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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

West Wing Compared to House of Cards

We recently began watching the old series West Wing and have found it as delightful and uplifting as when we watched the series when it was new. We’re about half way through it.



Then we began to hear about a modern equivalent on a talk show, The House of Cards on Netflix starring Kevin Spacey. We have watched several episodes of it now as well. It has a great cast with superb acting, good writing, and a unique format with the lead character turning to the audience revealing what is really on his mind, as he cajoles, manipulates, and is involved in all types of political intrigue.



When we watch West Wing we feel good and positive and feel some idealism of what good folk can do as they seek to lead a democratic country. When we watch The House of Cards we feel a bit bummed out and depressed and cynical about the country as though we were not cynical about it already.

I checked other web sites and News vendors and find that my observations are widely shared, that The House of Cards is indeed very cynical and reflects and perhaps promotes the cynicism our citizens have about our do nothing congress and its inability to aid it citizens.

Both shows have Democratic administrations but today Democrats, in my opinion, have become Republicans and there are no Republicans left, in the historical, traditional ideological sense. For that reason I might vary from the norm and conclude that perhaps West Wing is more realistic than The House of Cards in a limited sense.

West Wing had the premise that the White House could do something, that idealism could work in the right hands of smart intelligent people. As I have heard said, (perhaps by Clinton) that if you ask most White House staffers about their job they will say that no work was ever as hard as their work at the White House and no work was as rewarding.

The House of Cards seems to harken back to the days of Lyndon Johnson who was a political manipulator par excellence. I was not a great fan of LBJ but I do admire what he accomplished in the area of civil rights, and social programs, which he likely knew would cost him the presidency.

In addition to others who have compared these two programs I think there is another and more significant influence that is not bought out in either program (though I would not it would have been as relevant or blatant in the West Wing days.)

Both programs deal with the power of the White House and of Congress to get things done, whether for good or ill. I think that is a false premise. It is especially false today and has its origin beginning with the Reagan administration and deregulation. My premise is that real power is not found in our legislative bodies but in the powers that control them, that has bought them lock stock and barrel. Big money now runs the country and congress and the White House plays ball with them or they cannot get elected. For example, in The House of Cards congressmen write legislation to their purposes. My guess is that today they don’t write legislative bills, they are written for them by lobbyists paid by the wealthy interests.

This was made blatantly clear with the Citizens United decision of the Supreme Court when corporations were declare people and gave rise to unlimited money gifts to campaigns of those running for office who did they bidding.

As a result of this we live in a country that remains productive but where half the wealth and benefits of our economy go to 400 people. And then there are those wealthy who have the audacity to claim rich people have more because they work harder. We live in a country that turns its back on the working poor by not having a living minimum wage that has kept up with the economy. With cutbacks in education, we saddle those who aspire to upward mobility with backbreaking debt that trap them for a lifetime. Families and individuals are working harder than ever but receiving less and less of the economic pie.

We live in an oligarchy, government by the rich and for the rich. We have to get a whole lot smarter and more active if we are to reclaim democracy, otherwise the American experiment, as Alex de Tocqueville, wrote about my be a short lived experiment.

I have hope for this country but it is not based on the wealthy suddenly developing a social conscience, though a few do show that or average citizens becoming aware and organized by their own efforts to combat the power elite.




My hope perhaps is well described by Parker Palmer, a broken heart. A heart that is not broken and cannot be healed, but a heart that is broken open to become more aware of other broken hearted people who can unite in their brokenness to work to make things better. Of necessity this will have to come from the ground up.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Amount of Advertising Allowed on TV

“All television is educational television. The question is: what is it teaching?” ~ Nicholas Johnson

“Television has a changed a child from an irresistible force to an immovable object.” ~ unknown



First we will begin with children who what on average more than 3 hours of TV each day. These programs are limited to 12 minutes per hour of advertising during this time. We also note that the FCC (Federal Communications Committee: created in 1934) requires that commercial TV station provide 3 hours of core/educational programs each week between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. The programs need to be at least 12 hours in length.

Now as too regular TV regulations on advertising, I can’t find any. Some think it may be between 10 ½ to 12 minutes per hour, but I can’t find any data or law to back that up.

TVs were invented in the 1920s but did become common until of 1950s. Like radio, it was regulated by the FCC and still is. Stations had to have licenses and still do. And they had: an obligation to serve the interest of the community. This obligation requires the licensee to 'ascertain the needs of the community' and then provide program service to foster public understanding of those issues. How the licensee provides programming to serve the needs [was] left to the licensee's discretion.

New rules were adopted in 1972 for cable TV.

