Tag: television

On house guests

Television is an invention that permits you to be entertained in your living room by people you wouldn’t have in your home.” Sir David Frost, 1939-2013.

This quote by Sir David Frost landed in my inbox yesterday.  Sir David was an English journalist and television presenter who is best-known outside of the UK for the interviews he had with former US president Richard Nixon.  Sir David passed away on Saturday.

In one of the articles reporting on his death I read that he had had a great love for television as a communication medium.  One easily forgets that that is the purpose for which television (and radio) was originally invented – as a way to quickly spread information among large numbers of people; a way that even the illiterate could easily access.  Entertainment came later, probably as a way to generate funds through marketing.

Today entertainment (with the ever-present advertising) seems to have become the main point of television (if you’re in South Africa, between the shenanigans of our politicians and the incompetence of our two brand-new twenty-four hour news channels, that includes the news as well).  Entertainment, as Sir David said, in our living rooms.  One has to wonder about the people we let in to do that entertainment, though.

There are quite a few people from television (aforementioned politicians included) whom I wouldn’t allow in my living room in person. To find out who, click here

On how dumb we all were in the eighties

The wife and I have been revisiting our youth lately – we have been watching MacGyver.  Remember him?

macgyver-logoFor all my readers who were only born in the nineties (you poor dears), MacGyver was the epitome of cool a decade earlier.  If things seemed impossible,  if it was a situation that not James Bond, G.I. Joe or Chuck Norris could handle, they would send in MacGyver.  Be it an AI-controlled security system gone crazy, Amazonian army ants, a rebel army or a kid stuck down a well, MacGyver could solve the problem.  And he did this without radio-controlled invisible heat-seeking-missile-firing cars, cell phones or Facebook.  MacGyver needed only his trusted Swiss Army-knife (in those days you were still allowed to take them on planes) and whatever else happened to be lying around at the moment.  (And he had a mullet.  Just like Chuck Norris and Billy Ray Cyrus.  It was cool back then.  Like Chuck Norris and Billy Ray Cyrus.  Thank goodness some things change.)

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