Bullshattuck Feeds

  • Add to My Yahoo!
  • Add to Google

Ads on Bullshattuck

  • Blogarama - The Blog Directory
  • Humor Blogs -  Blog Catalog Blog Directory
  • Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Blog Flux Directory
  • Humor Blogs - Blog Top Sites

B.S. & Television

Bullshattuck Chooses Katie Couric's New Successor

I like Katie Couric. Really. Some find her saccharine personality to occasionally (i.e. always) border on the annoying. I on the other hand find her to be charming and delightful, while simultaeously plucky and determined. She's a scrappy orphan in manolos. She's a Norma Rae, but with better legs. She's a never-give-up Hillary Clinton, except with emotions.

It probably broke the hearts of more than just a few people (most of whom are either two, three, or seven times my age) to learn of rumors that Katie, who was America's #1 morning host and is currently America's #3 evening host, may be replaced on the CBS Evening News after this year's presidential election. Replace Katie? What will she do? How will she survive?

Who cares. Let's discuss her potential successors!

The following list, it should be pointed out, is pure speculation. In other words, 100% fact.

POTENTIAL CANDIDATES FOR THE CBS EVENING NEWS' SOON-TO-BE-EMPTY ANCHOR CHAIR
(Sponsored by Pfizer: "Yep, we're still making craploads of money, don't worry")

*Condoleeza Rice: It's like getting a man and a woman for the price of one.

*Rosie O'Donnell: As everyone knows, the seventh time hosting a television show is the charm.

*Amy Winehouse: How fun would it be if the evening news was a drinking game? You take a shot every time the anchor herself appears to be drunk!

*Terry Gross: Only because no one actually knows what she looks like.

*Laura Bush: The evening news is already boring enough as it is, so Laura Bush will feel right at home.

*Britney Spears: Let's be honest - you would pay money to hear her stumble her way through the word "Fallujah." Or to see if she even shows up.

*Ann Coulter: Because 'tranny' is 'the new black.' What's that I'm told - Ann Coulter isn't a transexual? I have to be honest, I sometimes confuse "post-op transexuals" with "men in drag."

*Margaret Thatcher: But could anyone stand to even watch her host the news? Sorry, I was told that jokes about 'Margaret Thatcher being ugly' are still funny. I think I've been lied to.

*Heather Mills: Let me just state for the record that she loves the evening news, and is not just marrying it for its money.

*Nancy Pelosi: All the anchor has to do is just sit there and talk, without having to take any type of real action? In that case, she's ready for the job.

*Nancy Grace: The only caveat is that her contract states that she be allowed to discuss at least one celebrity's death per broadcast.

*Miley Cyrus: After conquering music, television, and live concerts, anchoring the evening seems like the next logical step. That is, if you can find a ticket anywhere.

*Arianna Huffington: Sure, you won't understand a single damn word she says, but at least you'll agree with her.

*Angelina Jolie: She's beautiful, she's rich, she donates time and money to countless charities, and now she hosts the evening news. Why? Because you needed another excuse to hate yourself.

*Tyra Banks: You know, the evening news is depressing enough as it is. Let's learn more about the actual news anchor.

The 2008 Oscars Review/Autopsy (Stolen from Ken Levine)

Today is a busy Monday morning for me. Not only do I have a billion things to do on this gloomy and rainy Monday, but I also do not have a single original opinion in my empty head this morning.

That having been said, I thought I would share the following 2008 Oscars Review/Autopsy, which I stole from Ken Levine with the Huffington Post. It made me laugh.

This was Hollywood's biggest night -- when we paid tribute to this year's excellence in motion picture Oscar campaigns. The two leading contenders for Best Picture were one with a baffling ending and one that puts half the audience into a coma. Those marketing boys know how to spin a yarn.

I'm sure for most viewers, these are what they thought were the five nominees for Best Picture: Something Something Country, Something Something Blood, Michael Jordan, that thing with whatshername, and one of those Knocked Up movies.

Was there a single winner the first hour from America? This was the United Nations general assembly with production numbers. Every speech was like Borat but not funny.

We ended the writers strike for THIS? Jesus! The best thing I can say about this Oscarcast is that there were no shadow puppets this year.

Had we not settled this is what the show would have been, and tell me you wouldn't have preferred it.

"Please welcome your host, ABC foreign correspondent, Joohee Cho!"

The "In Memoriam" tribute would be stretched so long that by the end someone new would have to be added.

