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Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,207 ✭✭✭miralize


    Incredible interview with Snowden last night.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 367 ✭✭qweerty


    Just watched the clip from the most recent episode on Youtube. Over half an hour long and with an interview with Edward Snowden.

    Echoing some of the criticisms above, I thought the switching between jokes and serious content felt contrived and uncomfortable. The jokes were pretty lame too.

    Up until the "junk pics" section, I thought the Snowden interview was really weak. The style of LWT interviews is similar to that of Oliver's interviews on the Daily Show and to Stephen Colbert's. But whereas it worked when Oliver was a "correspondent", I don't think it does when he switches from being the straight-man host to being the brash interviewer. It works for Colbert because he retains that brash persona in both roles.

    I'm not a supporter of Snowden's, but it seems patently obvious to me that a whistleblower (especially one handling such complex data as Snowden did) is not obliged to ensure that everything they share is absolutely and entirely handled properly; merely that they make a genuine effort. Oliver chided Snowden for the mistake of the New York Times, possibly the most well-resourced newspaper in the world.

    Maybe he'd requested that the topic not be discussed, but I'd have liked to have known how Snowden felt about him having (to at least some extent) aligned with a country whose relations with America and the West are fast deteriorating.

    The "junk pics" section was more impressive. And Oliver landed the line of the century when he said, "No, you should absolutely not [share the document he was holding with the camera]. And it's unbelievable that you would do that. Actually, it's entirely believable." (Simultaneously mocking the NSA and Snowden). But I felt the playing of ignorant vox pops was not as revealing as the show implied. And the overall implication, in essence, was that Snowden and his media partners should have spun a compelling narrative in order to engage the public. Journalistically, entirely unethical.

    It should be noted that the interview was not linear - i.e. footage was, for whatever reason, edited (sometimes mid-answer).

    And last, when will Oliver admit that his show sees itself as being more than comedy? He always becomes incredulous when it is put to him that his show is news-based. But he seems blind to the fact that anything that presents itself as interpreting news events is a "news show". It's either satire or really weak comedy that uses current events as a skeleton. Take your pick! He says in this interview that the only responsibility he feels is to make people laugh. They gives rise to some worrying implications, IMO: would he be willing to greatly misrepresent for the sake of comedy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,074 ✭✭✭Tipsy McSwagger


    What the hell is going on with last nights episode?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 375 ✭✭NinetyForNone


    What the hell is going on with last nights episode?
    As in showing the Sex Education clips instead of House of Commons speeches?
    Think it's some sort of copyright thing...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 37,264 ✭✭✭✭Penn


    As in showing the Sex Education clips instead of House of Commons speeches?
    Think it's some sort of copyright thing...

    They've mentioned several times before (in the US version) that legally in the UK they can't show clips from the House of Commons in comedy shows in the UK. So when they air Last Week Tonight in the UK, parts of the show where they're showing clips from the UK Parliament (in the US) have to be replaced with something else (when aired in the UK). I think before they've shown clips of Gilbert Gottfreid reading erotica or stuff like that.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 203 ✭✭FlicFlak


    Sorry for ressurecting an old thread, but wondered whats going on with the time scheduling for this series?

    They used to show it at 9 o'clock on a Monday night, now its getting later and later every week, last nights episode was on after midnight! And its not like anything new or good is replacing it at 9, just repeats of other things.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 444 ✭✭fman


    Yep a weird one, slipping and slipping. I was suspicious they were trying to almost quietly dump it but it was still simulcast on showcase last night.

    From what I've seen of sky recently I wouldn't even be surprised if it's just down to them being slow to get the episode ready to air. In the past they have slipped on having episodes available in UHD on the same day as advertised with the reason often cited "it takes time with a bigger file".

    I know it's comedy central, but their scheduling of the daily show is bizarre too. All showings are out in the 3-4 am slot. Sometimes the show is available on demand before that but not consistently.

    Overall I wonder if it's a legal fear. Last week tonight has had some cuts (mostly over the royal family) . The later time giving them the option to drop the show last minute without leaving a hole in the schedule at 9pm.

    All just theories. I'm sure if we all contacted sky we would get different answers or one blanket scheduling reasons excuse.



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