The Power and Responsibility of our Nation's Broadcasters

Posted April 15, 2008 | 04:47 PM (EST)



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The following is my opening keynote speech for the National Association of Broadcasters Show in Las Vegas, which I delivered Monday night.

To listen to the speech, click the play button below:



Hello, I'm Tim Robbins. I'd like to thank you for the invitation to address you here at the National Association of Broadcasters. When I first received the invitation I was a little confused because the last time I had contact with the national media I seem to remember them telling me to shut the hell up.

I would like to start with an apology. To Rush and Sean, and Billo and Savage and Laura what's-her-name. A few years ago they told America that because I had different opinions on the wisdom of going to war that I was a traitor, a Saddam lover, a terrorist supporter, undermining the troops. I was appealing at the time for the inspectors to have more time to find those weapons of mass destruction. I was a naïve dupe of left wing appeasement. And how right they were. If I had known then what I know now, if I had seen the festive and appreciative faces on the streets of Baghdad today, if I had known then what a robust economy we would be in, the unity of our people, the wildfire of democracy that has spread across the Mideast, I would never have said those traitorous, unfounded and irresponsible things. I stand chastened in the face of the wisdom of the talk radio geniuses, and I apologize for standing in the way of freedom.

So when they asked me to come speak to you I said, "Are you sure? Me?" And they said, "Yes."

And I said, "You know, I have a tendency to say things that I believe at the time to be well-intentioned but that are actually traitorous." And they said, "Sure, cool." And then I read the press release and it said, "Mr. Robbins will be speaking about the challenges of new media and delivery systems." Oh, OK. But I just want you to know I'm not sure I know what that fucking means.

But it is an honor to be speaking to you here at this years National Association Broadcasting convention even if I don't know what the hell I'm talking about.

I owe a lot to broadcast media. I got my start in radio in the early 20s. In my early twenties. And it was television.

But these tremendous inventions have benefited us all.

Radio has come a long way from the early days when family's gathered around the trusty old Philco to listen to such programs as Superman, Sherlock Holmes and Amos and Andy. Thanks to music and sound effects, this magical medium was able to transport families to a place where a man could fly, a brilliant detective could solve the most perplexing of crimes, and two white guys could portray ridiculously offensive black stereotypes for the amusement of millions.

The first broadcast occurred on Christmas Eve in 1906 at Brant Rock, MA, when a man named Fessenden played his violin, sang a song and read Bible verses into a wireless telephone of his own invention. His goal was to find financial backers, but no investor of the day believed that radio could ever replace the most popular leisure activity of the day; listening to the hoot owl while playing the zither as your 14-year-old niece bounced on your knee. Some of you may remember. It was all the rage in the early century.

But soon broadcasting over the radio caught on and zither playing and child molestation were a thing of the past. Radio reached a boom time during the Depression as people begin to listen to and depend on radio to lift their spirits during that catastrophic economic crisis. Shows such as The Bickersons taught people life is not so bad as long as somebody has got it worse.

President Roosevelt became the first "radio president" and his "fireside chats" set the stage for later presidential weekly addresses such as; "chew the fat with Ike," "LBJ's bull session," and George W's "Hooked on Phonics and Strategery Hour."

Radio continued to expand and soon, the public turned to their radios for news, which began to mature during World War II with the regular reports of the bombing of London by Edward R. Murrow, with his "London After Dark" series, where Murrow coined the famous phrase: "Good Night and Good Luck" as well as the lesser known phrase; "Die, you Nazi cocksuckers."

In the post war years, the radio business exploded when 90% of all American's claimed radio was their primary source of news and entertainment. To meet this incredible demand Philco built 6 million radios in 1947. And to provide content for those 6 million radios, we were introduced to some of the greatest drama, comedy and musical entertainment this country has ever seen.

In the '70s, radio took a serious nosedive when Edwin Armstrong invented FM to eliminate the static and noise associated with AM and unwittingly provided a home for easy listening jazz rock, overly dramatic disco songs and 20 minute psychedelic sitar jams.

In the '80s and '90s the FCC, under pressure from the Reagan and Clinton administrations, changed the rules limiting the number of radio and television stations a business entity could own, paving the way for such conglomerates as Infinity broadcasting and Clear Channel to buy up local stations and put them under the umbrella of their larger corporations. Again the community benefited because due to Clear Channel and Infinities' conservative approach, listeners no longer had to be subjected to perplexing controversial subjects, or confusing varied opinion, or alternative rock. And as a bonus these large companies, with the help of Mr. Reagan and Mr. Clinton got rid of that annoying Fairness Doctrine, freeing its listeners from the burden of hearing equally from all sides of the political debate. What a bore.

