LIVE From the Deserted Island: 'Harper's Globe,' Arlen Spector & Prez O Hug the Raft

Can the online innovations in entertainment TV change the game in politics and news as well?
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Can the online innovations in entertainment TV change the game in politics and news as well? Look inside the Wilshire & Washington crystal-ball with special guests Miles Beckett & Greg Goodfried, the creators of the new CBS social TV event, Harper's Island, and founders of Eqal. These two online impresarios first came to the world's attention with the mega-Youtube hit, LonelyGirl15, pulling in audiences in the millions when regular TV shows were being canceled left and right. And now they're turning their attention to modernizing the studio TV system: How can TV make it in the internet era, and can new technology offer greater creator-control, and therefore better art? Can TV networks (and the news) modernize and take advantage of all the cost-cutting technology out there, hopefully abandoning their old (and expensive) way of doing business? It's a fascinating discussion with these new hotshots in the entertainment field, so don't miss this!

Hosts Ted Johnson, Maegan Carberry, and Teresa Valdez-Klein also talk President Obama's First 100 Days in Office. Why is 100 days our big measuring stick? Isn't that metric (divisible by 10) and therefore communist? Has there ever been a more over-examined, and less important, event on the blogosphere? Most people are down with what Obama's doing and know to keep their expectations in check. The dude's practically a Vulcan in how even-keel he is, which does keep us all calm in this economic panic (according to Teresa, everyone's favorite Star Trek fan). Still, should the prez maybe show a little enthusiasm to get us more involved again, like during the election? Do things like Serve.gov and Organizing for America have too much of an Orwellian feel for people to really embrace?

Finally, we've got the Arlen Specter switcheroo. Specter did go after Senator Jim Jeffords a couple years ago when Jeffords switched parties, so is this hypocrisy, even though it's not like the Republican Party has been friendly to politicians like Specter in the last couple of years? Was it courageous? Disloyal? Politically opportunistic? And does this reveal the real problem with our system: the constraints of political parties on intelligent politicians? Join us for all this in today's Wilshire & Washington!

Listen to the show here, subscribe to the iTunes podcast, or use the Blog Talk Radio player:

Wilshire & Washington, the weekly Blog Talk Radio program that explores the intersection of politics, entertainment, and new media, features co-hosts Ted Johnson, Managing Editor of Variety; conservative blogger Teresa Valdez Klein (www.teresacentric.com), and liberal blogger Maegan Carberry (www.maegancarberry.com). The show airs every Wednesday at 7:30am PST on BlogTalkRadio.com.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot