Author Topic: Heard on NPR  (Read 4500 times)

Offline Front-Ranger

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Heard on NPR
« on: November 26, 2012, 01:53:44 pm »
Anybody catch the weekend game show "Wait, Wait Don't Tell Me" this weekend? It was interesting to hear from Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist and head of the Hayden Planetarium at the New York Museum of Natural History that only cartoon characters that wear clothes can own pets, that the world will possibly end by an asteroid crashing off the Santa Barbara coast on Friday the 13th, 2029, and how clueless he is about the ever upcoming new album by Guns'n'Roses.

http://www.npr.org/2012/11/24/165599719/astrophysicist-neil-degrasse-plays-not-my-job
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Offline Front-Ranger

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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #1 on: May 12, 2013, 10:20:51 pm »
The "Lives of the Cowboys" segment on Prairie Home COmpanion was just so funny this last weekend. Check it out!
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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #2 on: May 22, 2013, 12:04:50 pm »
Thanks to listening to NPR's "Wait Wait Don't Tell Me" while I work out (as a podcast on my ipod) I now know what #houndsbum means. Can you guess?
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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #3 on: July 28, 2013, 09:08:22 am »
After hearing David Gilbert's interview with Terry Gross on NPR, I'll probably have to read & Sons, although his quote "His sleep was sponsored by Vicodin with a two-finger assist from Dewars" is too clever by half.
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Offline Jeff Wrangler

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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #4 on: July 28, 2013, 02:18:32 pm »
After hearing David Gilbert's interview with Terry Gross on NPR, I'll probably have to read & Sons, although his quote "His sleep was sponsored by Vicodin with a two-finger assist from Dewars" is too clever by half.

I should say. He ought to've used a single-malt. ...
"It is required of every man that the spirit within him should walk abroad among his fellow-men, and travel far and wide."--Charles Dickens.

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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #5 on: July 28, 2013, 03:44:44 pm »
Right, J Wrangler! On the way to the Dragon Boat Festival, I listened first to Wallace Shawn (son of the New Yorker editor WIlliam Shawn) talk about his latest Broadway play and his schizophrenic career which is coming to an end, and then to a discussion of Verlyn Klinkenborg's rural essays in The New York Times, and suddenly all seemed right with the world after I had woken all despairing and verklempt after reviewing my fiasco of a Friday.
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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #6 on: June 23, 2015, 10:33:39 pm »
I now know what the "Harvard sentences" are. Do you?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_sentences
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Offline morrobay

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Re: Heard on NPR
« Reply #7 on: June 24, 2015, 07:30:19 am »
Disappointing, to say the least.  I'm pretty sure kk can't spell "NPR".  To me, it reeks of selling out - they wanted her on the show because she's a "big star".  Surely a smaller star with a brain would be a better choice.


What's All The 'Kommotion' About Kim Kardashian On 'Wait Wait'?
 June 17, 2015 2:55 PM ET


You've been put on notice, Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!

John Moore of Decatur, Ga., wrote to NPR: "Everyone is allowed one mulligan, and you just had yours."

Moore, who admits he might be an "NPR snob," was referring to the show's "Not My Job" guest appearance this past weekend of—gasp!!!—Kim Kardashian, where she was invited to promote her new book, Selfish, 448 pages of photographs of herself.

Kardashian's presence on the show sent several hundred listeners over the top. By the dozens, they say they are "disgusted" and "disappointed," and a handful are sure the show has "jumped the shark." Paula Poundstone's "exposition on the proper preparation of Pop Tarts" is OK, wrote Gary Miller of Charles Town, W.Va., but Kardashian? "She has no business in any civilized forum," he wrote.

The listeners are self-aware and unapologetic about their outrage. "I have enjoyed your show for years, but I found the inclusion of Kim Kardashian so misguided and offensive, I fear I will never be able to listen again (hyperbolic, yes, but vapid, talentless, and shallow individuals who have not earned fame or fortune through an ounce of hard work have no place on a show of such caliber)," wrote Brianna Frazier of Laguna Beach, Calif.

They are threatening to pull their donations, or claim they have already done so. Kerry Castano, of Burlington, Vt., wrote, "I recently gave a small gift to my local NPR station. Had I heard your Saturday show before I made my gift, I wouldn't have donated. The Kardashians represent much of what is wrong with America today — and I listen to NPR to get AWAY from Kardashian-like garbage."