This new world of conglomeration also brought us back to a simpler, more exciting time with regard to natural disasters and calamities. Your local station would now be broadcasting from a city many miles away and should there be a tornado coming your way you wouldn't know about it until the funnel was in full view. Exciting times.

In the 1950s, television began to replace radio as the chief source of revenue for broadcasting networks. It quickly became apparent that talking about "Old Sandusky Lager" on the radio didn't quite have the same impact as watching a buxom flaxen haired temptress in a skin tight dress play pool in a bar while she drank "old Sandusky Lager." Beer sales skyrocketed.

In the '60s, American television networks began broadcasting in color bringing a new vibrant reality to the content of the day. Suddenly it didn't seem unusual that an astronaut was dating a scantily clad genie that lived in a bottle in his living room.

Television also brought the horror and reality of war into our living rooms airing footage of the war in Vietnam. Building on the mistakes of the past, war is now televised in an easily digestible sanitized version. The current administration has proven that war doesn't have to be upsetting, or sacrificed for, or even reported on at all. We have come a long way, baby.

But what is the state of broadcasting today? Some critics have noted that there is a dangerous lack of diversity and opinion. That may be true, but imagine the nightmare of having to rectify that situation.

I propose a much simpler solution, which I've separated into three prongs, or a Satan's trident if you will.

First, erase all diversity. Thankfully the majority of what is broadcast over television and radio is of two opinions and that feels good. That's simple. But unfortunately there is a tiny minority out here on the airwaves expressing a different view outside of the Democrats and Republicans nexus trying to confuse us all. Can we please shut them up? How expensive could it be to buy Pacifica Radio? These people are driving us apart.

Secondly, let's stay focused on Sex Scandals. Stop with the in depth reporting that gets outside of the sound bite. More sex scandals! Surely with a little more prying, a little more effort we can find more sexual deviants. And trust me, sexual deviancy is something we can all agree on. It's deliciously intoxicating to watch unfold. It's titillating.

The absolute zenith of news, the perfect storm of reporting, the shining city on the hill in news coverage was Lewinsky v Clinton. Now that was fun. We couldn't get enough of that. There were salacious details, semen stains, oral sex. And the president lied. He threatened every notion of marriage and the sanctity of family. He put our country at risk. And when he did lie we held his feet to the fire. We reported on every angle, every permutation of the story. We held hearings, appointed an independent council, led off every newscast for months about the lie, played it until there was no hiding from it, and then held him accountable by impeaching him. It is our moral responsibility to report on the sex lives of the powerful. It is the only thing that kept our country alive at that point. It righted our ship of state. It saved our collective soul. And it was great, juicy fun. Imagine what would have happened to our country's soul if the president lied and nothing was done about it, if impeachment was off the table. Where would we be today if we did not hold our president accountable?

Third, find more racially divisive news and play that constantly. As long as we hate each other we will never be bothered with this gnawing lefty obsession with information. Let's make the purpose of the media salacious entertainment, not information. The more our news outlets and talk radio can distract us the better. We love distraction. When the nattering nabobs of negativity tell you that the economy is falling apart, that gas costs four dollars a gallon, that they are foreclosing on your home, that there is chaos in Iraq, when these propagandists spread this "information" it is our moral responsibility to distract. I don't know about you but show me a starlet without panties getting out of a car and suddenly the world seems like a better place. Show me Knight Rider drunk on the floor eating a hamburger, and I won't ask why my kid has no health insurance. Let's stop burdening people with facts. I bet some of you are saying; "Sure Tim, there's no question, sex scandals, race riots and drunken TV stars are a lot of fun, but shouldn't broadcasters see themselves as part of the larger picture? Isn't there an obligation to honestly report on what is going on, to pursue stories past their headlines? Haven't criminal acts occurred in government? Shouldn't there be accountability for inept policy decisions? Shouldn't someone be fired?" And you know something? I didn't hear any of that because I'm still thinking about that starlet getting out of the car without her panties. You see, that doesn't take any energy. I know exactly what to think about.