"Singing the nominated song from Enchanted, here is ABC sideline reporter Bonnie Bernstein!"

"The theme this year: Stunt doubles. Those brave men and women who look like your favorite stars and tonight will get to BE them."

"The no-good son of a bitch nominees for best Original Screenplay are..."


At least that show might have had some surprises. All the locks won. Something Something Country swept the big awards. The only surprises were Marion Cotillard beating Julie Christie (and by the way, doesn't Edith Piaf clean up well? Wow!) and La Vie en Rose edging out Norbit for Best Makeup. Eddie Murphy was robbed AGAIN!

The flood watch was canceled prior to the show. We didn't get to see Anne Hathaway in her Jimmy Choo golashes.

But those inane red carpet shows went off as planned. My favorite was the local one for KABC in Los Angeles hosted by entertainment boot lickers, George Pennachio and Richard Roeper. When they're not gushing like school girls they're asking the most idiotic questions. George to Heidi Klum: "It's great to be at an event like this. How did YOU get invited?" To Amy Ryan he asked, "If you win will you be thanking the Teamsters?"

Richard Roeper to Tom Wilkinson about his role in Michael Clayton: "You had those big operatic scenes and were able to play way over-the-top." Surprisingly, Wilkinson took offense at that. George asked Sara Lawson if she beaded her dress herself? And serving as a fashion expert was Channel 7 Eyewitness News anchor, Michelle Tuzee. Just last week after reporting a bus plunge she complained that new Cypriot leader Demetris Christofias was a "nightmare in blue."

"Who are you wearing?" used to refer to dress designers. Now it means tattoo artists.

No Joan & Melissa Rivers this year. The red carpet equivalent of Mom & Norman Bates have run out of networks. Joan is doing a one-woman show in LA and for the first time ever on Oscar night is performing to more than 200 people.

The Hollywood cause this year: the campaign to close Guantanamo. Celebrities wore orange ribbons to show their tremendous concern for this issue. Ask them what last year's cause was. Most will say, "Uh...red ribbons?"

Red was definitely the color of the night. Every other gown was red. It was like being at the Nebraska Cornhuskers homecoming dance.

Jon Stewart was funny but you need someone bigger, more larger-than-life to host such a grand event. Seriously, Joohee Cho would have kicked ass!

Usually they start out with an actor category or two. Not this year. We were 40 minutes into the show before anything happened. Kinda like sitting through Something Something Blood.

Since Cate Blanchett played Bob Dylan, shouldn't she be nominated for Best Supporting Actor?

Even pregnant and showing, Jessica Alba still was the hottest woman in the room.

My daughter Annie has a good rule. No movie over three hours should be eligible for Best Editing.

It would have been interesting if Roderick Jaynes had won for editing Something Something Country. Roderick Jaynes is just a pseudonym. The Coen Brothers actually edited their own movie.

Katherine Heigl was a knockout!! Marilyn Monroe at her most radiant and lucid.

I'm so excited. For the first time ever, a movie I co-wrote, Volunteers was included in an Oscarcast. There was a two second clip of it in the "periscope and binoculars" montage. Between that and picketing, I really feel like I'm part of the industry now.

Ratatouille deserved not just Best Animated Picture but Best Picture as well. You didn't have to say you liked the movie just because critics did. You could actually like the movie yourself.

Diablo Cody came as Cleopatra: biker chick. I was happy she won for Best Original Screenplay. I liked the message Hollywood was sending: "No more Nancy Meyers comedies!"

How could the Academy nominate Lars and the Real Girl for writing and shun I Know Who Killed Me?

Tilda Swinton looked like Conan O'Brien. I was glad she won too. Maybe now she can afford two sleeves.

Al Gore and Cher have more Oscars than Johnny Depp.

How do I describe Cameron Diaz's dress? It's like if you tried to gift-wrap a vacuum cleaner.

Owen Wilson looked good and is apparently over that pesky suicide deal. They should have had him intro the "In Memoriam" tribute. By the way, they forgot Brad Renfro.

Oh no! Jerry Seinfeld pimping that Goddamn bee movie AGAIN?! Make it stop!! At least in the "hilarious" montage they didn't show My Girl where the lead character dies from a bee sting.

Daniel Day-Lewis finally won his Oscar for Gangs of New York. When he someday shuttles his mortal coil I'm sure the cause of death will be: choked on some scenery.

