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Blogger Mike Taylor said...

Your third video is not like your first two.

I'm actually a big James O'Brien fan most of the time, but there certainly are occasions (and these are two of them) where he completely loses the plot. When he stoops to mocking Rees-Mogg's use of the pronoun "one", you can see how out of control he is. His best work is done when he lets people speak an then picks up on the contradictions in what they've said — as in that marvellellous clip where he gently led a No-Deal Brexiter to the point where he was claiming that, given the right training, man could jump out of an aeroplane without a parachute and survive. These clips entirely lack that elegance, and as you rightly say do not show O'Brien in a good light at all.

However.

In the Corbyn clip, that's not what's happening at all. The interviewer is consistently polite an respectful, and at no point interrupts. All he does is ask for the answer to his one question. And Corbyn simply does not answer it. At all. In fact, the interviewer here is exemplary; and Corbyn is, sadly, laughable. (I remind you that I write this as one who registered as a Labour supported in order to vote for him to be leader. I am predisposed to like Corbyn.)

I don't think it's unreasonable that a politician, when politely asked a straightforward question, should answer that question.

Friday, 01 February, 2019

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

"Andrew would you like a double whiskey before driving home?"
"I'd love a cup of tea."
"Would you like a whiskey?"
"I said, I'd love a cup of tea."
"WOULD YOU LIKE A DOUBLE WHISKEY? CAN'T YOU ANSWER THE DAMN QUESTION."

Friday, 01 February, 2019

Blogger Mike Taylor said...

"Andrew would you like a double whiskey before driving home?"
"No thank you, but I'd love a cup of tea."
"Certainly! Here you are."

"Jeremy, do you honestly believe that Britain will be better off outside the EU?"
"As it happens, no I don't. But our policy is to honour the referendum result, which we think came about in part because some people feel that it's worth the economic loss. In any case, our goal is to shape the form of Brexit so that, unlike the Tory version, jobs are protected."
"Thank you very much."

Friday, 01 February, 2019

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

Clearly. But my point is that the "No thank you, I do not want whisky" is implicit in the "I would rather have tea." And the "I personally think we would have been better off if we had stayed" part is implicit in the "All that matters now is having the best economy possible after we leave" part. The questioner isn't seeking information: he knows that Corbyn supported remain in the referendum. I agree that Corbyn handles the question badly; my point is that, in an age when interviews are a form of gladiatorial combat, "not answering the question" can be the best strategy.

Friday, 01 February, 2019

Blogger SK said...

Didn't people used to be able to say, 'I'm not going to answer questions about hypothetical situations' and then the onus was on the questioner to explain either how their question wasn't hypothetical, or how it may be hypothetical but it's likely enough to be worth answering?

If we still lived in that world Corbyn could just have said that he's not going to answer a question about the entirely hypothetical situation where Britain voted to remain in the EU.

Actually to be honest Corbyn's best response would have been 'That's a counter-factual, and neither I nor you can possibly know what would be going to have been the case if history had turned out differently; there are far too many variables to be able to make those kinds of statements. those are matters for science fiction novelists, not politicians: we can only deal with the here and now.'

If you really want a clip of Corbyn coming off terribly you should go for the one where he's asked five times to condemn the IRA and five times refuses to do so before hanging up.

Friday, 01 February, 2019

Blogger Gavin Burrows said...

I believe in Britain news and current affairs shows were once not subject to rating scrutiny, as they were considered part of stations’ public service remit. But when everything became ‘marketised’ in the Nineties this protection fell and they were inevitably pushed into competition with other channels and other shows. And so the emphasis became entertainment over information, on generating verbal jousting and ‘event TV’. And that seems symptomatic of a broader trend.

And, while I try not to be one of those middle-aged people who randomly blames stuff on that new-fangled interweb, YouTube does seem an exacerbating factor. It’s where event TV goes to spawn. Time was, if you wanted to see a debate on, say, ‘Newsnight’ you needed to watch ‘Newsnight’. And that debate might last, say, fifteen minutes. And go back and forth in that time.

Nowadays you can just consult a three-minute excerpt on YouTube called something helpfully descriptive like ‘Jacob Rees-Mogg OWNS libtard’. And one thing to notice is if you watch those clips the titles often bear no relation to what occurs in them. Because you don’t even need to watch the three-minute clip. The label says all.

I suspect, however, there’s a more general cause with the two things above merely symptoms. And that’s the collapse of the social consensus and fracturing of society from Thatcherism on. In Ye Olde Days, your identity came largely from your social location, now you need to stitch it together for yourself. Outwardly dissimilar things, such as conspiracy theories, the rise of the far right and the fashion for post-modernism, enhance this.

So we get stuck with endlessly reiterating the all-too-familiar argument “no, saying climate change isn’t happening and the moon landings were faked by the Frankfurt School isn’t ‘just your option’, it’s just plain wrong, mate.” It’s like meaning itself has been privatised. So we get a Leave vs. Remain ‘debate’ largely phrased in terms of “out-of-touch metropolitan elite” versus “stupid know-nothing chavs”, which seemed to contain very little light amid the fury.

I have no ideas for how to get out of this, save to say I don’t buy the “they go low we go high” thing, and anyway didn’t like the deferential system which preceded it either. Maybe that was just the nationalisation of meaning.

I hope I’ve answered your question.

Friday, 01 February, 2019