(Please read or scroll to the bottom to see the actual record of this thread!)
Well, once more into the breach. There was 2011, there was 2012, and now there
is 2013. It is as if I just have not
become accustomed enough to swear words.
Well, the deal with this blog is that I let people respond
in whatever way they want, and I mostly won’t answer back. I mean, anyone who responds to this blog, at
least as it is so far, is more or less just passing through, and that person
would never check to see if I’d written anything in response, anyway (so what
is the point of responding even if I wanted to?—that’s web 3.0, if you like).
One could respond
to something I’ve written in my posts.
After all, I have said some things that are positive. On the
negative side, I feel I could have gone much further—gone all Rick Mercer, for
example, on Jian. But I did not. And I also said that, after two posts, I’d
pretty much said my piece, and that was a year and more ago and I have held my
word (anyone notice when they were writing?).
If I think I’ve got something really more burning to add, then maybe I
will, but right now I don’t see it. I
said I was done, and I meant it. I’ve
pretty much packed it in on Jian, because his twee egotism and wading-pool
depth have driven me away from a time and a station that I’d otherwise probably
frequent. I love those days when he ends
at 11.30 and something else substantive comes on and I hear it. I just don’t remember when they are. (Tuesday?
Thursday?)
I don’t know—maybe this is a new thread—why are Jian’s fans
so foul mouthed and incapable of writing words in English that aren’t four
letters? Does this say something about
the nature of the show and its content, its fans, its host. . . ? Is there something about Jian’s show that
*encourages* stunted as opposed to studied responses, profane as opposed to
profound ones? It could be. It is the Oprah of the morning, after
all. My two ancient posts probably
didn’t imagine Jian fans deliberating carefully over responses, but they
certainly also did not imagine a handful of swear words—I mean, if that was
what was envisioned, then I could have pulled that off myself, all by lonesome,
on twitter, or twit, with just 4 or 5 words totaling less than 20 letters.
I did write two posts about the Jian Ghomeshi show, one over
a year ago, one nearly a year ago; I’m astonished people are still reading
them. I guess it goes in cycles—one
person doesn’t like it and sends it to his/her friends, I get a few more
comments, etc. What I’m really struck by
is just how many positive comments I got and how they were more thoughtful and extended
than the fired-off expletives I got from the fans. I almost would have expected the reverse—that
people who agreed with me would say “you’re right,” and that those who
disagreed with me would say: “you’re wrong, you’re an idiot, and here’s why and
why and why.” But it didn’t happen.
The ever-incredibly depressing
Jian Ghomeshi treedux
I give some consideration to my posts, and when I post them,
I regard them as done—as done as I can make them. (I have edited or taken up or down one or two
posts, and I endeavour to update.) Therefore, if someone wishes to respond,
then s/he can fire away, and I won’t do any cheap Sun-style (or, of course, Jian-style editorializing and snip back
at people who themselves can’t really fight back—after all, I could delete the
posts. . .obviously I’m a lot more honourable than Jian in this regard, in that
I do not use an unassailable platform to get back at people who have disagreed
with me).
Now, to repeat, with my posts, I do update or edit
sometimes, even remove. But I don’t snip
back at people I know I can cut off (like Jian with his listener letters). If you want to say something, you’re free as
a bird in that regard and, as you can see, I won’t retort back in a jejeune, Sun, Jian kind of way. Notably, one thing I have studiously avoided
is foul-mouthed language. You sure don’t
post posts like I did eons ago with the expectation that you’ll draw a fan
base, but, of course, as the responses show, many did write in to support or
extend my comments, one even noting what anyone can note, that Jian’s fans,
unlike me, show a tendency to be strikingly foul-mouthed and monosyllabic. Whatever, it’s the web. You see something you don’t like, you launch
a few swear words and feel like you’re one big tough human. Sad.
You’d never see it from me, but it is what it is.
Anyway, I’ve kept silent, let others fire away for more than
a year now. I let others say whatever
they wanted to say, and I never took down a post or prevented anyone from
speaking. But since there is still the
occasional response, I’ll respond to what seem to me to be the most common
criticisms.
--You’re jealous of/you sure seem to know a lot about Jian’s
show.
Uh, duh, people, the first post was written in _September
2011_--in webtime, that’s like when dinosaurs roamed the plains. The other post was written at the beginning
of March, 2012. I said it in my last
post that I would be done with the issue, and I have been. I have not said anything more. And, yes, I have not listened to the show. A lot of time has passed since I wrote my
posts. I imagine some things on the show
have changed—how could they not have?
But no, I do not listen to Jian.
Anyone who says otherwise obviously didn’t look at the date of my posts
or the content of them; rather, they chose to *pretend* that I still did in
order that they could offer a few swear words.