If you want to vote for the
11-year-old girl from the August Rush song - 1-866-IDOLS 04.

I guess Nicole Kidman couldn't decide which necklace to wear so she wore them all. She looked like a Christmas tree with tinsel put on by a drunk.

My guess is the three songs from Enchanted canceled each other out. For Kristen Chenowith's number there were dancers and acrobats flying everywhere, a bridge, flowers, props, costumes. But for the star of the film, Amy Adams -- a bare set and a dress she couldn't move in. Nice.

I was thrilled however when Best Song went to Glen Hansard and Marketa Inglova for Once. And the highlight of the night was letting Marketa come back and deliver her acceptance speech after the music had pushed her off. Watch. Cuba Gooding Jr. is going to want to come back now. There's 50 more people he needs to thank.

The speeches I like are those rare few with genuine emotion. Marion Cotillard's and surprisingly, Diablo Cody's. She did not have to be censored even once.

I also was moved by 98-year-old, Robert Boyle, who received an honorary Oscar for working on hundreds of great, classic movies and Dragnet.

Penelope Cruz was smashing as usual but I'm not sure about furry black gown. She looked like Barney Rubble 's prom date.

Every year it's the same thing. The five nominees for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Documentary are four war movies and one about dance.

The winner of Best Documentary was from Austria and noted that many great film directors like Billy Wilder had to flee that country because of the Nazis and as luck would have it, his movie is about the Nazis. What is he talking about? Every Austrian movie is about the Nazis! Along with every book, every article, every children's song.

How'd you like to be in Paul Thomas Anderson's limo after the show? The director of Something Something Blood is probably going postal. "They don't understand my brilliance! My genius! I try to elevate the movie-going rabble! Give them art! Give them beauty! Take them to worlds the ingrates have no business seeing. And do they appreciate me? Do they at least acknowledge that I have been touched by the hand of God? No! They humiliate me in front of billions of people. They give away my award -- MY award -- to two hicks! Oooh, some trailer trash person finds a suitcase of money. That's real original. And bad guys are after him. Who's ever seen that before? Meanwhile, I make a masterpiece. Look at these ads the studio took out. What more proof do you want than that?! Oh, the hell with it. Just take me to the Vanity Fair party! I can drink myself to death there... What? Canceled?! Why? Writer's Strike? What the hell?!"

Remember when Al Pacino and Clint Eastwood and Julia Roberts and Meryl Streep and Robert DeNiro used to be at the Oscars? Now it's Miley Cyrus, Dwayne "the Rock" Johnson, Heidi Klum (how DID she get invited?), Jonah Hill, and Seth Rogen.

It's just not the same. It's just not as good. And it's still just as long.

But we watch. Every year we watch. I guess we just can't resist a good Oscar campaign.

Return of Stewart and Colbert and Not Bullshattuck

So I suppose I've accepted the fact that during the holidays, I am simply too fat and too lazy to post much to my blog. It's ironic, isn't it: I have more time now that I'm not in school for the next few weeks, and yet having more free time means I don't find time to blog. Go figure.

But in the meanwhile, while you wait for me to find my inspiration again to daily blog...

GOOD NEWS: Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert will be returning to television on January 2nd!

BAD NEWS: But without their writers!

In a joint statement, Stewart and Colbert said:

"We would like to return to work with our writers. If we cannot, we would like to express our ambivalence, but without our writers we are unable to express something as nuanced as ambivalence."

Now you can finally watch someone perform comedy with a gun pointed at their head - the way it's always meant to be.

The Second Richest Gay Mormon After Bruce Bastian

Well not really.

But nevertheless, congratulations to Todd Herzog, the self-proclaimed gay Mormon who won Survivor: China this last weekend.

The most that I - also a gay Mormon - have ever won, is the occasional disapproval of friends and family.

I didn't need to go on TV for my prize.

November 12th - Whats New(s) With Bullshattuck

KATIE

It was recently announced that as many as 500 writers for CBS News could soon be striking, in addition to the thousands of other strikers who have been on the picket lines for a week now.

According to the Associated Press, "the writers, employees of CBS News television and radio, are expected to overwhelmingly approve a strike authorization."

Upon hearing the news that the people responsible for writing her nightly newscast would soon be striking, Katie Couric selflessly announced that she would cover the void left by her writers - with her massive mouth.

Skatiecouricwritersstrikelarge

-bullshattuck

Bullshattuck Takes Cover, They're On the Attack!

