Just Because You Can…

…doesn’t mean you should

I added my email address to my contact page less than a week ago.

Someone has already gone in and harvested it for a mailing list. Though the mailings seem to have a Conservative bent, I never consented to be added.

I have gotten 3 emails in the last 90 minutes from that person. Even if I had consented to receive the mailings in the first place, I would have regretted it after that sort of bombardment.

That has left a seriously bad impression on me, and is bound to color my perception of any communications going forward.

Think about how your actions will be received and perceived before you alienate potential allies


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This is going to be stream of consciousness, because if I wait to know precisely what I want to say, I’ll never get this post up.
David Letterman is a jerk. He has been for a very long time.
I remember when he began Late Night, it took me a while to get used to him (I was a Tom Snyder fan) but I eventually found him funny – and even endearing. Over the years, however, he started to get…mean. His monologue became almost cruel and his interviews were often snippy. I no longer found much reason to watch, but would if the guest or musical act were interesting.
I had always enjoyed Leno as a guest host on The Tonight Show, not least because he seemed to be a real fan and conducted interviews that gave the guests a chance to shine. When he took over The Tonight Show, and he was just starting to go head-to-head with Letterman, he changed his style a bit. For a while it seemed Leno was attempting to be Letterman-lite; he told mean jokes, he was a bit of a bully during interviews. Thankfully, he reverted to his old style and The Tonight Show became enjoyable again. (It has been less so lately, but that is another topic)
I haven’t watched Letterman in years – why would I? The few times I’ve happened upon CBS late night while channel surfing my opinion of the show was reinforced – just not funny. I felt the same way about Conan, though I could understand his appeal to a niche audience. I had very low expectations for Conan in Leno’s slot and, in the few shows I’ve watched, I appear to have been right. Perhaps he will find his footing in that time slot, we’ll see.
During Conan’s first week, I happened to be up and, not being impressed with Conan, thought I’d give Dave another try. Bad idea – as in couldn’t even get through the monologue bad. Just. Not. Funny – and his jokes were severely dated. I turned away.
Now he is in hot water for his tasteless attacks on Sarah Palin – and, more specifically, his attack on her daughter. He certainly should be, within reason.

  1. They were tasteless, they were crude, they were over the line, they were sexist – all those things. And, they were unfunny.

  2. Greg Gutfeld was right; it is pathetic that with an entire inept administration to choose from for his jokes, Letterman is still so obsessed with Sarah Palin. It is also pathetic that he couldn’t come up with something funny.
  3. It is conceivable, and even likely, that his staff was too stupid, too lazy, or too disinterested to check which daughter was with Palin in NY. Had it been Bristol, the jokes would have been stupid, the fact that it was Willow puts the jokes in beyond-the-pale territory. And don’t forget that Letterman also targeted Palin herself.
  4. He would never have made those jokes about a female, left-leaning politician, let alone her children. You can imagine the outrage had Rush said something about the Obama girls, or if Treacher’s Ashley Biden joke was not merely in illustration of the double standard. There was hell to pay when Chelsea Clinton was maligned during her father’s campaigns/terms – and even much gnashing of teeth when it was suggested that as a grown woman she was being “pimped out” during her mother’s failed Presidential run.

That said………we do ourselves no favors by becoming “hysterical” over these things the way the left does. I know that in most cases it is an attempt to give as good as we got, but I don’t think that is always the best strategy in a PR battle. Think about how idiotic lefties appear when they bluster and foam at the mouth over every perceived slight, is that what you want for yourself? These were obviously comments that needed to be addressed, but not hammered over and over. Letterman needn’t be fired, though an actual, sincere apology would have been nice.
A-Rod having sex with Willow Palin would quite obviously be statutory rape (though pushing Letterman’s idiocy into giggles at statutory rape is a stretch), besides being disturbing on other levels. But statutory rape is quite a different animal from RAPE. To continue referring to Letterman’s comments as advocating the rape of a child trivializes the word, much the same way as moonbats calling Bush “Hitler” and Republicans “Nazis” trivialized the evil that was done by the Third Reich. It also has undoubtedly caused the child in question, whether Willow or Bristol, more harm than anything he said in the first place. We need to stand up for our principles, we need to defend smart, conservative women who are brave enough to step into the political arena, and we need to ensure everyone understands the limits of humor stop long before the family gets attacked. We also need to keep our heads and not risk becoming like the loonies on the left. We are bigger than that, we are smarter than that – and we need to stay true to who we are.
We also don’t need to give a jackass like David Letterman any more attention than he deserves. He can’t win on the humor front but he always has controversy. Since his Palin digs, and for the first time in a very, very long time, David Letterman won the ratings battle in his time slot.
It would behoove clear thinking lovers of humor to allow Letterman to fade into the obscurity he has been toying with for decades.
UPDATE: Found this quote

If the right goes after Letterman, they make him look big and themselves small,” says Mark McKinnon, a former campaign adviser to George W. Bush and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). “It’s win-win for Letterman.”

UPDATE: Regarding giving Letterman more attention than he deserves.
UPDATE: Here is Greg Gutfeld’s take.