Now some of you are concerned with that unrelenting pesky competition. You know, the new technologies; the Internets and satellite radio and television. The problem is there are too many people in this country that take the notion of creativity and invention too damn seriously. Just when one technology is centralized, conglomerated, monopolized, along come new technologies and delivery systems to threaten the good work born of deregulation. Just when we were getting close to a national playlist for our music, satellite technology is threatening to provide music that people actually want to hear. Just when we were close to a national news media, providing a general consensus on what the truth is, along comes the Internets that allow its users a choice on the kinds of news it watches. And the You Tube. My God we've got to stop them. Recently when we were about to enjoy our great national pastime of 'tearing apart a presidential candidate with relentless repetition of ugly things his friend said', You Tube provided the candidates reasoned response and millions watched and responded positively.

Well you here at NAB have the power to stop this dangerous technology. The question is, how? I respectfully suggest that you do what others have done when facing the competition of new technologies. Get compromising information on your enemy and expose them in a sex scandal. Or call them a racist, or better yet a traitor. That not only undermines your competitor, but provides the public with fantastic entertainment.

Of course you can do that. And no one in this current world would fault you for it. It is, after all, where we stand today. In all seriousness folks, let's face it. We are at an abyss as a country and as an industry. And I know that saying we are at an abyss isn't the stuff of keynote addresses but all sarcasm and irony and rude pithiness aside, we are at a critical juncture in this nation's history. This is a nation divided and reeling from betrayal and economic hardships. And you, the broadcasters of this great nation have a tremendous power, and a tremendous potential to effect change. You have the power to turn this country away from cynicism. You have the power to turn this nation away from the hatred and the divisive dialogue that has rendered such a corrosive affect on our body politic. You can lift us up into a more enlightened age. Or you can hide behind that old adage; "I'm just a businessman, I provide what the audience wants." Well, I'm here to tell you that we don't need to look at the car crash. We don't need to live off of the pain and humiliation of the unfortunate. We don't need to celebrate our pornographic obsession with celebrity culture. We are better than that.

Some of you are trying. Some of you are inspiring people towards altruism and compassion with your programming. Some of you are trying to lift the civic dialogue into a more responsible and adult arena. But I know you do so against the odds of ratings and job security. It is really up to the leaders in this room. It is up to you, the scions of this industry to leave behind formulas and focus groups and your own fears of job security. Only with your courage and your vision can we begin to imagine a world of broadcasting where the general consensus of those with real power say "Enough is enough. Now is the time to move away from our lesser selves. Now is the time to stop making money on the misfortunes of others and the prurient and salacious desires of the public. Now is the time to admit and recognize that we aren't just businessmen but the guardians of the human spirit, with a responsibility to the health of this nation. That we can lift this country up with our programming, that instead of catering to the gossips and the scolds and the voyeurs we can appeal to the better nature in our audience, the better nature of what this country is all about."

This is a country filled with people of great compassion and tremendous generosity. This is a country that has survived dust bowls and depressions, that united to defeat Hitler and fascism and communism. We are a resilient people and a tenacious people. And we are ready for change.

Imagine a new broadcasting industry aesthetic, that respecting the better nature of the American people, produces shows that promote strength instead of fear. That does not divide, but inspires, that does not promote hate, but unity, that will not tear the weak down, but build up their strength. Imagine a world of broadcasting where the American people are encouraged to reject despair and distrust. And when they turn their TVs and radios off at night and go to sleep they possess strength, and unity and compassion for those they disagree with. That's not out of the question. You can make that happen. It will be difficult, and will fly in the face of conventional wisdom, and standard operational procedures. But do we have any choice? The road we are on is leading us to a corruption of our former selves. We are better than that. You can help us reclaim our better nature, our perfect union. It isn't necessarily a matter of country before profit, or of patriotism and truth before personal comfort. There could be money to be made in appealing to our better selves. Wouldn't that be great?

And if there isn't and we came out of it a little less rich but more unified and healthier as a nation wouldn't that be something we could all be proud of?


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Fantastic keynote Mr. Robbins, one can only hope that they listen ...
I live in Canada and we receive quite a few American television stations. I gave up watching the news on these channels ages ago, probably around the time of the whole OJ Simpson fiasco. It's all become one big reality tv show clamoring for ratings and revenue. Hopefully the future will look a bit brighter and integrity will find it's way back into the dictionary ...

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 AM on 04/19/2008

Now hopefully this speech will be on mainstream media!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 04/17/2008

I'm afraid ABC's wretched, shameful, fascist-whore last night is just another example of what you're talking about, Mr. Robbins.
Your speech to broadcasters rivals Murrow's. Keep at it, sir.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 PM on 04/17/2008

I have been in the broadcast industry from 35 years. What Tim Robbins said was right on the money. In the last 12 years or so, they have been getting progressively worse. There is no diversity. THey are panicing at the mention of internet, iPod and satellite radio. They people who work in radio are a joyless lot. THey want to do right but their livelyhoods are threatened every time they bring up quality. I know. Thaht's me, looking from the outside. I was fired for saying in 2004 that people should stop bitching about Merry Xmas vs. Happy Holidays. It was a pointed but humorous message that one advertiser took too seriously and demanded my removal. This was on a station that ran Imus in the MOrning. I was told that local talent is held to a higher standard than national talent. THe translation? THey can't fire Imus. The home office in NJ put him on. They can fire me because it's easy. Companies like Clear Channel are bailing on small markets. They paid way too much for these properties. They thought they could save money by using the economy of scale to program. What they are learning but won't admit is that few people like their programming. What does a programmer in San Antonio know about a listener in Skowhegan, Maine? Nothing, but they pretend that we are all alike. TV has givien an impression that they all believe that local in CA and NC are the same.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 AM on 04/17/2008

Your speech was brilliant. Vengeance and vindication for those of us who shouted ourselves horse at the Brooks Brothers fascists and the supine American public, trying to stop this immoral disaster.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 04/17/2008

Hey Tim,

Quick update... took an hour out of my schedule to contact some of the SuitWeasels... and although I don't watch much TV programming, have also decided to cut some of the crap that I do ingest.

Contacted : Anne Sweeney - ABC, Jeff Zucker - NBC, Neal Shapiro - NBC, Leslie Moonves - CBS, Nancy Tellem - CBS, Mark Itkin - WMA, Bob Wright - GE, Peter Roth - Warner and Roger Ailes - FOX

Don't expect much from them... in fact, in the process of tracking down contact info, what I ran across brought me much clearer indication of the direction that future programming is heading. Led by Jeff Zucker, President and CEO, NBC Universal, it appears that major networks are gearing up for LESS quality, as their bottom lines are sucking and they believe the new broadcasting industry aesthetic is going to have a lower standard than we now "enjoy".

Anyhow, it was a good exercise... thanks again. Best to all.

alienated in Seattle

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 08:12 PM on 04/16/2008

First of all, I don't believe for one minute Tim Robbins wrote that speech. Second it had two messages for two minds to hear the fluff for the compasionate and validation for the psychopath. Pure Orwellian Double Speak, plain and simple more Mind Control.

I believe he is on the same payroll as Rush, and Sean. A Patriot would have spoken not as the "Riddler" and only ask them to clean up the smut. He would have asked why they did not address the concerns of 9-11 Victims families and fire fighters and the cost of the inhumane and unjust war. He only mentioned the war in passing as if he once opposed it. How about the Financial Markets and our Social Services durability should we not have intelligent debate sponsored.

He affirmed the lie that Whitewater was actually investigated and the results revealed. The Lewinsky sexcapade was the distraction and cover up and still is not being reported . Google "Clintion Chronicles" Video.

Wake Up people, he is just another Government Agent putting you in the spin cycle. Do you think for one minute they would put anyone in front of that audience without a script?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 04/16/2008

The screenwriter of Dead Man Walking, Bob Roberts, and Cradle Will Rock--

Playwright and artistic director of his own 25-year-old theater company--

is supposed to not be able to write this speech, according to your logic?

?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 AM on 04/17/2008

"Do you think for one minute they would put anyone in front of that audience without a script?"

Oh, you must mean like what happened when the White House Correspondents had Stephen Colbert speak at their dinner, had him standing right next to the President, and had no doubt completely approved his speech and had written it for HIM.

Uh huh...

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 04/16/2008

As incitfull as Mr. Robbins's address was, it is equally appaulling that so many posters on HuffPost have know ideah what a diktionery is or how to use spelcheque, rendering their mostly meandering posts diificult to read and fuking UNINTELLIGIBLE.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 PM on 04/16/2008

Jeez dude, I hope you're attempting to ILLUSTRATE your own satire, otherwise I might suggest that you take your own advice....