It would seem that since TV and radio are privileges granted to stations that should be regulated by the regulatory agency it terms of time limits on advertising.

As to actual regulations for the time per hour allowed for advertising I can’t find any. Perhaps there are none and never were. What we do know is that today typically a ½ hour program has 22 minutes of content and 8 minutes of advertising (6 min. for national and 2 for local). Or, in 10 hours of TV you get about 3 hours of advertising which is about double what it was in the 1960s when a typical commercial of 30 seconds to 1 minute.

Growing up I thought it was an FCC rule that there were on 3 minutes per half hour or hour that was legal. But it appears that was just myth.

The idea of radio and TV was that it existing and was licensed to provide for the public welfare. It seems today that it is more just an example of unregulated who can get the most bucks standard.
* * *
Now to another related area.

Have you ever tried to compare how much time on an usual TV news program is spent on hyping coming news versus the actual news itself. Now I haven’t sat down with a stopwatch and figured this out nor can I find any source that has, but my guess it would be about 75% hype and 25% actual news, and that might be generous. Or in mobile news, from the Internet etc., it is estimated at 92% hype [McKinsey and Company.] With this said, I must admit that I spend most of my time searching for news on the Internet than TV as I can research it better for accuracy and ignore most of the hype.

We typically watch Good Morning America (GMA) for our news. It looks and acts more like a social club that a news organization, even though we like the characters. But news? “This is what we will report next hour” “ this is what we will report, next half hour”, “this is what we are about to report,” “stayed tuned for our news on…”… then the story is about a half minute long.




I guess that is enough grumping for today.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Funding of the Attack Ads on Mary Burke

If you are watching TV at all currently it is hard to miss the attack ad on Mary Burke. These ads are being sponsored by the RGA (Republican Governors Associations) and cost in the 6 figures area according the Associated Press.

The attacks include Burke outsourcing jobs to China. The company she led was Trek Bicycle Corp, which employs about 1,000 worker here in Wisconsin. It also pumps in over $100 million into the state economy yearly. The also said she drove jobs away whereas the data shows that when she was the Secretary of Commerce, 84,000 more jobs were created than under Walker.

The RGA has raised $50.3 million in comparison to it Democratic counterpart which has raised 28 million. So where does that money come from? Surprise the Koch hedge fund kicked in a million, the Reynolds Tobacco Company, and Health insurer Wellpoint along with Koch industries all chipped in a half million each. Now I’m none too thrilled about Democrats getting this money either, just more outside interests messing about in politics and raising money without limits.

Related to this are things that the CBO (Congressional Budget Office; nonpartisan) reports that some seem to Republicans ignore.

First minimum wage, which the Republicans say will cost jobs, they say 500,000 or a million jobs. The CBO says, “Real income would increase, on net, by $5 billion for families whose income will be below the poverty threshold under current law, boosting their average family income by about 3 percent and moving about 900,000 people, on net, above the poverty threshold (out of the roughly 45 million people who are projected to be below that threshold under current law).

Next is the immigration reform palaver. The bill that passed the Senate would reduce the deficit by $158 billion from 2014 to 223 and in the next decade another $685 billion.

Though under G.W. Bush Republican extended emergency unemployment benefits they don’t want to do it now. This would cost us another 200,000 jobs according to the CBO.

The Democrats worked the Affordable Care Act over to be fully funded and to shrink the deficit. Yet Republicans keep saying it will make the deficit worse. This is what the CBO finds: What Is the Impact of Repealing the ACA on the Federal Budget?
Assuming that H.R. 6079 is enacted near the beginning of fiscal year 2013, CBO and JCT estimate that, on balance, the direct spending and revenue effects of enacting that legislation would cause a net increase in federal budget deficits of $109 billion over the 2013–2022 period.
It will also cut the unemployment rate.

Finally Republicans insist that the stimulus program did not work even before it was enacted. The vast majority of economists believe it reduced unemployment: The CBO figures released Tuesday estimate that the stimulus package raised the gross domestic product this past quarter by 0.3 percent-1.9 percent.

The CBO report provided a broad range of the estimated number of full-time jobs created because of the stimulus — from a low of 500,000 to a high of 3.3 million jobs.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

We Need a Protection Plan for our Human Servants

”Hey Patch and Paw,” meowed Lamont, “come here. You’ve got to see this.”

Patch and Paw wandered into the laundry room where Lamont was standing on the dryer looking out the window. “Gee, this place is a mess,” said Paw.

“Yeah, said Patch, “and what’s with these buckets in the closet? Ooh what a pig sty.”