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I Heart Red Eye

Someone searched my blog for “Red Eye” and “Levy” the other day – perhaps looking for more info on my late night crush, Andy Levy.
I don’t think I’ve blogged about it much because, really, what is there to say? You’ve seen him.
So, in the interest of full disclosure, and to satisfy whoever was lookin’, here is everything I remember putting online about it prior to tonight.
In order, my tweets (and a couple of replies):

VOXAZ: Ah, #RedEye, you had me till Creed. Guess I’ll miss @AndyLevy’s wrap up
VOXAZ: I need #RedEye to be on earlier – I never get any sleep anymore
VOXAZ: I can’t help it, I ♥ @AndyLevy #RedEye
ANDYLEVY: @VoxAZ You should see a doctor, stat. [OMG, he replied to me]
VOXAZ: I had a very “Fox”y day yesterday – a shout out from @HarrisFaulkner & a reply from @AndyLevy. (yes, I am a dork for pointing that out)
HISTERIN: @VoxAZ I’d kill for a reply from Andy Levy. :D [see, I'm not the only one]

So what is it? His deadpan delivery…his cute little eyebrows…his dogged pursuit of accuracy…? Whatever, he is my current ridiculous crush – until he isn’t anymore.
So, Mr Andy Levy, you’re on the list* – as soon as I figure out who I want to kick off, until I need your space for someone else. I’m very fickle with my celebrity infatuation ;-)
There ya’ go.
* He could take the “smart guy” spot from Ketterle, or the “funny/charming guy” spot from Fraser (he’s kind of let himself go), or the “great voice/entertainer guy” spot from Nichols (he went to rehab, addiction is not attractive) Wow, looks like I am going to have to redo the whole thing….


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From New York Magazine
In an article about Bill Kristol leaving the Times, they discuss who is currently at the Times, and who they might consider hiring – I found this quote:

David Brooks is the sort of Republican whose column a self-respecting liberal can read without wanting to hurl things in the aftermath

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How’s That Workin’ For Ya?

With newspapers cutting back and predictions of even worse times ahead, Rupert Murdoch said the profession may still have a bright future if it can shake free of reporters and editors who he said have forfeited the trust and loyalty of their readers.
“My summary of the way some of the established media has responded to the internet is this: it’s not newspapers that might become obsolete. It’s some of the editors, reporters, and proprietors who are forgetting a newspaper’s most precious asset: the bond with its readers,” said Murdoch, the chairman and chief executive officer of News Corp. He made his remarks as part of a lecture series sponsored by the Australian Broadcast Corporation.

readitall

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BWAHAHAHA

I heard Carl Cameron once answered his hotel room door in a full Wonder Woman costume
I’m not sayin’ it’s true, I’m not sayin’ it’s not. That’s just what I heard. And no, I won’t tell you who said it. Under the new standard of journalism, it’s plausible until proven otherwise. And I get to decide what constitutes proof.
Better get out in front of this one, Carl!

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eReader Version of the Newspaper

No real time to distill this, but I had an IM convo with a friend who works at the Republic. It was precipitated by this. Are there any papers out there delivering a version for the eReaders? (UPDATE: Apparently there are, according to the Kindle product page) Would you read it?
*****************************************
Vox: have they started doing anything like a version for electronic readers like the Sony one or even the Kindle?
Vox: I would subscribe to an eReader edition that popped up there every morning.
Vox: I like the traditional newspaper layout/feel – but not the traditional price/delivery method
Friend: i think it’d be too consuming on our part to try and port that over… we do have this thing called “e-edition
Vox: It would seem like the ‘layout’ portion would already be done, just like the print edition – but print it to a .pdf type version
Friend: it’d be hard to navigate from an electronic device, in my opinion
Friend: plus, the Republic wouldn’t supply it for free
Vox: same as a book
Vox: I would pay for it, especially if I could pick which sections I wanted
Friend: yeah, that’s not gonna happen either
Friend: besides, why would you wanna read yesterday’s news today?
Vox: so easy for AZ Republic to monetize with subscription fees and ads
Vox: because, like most people I know, I like the paper – I like layout, the leisure, the depth
Vox: odd that online stories, where there is really no size limitation, are so much shorter
Friend: personally, i would prefer the print product over reading it on a kindle
Friend: we’ve had this discussion
Vox: I like the print product, but I am only willing to pay for Sunday – and then only because of the ads
Friend: you can get just sunday
Vox: I do – though I usually pick it up instead of subscribing
Vox: case I am not in the mood one week
Friend: ah
Friend: we thank you for wanting it because of the ads
Vox: and the comics
Vox: kinda liking that e-edition
Vox: would like something like that (e-edition) that I could carry in a reader, take on the bus, say, or to an appointment, to lunch – awesomeness
Friend: well, when we hire enough people, i’m sure we’ll think about it
Vox: heh
=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=
Not long after, I found they did have a Kindle version. Sweet

Or, not so sweet

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The Palin Effect

She may have boosted ratings for SNL, but for CBS, not so much.
[NY Times article below]

(more…)

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The Upside of Economic Turmoil


Lots more Jenna Lee

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