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 05:23 PM on 04/16/2008

Thank you, Tim, for sharing this. I, for one, would've loved to have been there for this overdue, if under-reported, vindication of your honesty and integrity. Not to mention also knowing many of your audience wore ignominious egg on their face.

While plenty even here at HuffingtonPost are seemingly still under the spell of a drink they've swallowed for many years, trapped by lies of a 'false' patriotism being used against them, you've been in the game of 'truth to power' much longer than 'power' has liked. Many here are of like mind though, more every day, and appear ever more receptive to argument that speaking against wrongs, committed by even the highest levels of OUR Government, underscore a FAR TRUER patriotism than a blind pledge of allegiance or a blind eye to WAR CRIMES.

The satire in the larger part of your speech WAS surpassed by the simple truth in the later part, and we can only HOPE the broadcasters that listened take your words to heart. While the White House Press Corp contingent of those broadcasters STILL fears for their jobs more than supports the TRUTH to OUR country, there are places and people that want more than the main stream media will offer, and find it where they're able. To that end, sir, may you please return frequently with 'whatever' words you have for us? Such insights are greatly appreciated by the open minded, as is ALL you and Susan give to OUR country.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 04/16/2008

I agree very much with the above comment, and with everything Tim said. I used to listen to radio from morning till night, but gave that up some time in the 70's, with the start of the conservative "hate-mongers," and now only listen to Ronald Hoffman, MD, on WOR-AM, in NY. Otherwise, I listen only while driving in my car to some "oldies" music. Until radio is once again "listenable," this will remain my pattern, and I will continue to treat it as I have, for the past 30 years of my life, as a prop!!!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 04/16/2008

kroses -- try 1600 on the AM dial, in NYC -- WWRL.
On the "Tee Vee", try INN World Report, Democracy Now, and listen to Bill Moyers on PBS on Friday nights.
And urge Tim Robbins to write and speak often on media issues. My day is better for having taken the time to ponder his speech at the National Association of Broadcasters. Tim Robbins gives me hope.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 04/17/2008

People cannot always be at the point in their cycle when they are at their highest level of consciousness. This is why we sometimes think rabbits are taking over Greenland (an idea more likely to appear in the unconscious point of our cycle, though it may occasionally surface as breaking news on slow news days). I therefore would suggest that we have different categories of "breaking news":

1. Really Major Breaking News
2. Major Breaking News
3. Breaking News To Roll Around In Your Mind

In this way, the normal fluctuations in levels of importance that one generally finds in everyday conversation can continue to occupy a place on TV, being the point of our cycle that I like to call, "Now We Are One, Just For The Hell Of It".

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 04/16/2008

Huzzah!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 04/16/2008

And I wonder how many in the audience were actually listening and 'got it'.
It'd be really sad if there weren't very many (mainly those yawning, snoring and rolling their eyes-'yeah yeah yeah we get it but how does it make ME and my station MORE MONEY and BIGGER RATINGS')

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 04/16/2008

OMG Tim, what a truthful and wonderful piece of work. I love everything you said and I hope it was real - I wasn't sure if you were teasing us - and that you really did speak before the Nat'l Assoc. of Broadcasters. If so, you were brilliant. The fact that we have turned our t.v.'s and radios off to the MSM of whatever network was a decision we made the second week of Pastor Wright's 24/7 loops of sound bites. We knew that there had to be other noteworthy issues during that time frame, but not one "news" station was broadcasting anything other than Wright. As a result, we decided that they certainly did not need our piece of their salaries and refused to watch any of them again. As far as I can recall, it has been probably four decades since broadcasters actually reported "NEWS". It is an entertainment piece comprised of personal opinions, inenuendo and propoganda. And, I saw a link yesterday that proved that the networks have been putting out propoganda since Clinton was in office pushed by HRC and will provide that link here. It is one of the WH papers from that period. Furthermore, I pray that these journalists will listen to you and start reporting news (TRUTH), but until that time, we will stay "tuned out" and find our news from the net instead.
http://thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?ID=6143

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 04/16/2008

The MSM have been abrogating their responsibility as responsible purveyors of information for many years now, but I fear that they are only a mirror in which we, as a society, see ourselves. "If it bleeds, it leads" is nothing new, but Tim is right on when he talks about our obsession with celebrity trivia; too many people would prefer to hear about Britney's shopping spree rather than the closing of the factory in the next town over. The media blow these things all out of proportion, seemingly just to generate controversy that will bring more watchers/listeners to their station. Edward R. Murrow, where are you?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 04/16/2008

tim,

the media used to believe it had a responsibility to it's readers/listeners/viewers.