“Oh,” said Lamont, “the buckets are there to catch the water dripping from the upper part of the closet door. See, I knocked one over so you can see it better. I think that is why Meugh is outdoors. You’ve just got to see what he’s doing.”


Peering around each other the cats tried to observe Meugh. “What are those metal things,” asked Paw?

“They are ladders. One is a step ladder, which apparently wasn’t tall enough for Meugh, so he got a second ladder called an extension ladder.”

“What for?” asked Paw.

“As near as I can figure,” replied Lamont, “it has something to do with the water dripping into the buckets. Look, see him toss hunks of ice off the roof. Also there is water dripping off to roof as well. I think it is called an ‘ice jam.’”


“Okay, what are those white hockey pucks he’s tossing of the roof,” asked Patch?

“Those are called ‘roof melt’,” answered Lamont. “Read the bucket they are in. He is tossing them up on the roof apparently to melt the ice. A little bit ago he lugged up 50 pounds of rock salt to do the same thing.”

“Look at him go up the extension ladder with a small axe and the box of roof melt,” said Lamont. “Holy Mother of Cats, the ladder is slipping down the roof with Meugh flailing away. Oh, it stopped. From the reflection on the window on the Schacteau I think I can deduce why. His arm is stuck between the ladder and the roof, stopping the ladder, which is now at a very sharp angle. I wonder what he’s doing to do now.”

All cats peered out the window and the reflections and saw Meugh slowly pull his arm out from under the ladder and then slowly, very slowly and cautiously creep down the ladder.

“Wow! He made it!” exclaimed Patch. “I thought he was a gonner for sure on that maneuver. “Now what’s he doing?”

“For heaven’s sake,” mutter Patch, “He’s putting the extension ladder back up on the roof again. And the deck is very slippery with melted snow and water.”


“Why,” exclaimed Paw?

“Seems obvious to me,” said Lamont, “He’s going up again. Yep, he checked the rubber feet on the ladder and now he’s going up again with his axe and roof melt. I don’t like the looks of this.”

“Oh no,” cried Patch, “the ladder fell down again, all the way this time. Splat! Where’s Meugh?”

“Well,” explained Lamont, “as you might expect, he didn’t levitate, he came down with it. Look he’s laying right on top of the ladder.”

“He seems very quiet,” continue Paw. “As a matter of fact he doesn’t seem to be moving, just laying there. Seems like a funny time to take a nap.”

“He moved,” holler Patch. “Not much but he moved. His mouth seems to be moving more. I think I’m glad I can’t hear what he saying. He’s rolling off the ladder. He’s up on one knee…now on both knees and both hands. I think he’s trying to stand…yep…oh good he made it. Meugh is upright, but he looks funny and seems to be holding and touching various parts of his anatomy.”

“I don’t believe it, and really don’t believe it,” gasped Lamont. “I always thought Meugh was pretty smart but he’s putting both ladders up again. Surely not, he couldn’t”

“Yes he is,” said Patch, “He’s going back up the step ladder this time. That’s an improvement anyway and he is tossing more white hockey pucks; what did you call it, oh roof melt, on the ice.”

“Ah, he’s coming down again,” Paw added. “Coming down pretty slowly, but he’s coming down. He’s walking around a bit, but he seems to be limping, limping with both legs. I don’t think I’ve ever seen that before. There he goes into the house. I think it would be prudent not to get too close to him right now.”

“Right,” exclaimed Patch and Paw in unison.

“I wonder if he is going to see Mewreen,” pondered Paw.

“I would imagine,” replied Lamont. “He likely needs to check on her broken foot.”


“You know,” inquired Patch, “I wonder if you can get human servant insurance. I’m beginning to wonder about those two. They’re not exactly spring chickens. You’d think they would take better care of themselves so they can take care of us.”

“You know it is supposed to be warmer tomorrow, about 40 degrees, like today, “said Lamont. “Do you suppose he’ll be up there again whacking at the ice? And then it supposed to get cold and snowy and icy again. Surely he won’t go up there again.”


“I wouldn’t count on it,” said Paw with a knowing cat yawn. “Humans, go figure.”

Cat Story Addendum (accent on Dum)

While Meugh was sleeping Lamont came up to him and whispered in his ear, "You know Meugh, there is a washer and a dryer about 10 to fifteen feet from you ice jam. If you'd attach a hose to the washer hot water tap, you could wash that pile of ice down fairly quickly and not destroy your body in the process." Hugh awoke  in a zombie like trance state a bit later and went downstairs and got a hose and connected it to the hot water tap to the washer. Our ice jam is now floating down the street following a curious but effective path. It's good to have a smart cat in the house. I'm sure he will wake up soon and wonder where that ice went.

The Shadow knows!