m*****y 发帖数: 438 | 1 【 以下文字转载自 Seattle 讨论区 】
发信人: mewbaby (小神仙), 信区: Seattle
标 题: 华盛顿邮报已经报道鸡毛事件了,看来主流媒体可以开始报道了。
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Sat Nov 9 02:13:09 2013, 美东)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/reliable-source/wp/2013/11/
How Jimmy Kimmel’s China joke became an issue for the White House
It’s one thing for late-night comics to make jokes about the White House.
But Jimmy Kimmel managed to offend so many people with a joke about China
that the Obama administration is now officially compelled to respond.
On Oct. 16, Kimmel aired a segment of his Kids Table, where he asks small
children to address complex issues. The subject was China and how the U.S.
could solve the $1.3 trillion trade imbalance. “Kill everyone in
China,” answered one laughing 6-year-old.
Some viewers were so upset that they took their anger to the White House’s
“We the People” online initiative, where citizens petition the
administration to comment on various issues — and are promised a response
if at least 100,000 people sign on during a 30-day period.
“H.Z.” of Cedar Park, Texas started the Kimmel petition, asking for an
investigation of the show: “The kids might not know anything better,” it
read in part. “However, Jimmy Kimmel and ABC’s management are adults. They
had a choice not to air this racist program, which promotes racial hatred.
. . .This is the same rhetoric used in Nazi Germany against
Jewish people.” The petition reached 100,000 signatures by Thursday morning
, less than three weeks after the show aired, reports Deadline.
Of course, Kimmel manages to offend viewers on a regular basis. This week’s
outrage: Child psychologists are weighing in on his annual Halloween stunt
in which parents pretend to eat their children’s candy, then post the
tearful reactions on YouTube.
His China segment, however, really hit a nerve. A group of Asian Americans
picketed outside of Kimmel’s studio in L.A.; the host met with protestors
and issued an on-air apology. ABC pulled the clip from the website, edited
it out of any repeat broadcasts, and issued its own mea culpa: “We would
never purposefully broadcast anything to upset the Chinese community, Asian
community, anyone of Chinese descent or any community at large.”
We believe this is the first time the White House has been asked to respond
to a late-night comedy segment. Most petitions are more wonky: retire
daylight savings time, recognize acupuncturists as health-care providers,
prevent the FDA from regulating cigars.
The White House, as promised, will comment on the Kimmel flap — though it
may take awhile.
“Every petition that crosses the threshold will be reviewed by the
appropriate staff and receive a response,” White House spokesman Matt
Lehrich told us. “We do our best to respond to those petitions in a timely
fashion, but, depending on a variety of factors including the topic and the
overall volume of petitions, response times vary.” In other words — a few
weeks, maybe a few months. |
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