now it believes it's only responsibility is to it's shareholders.

that is the entire crux of the problem.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 04/16/2008

Wonderful speech - so true! I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. You nailed it, and I hope the broadcast media pay attention.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 PM on 04/16/2008

I love where Tim says the country "united to defeat...communism..." That's revisionist history at its finest. Liberals fought Ronald Reagan every step of the way with the same kind of mean-spirited attacks they wage on a daily basis against George W (albeit more efficiently now thanks to cable and the internet).

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 04/16/2008

Power of broadcasting - yes. Responsibility of broadcasting - absolutely not.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 04/16/2008

Crazy
Friedrich Nietzche said insanity among individuals is rare, but in any committee, society, or plurality, it is anticipated, and often taken for granted.
The media is sick, being obsessed by and saturated with trivia: the continuing saga of Hillary, Obama, McCain, an issue way down the list of most peoples" priorities, as powerful folk dominate the discourse in an "ignorance is bliss" citizenry, a democracy of dunces, reminiscing press-controlling, totalitarian dictatorships. Greg Palast said Thomas Jefferson must be rolling in his grave by now, the man who said any government even anarchy is preferable, when it is monitored by an independent, adversarial press.
How else can we rationalize the nit picking, the "How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?" quality of the coverage, in a campaign that has worn out its welcome, for me. Pavlov"s dog quit salivating when it was full.
I can"t, can"t forgive the media, when i think about how likely was an Al Gore presidency, with no Iraq War, no destroyed economy, no mortgaged future thanks to a rogue, "fly now, pay later" presidency of George W. Bush and his fantastic Christ-as-Caesar complex, "the worst president, ever"¦if it weren"t for Bill Clinton"s DNA on Monica Lewinsky"s stained, blue dress. Then I think about former French president Francois Mitterand"s funeral, and its being attended by his grieving widow and his mistress, and that, just maybe, once again, Nietzche was right.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 04/16/2008

How kind of you Tim to remind us of who let us down and how they continue to do it. A few years back, maybe 15-20 years there was less channel but it felt like there was more informaiont. Sure the local stations were local and you could watch the wildfires burning down the block but you really got your fill of the local news. The news channel CNN brought a brand new day and I could see the world outside of the local channels. I was so enamored by that that I spent hours watching the same shitover and over again because it was news. Now we can tell by the channel who is what. Fox news cable channel is so republican slanted you fell like your ride side is OD'd. The rest of them have individual shows slanted one way or the other and they seem to always have people arguing with each other about the topic so whatever good that does the host is always the winner! I tend to watch the BBC news because a some point I learned about the control of the news fed to us daily and I thought a unbiased news show with the "real" world news is what I need for a news fix.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 PM on 04/16/2008

Tim,

As I read your speech I couldn"t help but get the image of you as Norville Barnes, full of himself due to his recent success with the Hula Hoop, prattling on in that very campy, somewhat arrogant tone of voice"which actually enhanced the humor aspect.

A well thought out piece of political satire, thank you for posting it.

I would have liked to have seen the reactions¦!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 04/16/2008

So, let me get this straight.......you want broadcasters to report stuff that actually will force us to think? Gosh, Tim, I'm not at all sure I'm ready for that. I mean, I was just about to repost my blog about that pantie-less starlet, since the blogsite I had it on originally has shut down. If people start thinking about all that other stuff they won't read my blog - I'll lose the $.00001 that I could make on my Adsense account.

I just don't know...... maybe we should give this a little more thought.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 04/16/2008

Well said, Mr. Robbins.

And you have to include blogs. This site has been spewing off hate and mean-spiritedness for months. I hope they read your entry, and take it to heart. I don't understand why the Obama followers are so hateful. Support your candidate, fine, but no need to use the b word and the c word against another human being.

It's time to start being kind, in our actions and our words; treating each other like you'd like to be treated. Is that so hard?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 04/16/2008

Well said.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 04/16/2008

Brilliant!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 04/16/2008

Thank you Mr. Robbins. That was a really impressive speech, as well as being fun and kind of racy! I wonder how it went over. I hope you will write a followup and let us know.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 04/16/2008