Monthly sustaining donor Sharonn Flaucher of Tuftonboro, N.H., is "seriously thinking about dropping my membership. I thought NPR had a certain class/values and it looks like we might be heading in another direction that I'm not willing to go with you. Just thought I'd give you a heads up. Have a sparkling day!"

I will admit it. In my not–quite five months as NPR's Ombudsman, I've found one reliable source of joy: the Monday morning email—there's at least one each week—from a listener outraged by whatever bad taste joke Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! has told on its latest episode. This Monday, the inbox was overflowing.

I am decidedly not mocking the listeners' devotion to the religion they hold sacred, to their gluten-free diets, to their right to own however many cats they want and not be painted as "crazy," to their belief that all 90-year-olds should not be lumped together as unsafe drivers, to defeating stereotypes of [insert ethnic group name here]—all the sources of unhappiness when Wait Wait dared poke a bit of fun.

But, well, it is a humor show and an equal opportunity offender. Many listeners seem willing to laugh until the comedy is turned on something that touches their own lives or sensitivities. Does the show occasionally seem sophomoric or cross a line? Perhaps. But rarely, if ever, does the fun come across—to me, anyway—as mean-spirited.

I'm still not sure what to make of this week's outrage over Kardashian, who was indeed a surprising guest, given how often the show has pilloried her and her clan in the past. She wasn't a great guest—she had a couple funny lines—but she was gracious. Or at least I think so. I'm in the camp of those who have avoided her other ubiquitous media projects and appearances, so I can't say I'm familiar with her normal demeanor. But I was far from offended by her presence on an NPR show. It was only eleven minutes, after all, and now maybe I won't be so lost at the next dinner party when the topic of Kardashian-mania comes up.

A handful of listeners agreed. "I admired Kim's daring acceptance of the 'Not My Job' gauntlet throw-down," wrote Lawrence Caring of Houston, Texas. "She knew what she was getting into and had the guts to subject herself to it anyway, albeit to plug her new book. Kudos to the WWDTM guest approval crew. If the NPR 'holier-than-thou' complaints had to be written on the backs of contribution receipts, well I'm sure the complaints would just trickle in.

But listener Mary-Lynne Peluso of New York City seemed to speak for many when she expressed her dismay: "Now, you've given that low-level, self-centered, ego-driven mentality a place in the 'public radio' world. Not a real, in-depth, look at 'How self-promotion today affects societal thinking,' or some such analysis, but a 'Hey, Kim, let's gab about your busy (full, but empty of socially uplifting value) life. Come play with us; we want to be popular like you, too!'"

Peluso added: "This is a real question, for which I'd appreciate a reply: 'What was your thinking behind having Kim Kardashian on as a guest?'"

So I asked Michael Danforth, the show's executive producer. When I talked to him earlier this week, he said, "Of course we tried to book her, because she's huge. She is a favorite in our lives." He called it "a totally normal booking. We always try to book people who are culturally relevant."

Danforth said the team was surprised Kardashian agreed to the appearance, and called her "self-effacing," although he added, "One thing we've learned is she's got a very polished and easy public persona" and isn't about to go off message. He seemed truly baffled by the strong listener reaction. "I did not anticipate it," he said.

Emmanuel Hapsis, writing on KQED's Pop blog, analyzed the outrage—smartly, in my opinion—in the thoughtful way that many people associate with NPR:



This preoccupation with identity and how one is perceived by others also happens to be something Kim Kardashian knows a lot about. She meticulously crafts how the public sees her (in full face, at all times, mostly) and what they find out about her. In this same way, the people leaving these incensed comments or posting about how they wish Kim would just go away on their Facebook pages are also maintaining some idea of themselves that they want to project or would like to believe about themselves. Kim puts beauty first, others lead with intelligence, but, in the end, it's ultimately the same thing: a facade.

Later, he concluded:

I went to grad school. My favorite writer is an experimental classicist. I've read Ulysses in its entirety. And I also know all the names of the Kardashians and why they're mad at each other. Learning that information didn't cancel out my degrees or any of my brain cells. Neither did listening to this radio segment. Kim Kardashian is a part of our culture, whether we like it or not. She doesn't have the power to destroy you or your favorite public radio show. But she could probably school some of us on how to lighten up.

Still, as one of my harshest critics likes to point out in the comments each time I post a new column, my job is to represent the public to NPR. So NPR, consider yourself told. Or, in the words of Max Planck of Centennial, Colo.: "I'll forgive you this time but don't do it again."


http://www.npr.org/sections/ombudsman/2015/06/17/415203751/what-s-all-the-kommotion-about-kim-kardashian-west-on-wait-wait
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