A History of Television News Parody in America: Nothing but the Truthiness
By (Author) Curt Hersey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
1st August 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Parodies and spoofs: non-fiction
Popular culture
791.456
Hardback
296
Width 160mm, Height 227mm, Spine 29mm
621g
In this book, Curt Hersey explores the history of U.S. media, demonstrating how news parody has entertained television audiences by satirizing political and social issues and offering a lighthearted take on broadcast news. Despite shifts away from broadcast and cable delivery, comedians like Samantha Bee, Michael Che, and John Oliver continue this tradition of delivering topical humor within a newscast format. In this history of the television news parody genre, Hersey critically engages with the norms and presentational styles of television journalism at the time of their production. News parody has increasingly become part of the larger journalistic field, with viewers often turning to this parodic programming as a supplement and corrective to mainstream news sources. Beginning in the 1960s with the NBC program That Was the Week That Was, the history of news parody is analyzed decade by decade by focusing on presidential and political coverage, as well as the genres critiques of television network and cable journalism. Case studies include Saturday Night Lives Weekend Update; HBOs Not Necessarily the News; Comedy Centrals original Daily Show, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and The Colbert Report; and HBOs Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. Scholars of media history, political communication, and popular culture will find this book particularly useful.
A richly-detailed account of how news parody TV shows have become the watch-dog of TV journalism. Through archival research and close analysis of original programs, Hersey explores how these shows started with lampooning the evening news and, over 50 years, have grown to ridicule the willful misinformation so prevalent today. Hersey persuasively argues that news parody shows have gained cultural standing to speak on political issues. This is a terrific historical examination of how news parody shows developed their satirical marksmanship as they took aim at presidential politics.
-- Kathy Fuller-Seeley, University of Texas at AustinCurt Hersey is associate professor of communication at Berry College in Rome, Georgia.