Killer technique, dudes. But
since you imprecate, I’ll tell you about the last time I can really remember
hearing Jian. This would have been about
in late Oct./early Nov. 2012, I’m guessing, and I was coming home late and
stopping at a favourite store; Jian was interviewing a guy who I think did a
bio on Gary Bettman. I kind of listened
as I focused on the road (it still happens sometimes) and I more or less was
diverted. It was a lock-step,
paint-by-numbers, this-is-how-to-do-the-foxtrot with a cardboard cutout on the
floor your staff of 50 has made for you, and Jian wasn’t really into it, but,
whatever, it was there and I was diverted and had no complaints. Then, THEN, there was the giant sucking and
blowing interview with David Byrne, so famous for being famous for so many
thousands of years that even his impossible to find hits have become impossible
to find hits. Anyone see him on Colbert,
regaling the audience with how they had to use horns or something with this
girl who just happened along because nothing else worked for their computer
exchanges, and how they’d send each other garbled computer files and sometimes
get it wrong but. . .IT STILL WORKED!!!?
Well, that is Byrne in a nutshell, and it takes Jian to love that. Oh, to be a dilettante. Yes, yes, I’m really—no I mean really—envious
of that.
--You’re homophobic/racist.
When you can look around the whole blog, and of course, duh,
just look at the two old posts on Ghomeshi, and see pro-Kurt comments, and the
like, then you’re just being really, really stupid. But the point for many responders is to be
just that—to respond to one thing they don’t like and be done with it. Fine.
Next up? Race. Well, fine, but look around the blog, and you
will find charges like that equally untenable and comical. And to pretend that public and private organs
have not explicitly and overtly emphasized a particular target area, and
publicly declared freezes on others, is to let yourself in on a world of hurt,
legally speaking. Do such measures
necessarily militate against a meritocracy?
I doubt it. But should you fear
the debate?
--Jian brings in the young demographic!!
This is the oldest shibboleth in the world. It is so beyond tired I can’t even believe
it’s coming up again, but come up again it will, and it will, routinely, in the
Glib n’ Stale, say, every few
months. Ok, I’m game. Kids love Jian (??), so now CBC is just the
hottest thing in the land!!! And it’s
all b/c of Jian.
Yeah, sure. No, yeah,
suurrrre. Show us the stats, then. Jian DOES NOT bring in younger
audiences. Jian is a middle-aged man
with middle-aged interests. All he can
do or has ever done was appeal to a different kind of middle-aged
listener. Ever listened to one of his
“essays”? You may say: “but it’s pablum,
kids eat that!! No, kids hate it; it’s
just a different kind of senior who appreciates pablum. I’m really reluctant to bring something
that’s just personal and anecdotal into this blog and about CBC, but I can tell
you that the trajectory I’ve traced, and one that just about any other CBC
listener I can think of has traced, is that their listenership and loyalty to
the CBC has just gone down and down and down as the days have gone by. No, their kids aren’t listening to Jian. They’re finding hipper things their parents
are sometimes also into. Hey, I like
it—ultimately I support CBC, so if there’s lots of you out there who love Jian
(like the 66-year-old who hates me lately said), then good. But if CBC wants a “younger demographic,”
then it should try hiring a “younger host.”
It happens. All around the world,
it happens. Give it a try. I’d probably listen to him or her. Give me younger anyday.
--zr
{{4 years, 4 posts on this blog.
(I don't blame you for getting bored, but I've as much a right and a responsibility as anyone to be held to complete account for what I have written.)
The first post, the one that EVERYONE read:
The Ever-Incredibly Depressing Jian Ghomeshi of CBC’s Q -- 17/09/2011
The next and final post, that a few read.
The Ever-Incredibly Depressing Jian Ghomeshi of CBC’s Q -- redux 02/03/2012
3rd post (that a few more read):
My decision to at last address some of the so many comments I got about my *2* Ghomeshi posts (my antique internet attitude has always been that you can respond and say whatever you want to say, and I won't editorialize. However, after many comments, I decided to take up a few of the most common ones).
The ever-incredibly depressing Jian Ghomeshi treedux -- 11/02/2013
The recent post, that a few have read, now that he's really famous (and a post that's already starting to look really antique, like the once-powerful "Copps-May-Shelaghlah Swoonferit Theory of General Sexual Moral Infallibility"):
50 Shades of Jian Ghomeshi: Parsing Jian’s Infinite Self-Regard -- 28/10/2014}}
{{4 years, 4 posts on this blog.
(I don't blame you for getting bored, but I've as much a right and a responsibility as anyone to be held to complete account for what I have written.)
The first post, the one that EVERYONE read:
The Ever-Incredibly Depressing Jian Ghomeshi of CBC’s Q -- 17/09/2011
The next and final post, that a few read.
The Ever-Incredibly Depressing Jian Ghomeshi of CBC’s Q -- redux 02/03/2012
3rd post (that a few more read):
My decision to at last address some of the so many comments I got about my *2* Ghomeshi posts (my antique internet attitude has always been that you can respond and say whatever you want to say, and I won't editorialize. However, after many comments, I decided to take up a few of the most common ones).
The ever-incredibly depressing Jian Ghomeshi treedux -- 11/02/2013
The recent post, that a few have read, now that he's really famous (and a post that's already starting to look really antique, like the once-powerful "Copps-May-Shelaghlah Swoonferit Theory of General Sexual Moral Infallibility"):
50 Shades of Jian Ghomeshi: Parsing Jian’s Infinite Self-Regard -- 28/10/2014}}