Protect yourself from them! There are HUNDREDS of them! First Oprah, then the world!

Bullshattuck Supports the Writers Guild of America

BULLSHATTUCK'S OFFICIAL STATEMENT ON THE WRITERS GUILD OF AMERICA'S STRIKE

As a not-very-good writer, I empathize with the 12,000 writers who always seem to be on the short end of a getting-the-shaft stick, and agree with the Writers Guild of America's decision to strike. The production companies are being uncharacterisitically greedy, and I strongly believe that writers should be paid much more - they are after all, the flesh and blood and pen juice of most television shows that use words. Said striking writer Zoe Green, who recently sold her first pilot, "This will be very tough for me personally, but I 100 percent support our cause. I'm going to be struggling on $6,000 until this ends." Writers are being forced to survive off a mere $6,000?! What do the production companies think they are - animals? Animals who write television shows? I totally know where Zoe Green's coming from - a mere $6,000 is only a year's worth of my rent. Barbaric!

The strike has been supported by several celebrities and comedians - including Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Tina Fey, Jon Stewart, Jay Leno, and Ellen DeGeneres among many others - and anything a celebrity supports, I support (i.e. scientology, 2-day work days, free-range hedonism, etc).

As a sign of my solidarity, I would like to announce that I, Ryan "Bullshattuck" Shattuck, will no longer write for television until the writers' strike ends. Sure, some may argue that I've "never actually written for television" and "Hollywood wouldn't hire Bullshattuck if he personally offered a prostitute carrying a plastic baggie of cocaine in her gold-plated teeth to every producer available." Regardless, my sign of solidarity does not make or accept excuses.

These writers need my help - and by my choosing to not write for television until the strike ends, I'm directly helping them in their efforts. It's the same principle, if you will, to the way your mother would tell you when you were young to eat your vegetables because children in Africa are starving. CAUSE: I stop writing for television (even if I never technically "started") - EFFECT: writers in Hollywood receive my help. CAUSE: You eat your vegetables in the United States - EFFECT: children in Africa no longer starve. Which is how the cause-and-effect principle works.

Now if you don't mind, I'm going to excuse myself as there are some reruns on television that need my watching. They're not going to watch themselvs.

Bullshattuck Retracts His Support for Barack Obama

A wag of the finger at Barack Obama.

Picture_2

I learned today that supporters for Barack "I'm so black, I'm starting to peel" Obama were the ones responsible for keeping All-American Stephen Colbert off the ballot in South Carolina. I have to admit, I'm terribly disappointed that Barack "I'm so sincerely serious, I can make a scowl look like a feature story about Lindsay Lohan on Entertainment Tonight" Obama's campaign would stoop so low. Really, what is he afraid of?

Could it possibly be because, as the Harvard Crimson points out, "...it took his [Barack Obama's] Facebook group, “Barack Obama: 1,000,000 Strong for Barack” eight months to garner 381,000 members. Colbert’s had 750,000 in less than a week?"

Could it possibly be because his sense of humor is as sharp as a piece of wet cardboard, as seen here in his cameo on Saturday Night Live?

COULD IT POSSIBLY BE BECAUSE BARACK "I'M SO AMERICAN I MAKE BALD EAGLES LOOK LIKE ISLAMOFASCIST TERRORISTS" OBAMA IS AFRAID THAT STEPHEN COLBERT WOULD ACTUALLY BEST HIM IN THE POLLS?

Geez. Listen up Barack "I'm so presidential, I... uh... probably don't want to be Hillary's vice-president" Obama, how about next time you leave far-more-popular-than-you Stephen Colbert alone, and try picking on something or someone a little less adorable and a little less helpless.

You know, like a box of kittens.


...several months later...

What's that you say? It was Barack Obama who won the Democratic nomination? As it turns out, I've ALWAYS been a big supporter.

Don't Throw Out Your TV Yet

(This article was published in the
September 13th, 2007 issue of the The Daily Utah Chronicle)



The following article is brought to you by CBS: "Pioneering the Anti-reality of Beautiful Women Marrying Unattractive Fat Men since 1998 (i.e. the year 'The King of Queens' aired)."

Everyone's heard, at some point in his or her life, the more-pretentious-than-Frasier phrase "I don't own a television." This phrase always ends in "television" and not "TV;" a person too pretentious to own a television is most likely too pretentious to abbreviate.

