Sunday, January 12, 2020
The Good, the Bad, and ‘the Daily Show’ Reading Analysis
Analysis of The Good, The Bad, and The Daily Show In Jason Zinserââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"The Good, the Bad, andà The Daily Showâ⬠his purpose was to formulate a response to the uncertainty regarding the legitimacy and ethics of ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ news sources. Zinser begins by discussing if it is acceptable to obtain information from a humorous and often satirical news source (in this example,à The Daily Show), he points out that ââ¬Å"the question isnââ¬â¢t whether Jon Stewart or the showââ¬â¢s producers and writers are morally corrupt people, but whether or not fake news is, on the whole, beneficial or damaging to societyâ⬠(Zinser 363-364).In other words, he begs the question, can we really be an informed public that can contribute, comprehend, and function as a democracy through the projections of a ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ news source? Zinser then makes the claim that ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ news causes two vices, the first being deception due to the lack of valuing object ivity in their reports. The second is dilution, both in the quality of media from the variance of online sources as well as adding excessive news reports attracting more viewers to what is typically a hard news source.Zinser also reminds us of the beneficial aspects in ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ news. Empirical data suggests a trend that either viewers of The Daily Showà are better informed than those watching hard news because of its effectiveness, or, on the other hand that it attracts viewers who already know about the current events being discussed, evidence of its success.The ideal solution, he concludes, would be to merge the two, retaining the power and persuasion ofà The Daily Showà as well as including ââ¬Å"depth and insightâ⬠more apparent in hard news reports, helping viewers understand different sides of the arguments present (Zinser 371). When diving into Zinserââ¬â¢s writing, some similar aspects from George Orwellââ¬â¢s, Politics in the English Language ca me to mind. Orwell states, ââ¬Å"foolish thoughts, being a result of language, language has become a result of foolish thoughts.Vagueness is the most evident characteristic of the English prose. There is a lack of imagery and the figurative language no longer gives a connection to images and concrete thoughts. â⬠When comparing this to the satirical writing and language that Zinser speaks of in The Good, The Bad, and ââ¬ËThe Daily Showââ¬â¢ it creates a perfect picture of how by exemplifying the two vices, (deception and dilution) misconceptions can easily happen, especially when your only news source is a satirical ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ ews source. When thinking about some of the other ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ news sources, one example that might be overlooked is The Onion: a very popular source from which the stories are based on fact but written in a humorous and satirical way. Being that The Onion makes fun of all different types of news events from health issues to sports, The Onion actually delves into multiple aspects of our culture in a comical way but still delivering facts and informing people about what is going on in the world.In this case it can be just as influential as real news. In fact an example of The Onions influential satirical news was captured when they published the worldââ¬â¢s sexiest man and posted Kim Jong Un (the North Korean Dictator) as the sexiest man alive. North Korea took it serious and published it in their local paper and made a big deal out of it (news. yahoo. com). It is in this same sense that is described in Zinserââ¬â¢s analysis of this so called ââ¬Ëfakeââ¬â¢ news that you can get an idea of the actual influence this has on our culture.
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