clinton Remark, Ordered To Write More"--makes clear, that this "pillow talk" is far from over.

Video from the Ohio Debate (also see my earlier post on SNL's role in Debates)


Below the fold: Media Response, Anticipating SNL's response.

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When the audience laughs at you

You want them laughing with you, not at you. Humor is good. Saying stuff that elicits scoffs, bad.

Michele Bachman (MN-06) discovers that her debate's audience is more than a little skeptical of her climate science skepticism. (Hat tip to kos).

She joins Randy  "Katrina" Kuhl (NY-29) in our "joke's on you" hall of fame.