I bring this up because I recently heard a potential employer proudly declare in a job interview -- for a job I didn't want -- that he did not own a TV. Would I have wanted to be employed by an individual who not only ostentatiously informed others of his refusal to own a television, but was just slightly less morally superior than all 22 episodes of "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip?"

I'm not blind to the fact that millions, if not hundreds, of people have made the personal decision of not owning a TV. Having once worked for the Nielsen TV Ratings, the company responsible for tallying America's favorite TV shows (including all 12 versions of CSI), I definitely understand why many people have become disillusioned with owning a TV. Why own a TV, considering that America was unable to feign enough interest in "Arrested Development" for more than three years, despite "Cops" showing no signs of slowing after 19? Why own a TV when the top rated television show of last year was the intellectually stimulating "American Idol," while "Nova" placed somewhere between "Masterpiece Theatre" and a bowl of stewed okra?

We've all heard the reasons for not owning a TV: "TV is too manipulative, whereas NPR doesn't have cliffhangers." "Kill your TV, or at least send it to serve in Iraq." "Nothing is good on TV, or at least hasn't been since both Frank Sinatra and 'Seinfeld' decided to expire on the same day."

In summary, TV must be bad.

But wait just a red hot commercial break! Is TV really as morally vacuous as "The Jerry Springer Show" and as worthless as "My Mother the Car"?

Philo Farnsworth, who invented the TV, was once recorded as saying to his son Kent, "There's nothing on (television) worthwhile...and I don't want it in your intellectual diet." The man responsible for the invention that made it possible for TV dinners, "The Surreal Life," and "The Rachel," appeared only once on television, on "I've Got a Secret." Despite this initial reluctance and disappointment with television, Farnsworth said to his wife years later, after being emotionally moved while watching Neil Armstrong land on the moon, "Pem, this has made it all worthwhile."

This was of course followed up with "Pem, I want my MTV."

Television was preceded by radio, which was preceded by newspapers, which was preceded by gossipy neighbors. While there's no question that the human race existed comfortably for millennia before the inception of the television, it has brought with it the ability to experience and communicate as has never been possible. Because of television, the human race has been privy to witness incredible historical events, such as the first human on the Moon, The Beatles playing on "The Ed Sullivan Show," the fall of the Berlin Wall, Edward R. Murrow's criticism of the Red Scare, the international Olympic Games, inaugurations of U.S. Presidents, and Cher winning the Oscar for "Moonstruck."

While television has recently come under fire for a decline in quality, it also continues to offer a wide variety of respectable and educational programs. Roscoe Orman, the actor who plays Gordon on the television show "Sesame Street," recently gave a lecture in Salt Lake City where he cajoled the virtues of his television show, including the astounding fact that "Sesame Street" has educated more than 75 million children. One cannot discredit all television without at least acknowledging that many educational and informative television shows -- on both PBS and other networks -- have aired over the past decades.

The television may not be perfect, but like food, love, and the Internet, the key is self-control. The solution is not ridding oneself of television, but rather being more particular about the time spent viewing and pragmatic with the content watched. Because of the potential television has in allowing one to become more educated, participate in historical events and become part of an international dialogue, one simply needs to be aware of one's viewing habits.

At the very least, watching television is an excuse to make references to "American Idol," "Arrested Development," "Cops", "CSI: Dallas," "The Ed Sullivan Show," "Frasier," "Friends," "I've Got a Secret," "The Jerry Springer Show," "The King of Queens," "Masterpiece Theatre," "My Mother the Car," "Nova," "See It Now," "Seinfeld," "Sesame Street," "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip," and "The Surreal Life."

After all, how else does one discover who shot J.R.?

August 12th - Whats New(s) with Bullshattuck

RETIRED

Merv Griffin, the mastermind behind the game shows 'Jeopardy' and 'Wheel of Fortune' died today at the age of 82. Griffin, who passed away from prostate cancer, had a long illustrious career ranging from radio singer and television producer to real estate developer and talk show host. His most popular game shows, 'Jeopardy' and 'Wheel of Fortune,' have each been on the air for more than two decades and have since become a staple of television pop culture. Millions of retirees the world over have come to depend on tuning in to 'Wheel of Fortune' at 7:00, followed by 'Jeopardy' at 7:30, weekdays.

In honor of Griffin's lifelong dedication to television, it was recently announced by the White House that the time currently known as "seven o' clock" will officially be renamed "Merv Griffin o' clock," weekdays.

-bullshattuck