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News satire

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(Redirected fromNews comedy)
Type of parody presented in a format typical of mainstream journalism
This article is about untrue news with satirical intent. For untrue news with the intent to mislead, seeFake news.

News satire ornews comedy is a type ofparody presented in a format typical of mainstreamjournalism, and called asatire because of its content. News satire has been around almost as long as journalism itself, but it is particularly popular on theweb, with websites likeThe Onion andThe Babylon Bee, where it is relatively easy to mimic a legitimate news site. News satire relies heavily onirony anddeadpan humor.

Two slightly different types of news satire exist. One form uses satirical commentary and sketch comedy to comment on real-world events, while the other presents wholly fictionalized news stories.

In history

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AuthorSamuel Clemens (Mark Twain) was employed as a newspaper reporter before becoming famous as a novelist, and in this position he published many satirical articles. He left two separate journalism positions, Nevada (1864) fleeing a challenge to duel[1] and San Francisco fleeing outraged police officials because his satire and fiction were often taken for the truthful accounts they were presented as. Ironically, the accuracy of many newspaper and autobiographical accounts used to follow the early life of Samuel Clemens is in doubt.[2]

Newspapers still print occasional news satire features, in particular onApril Fools' Day. This news is specifically identified somewhere in the paper or in the next day as a joke.

In 1933 and 1934,Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer released a series of ten one-reel theatrical shorts calledGoofy Movies, which included "Wotaphony Newsreel", anewsreel parody that paired actual footage with a mocking,deadpan narration.[3][4]

Also in 1934, halfway through aKraft Music Hall radio show, Dean Taylor ("Others collect the news, Dean makes it!") narrated a fake newsreel which began with a report on the New York Giants and Philadelphia Phillies being cancelled due to bad weather, and baseball season being rescheduled to when farmers need rain.

On television

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News satire has been prevalent on television since the 1960s, when it enjoyed a renaissance in theUK with the "Satire Boom", led by comedians includingPeter Cook,Alan Bennett,Jonathan Miller,David Frost,Eleanor Bron, andDudley Moore, and the television programThat Was The Week That Was. In theUnited States, theNBC network adapted this program and also produced its own content, from the "news" segment ofRowan and Martin's Laugh-In, to the still-runningSaturday Night Live mock newscast segment "Weekend Update".Cable television got into thecable news act withHome Box Office'sNot Necessarily the News in the mid-1980s.[citation needed]

In the 2000s, Comedy Central'sThe Daily Show became an icon of the American political satire genre, asJon Stewart delved into opinionated political criticism. Its spinoff,Stephen Colbert'sThe Colbert Report, also enjoyed a high level of popularity during its 9-year run.[citation needed]

The 2004 National Annenberg Election Survey found thatDaily Show viewers were better informed than those who relied solely on conventional network news,[5] and Steven Young ofLos Angeles Daily News compares the trust and influence that long-time hostJon Stewart enjoyed to that of CBS anchorWalter Cronkite in the 1970s.[6] However, a study published in theJournal of Communication suggests that news entertainment shows such asThe Daily Show orThe Colbert Report may not be as influential in teaching voters about political issues and candidates as was previously thought. Researchers from Ohio State University have found reasons to discount how effective these shows are in informing the general public. People watching television news learned more about a candidate's position on issues and about political procedures compared to those watching the news entertainment shows, while news entertainment shows primarily taught viewers about a candidate’s personal background.[7]

After the success ofThe Daily Show,Fox News launched its own news satire program in February 2007 with the title ofThe 1/2 Hour News Hour. Its creator describes it as "The Daily Show for conservatives", but it was canceled within a few months. Fox News then launched the more successful seriesRed Eye which ran from February 6, 2007 to April 7, 2017. As of 2017, news satire in the United States remains popular, especially inlate night television;late-night talk shows often incorporate elements of news satire. Current American programs known primarily for their news satire include those hosted by former correspondents forThe Daily Show (John Oliver'sLast Week Tonight,Samantha Bee'sFull Frontal, andThe Daily Show itself underTrevor Noah's tenure), as well asBill Maher'sReal Time.[citation needed]

InBritain, several news satires have been created, most famously the works ofChris Morris. Shows such as the radio seriesOn the Hour and its television versionThe Day Today parodied news programs very accurately, so they were almost believable and could have been confused with actual news programs, if it was not for the fake stories reported. Morris went on to continue this and several other themes inBrass Eye, one of the most controversial series on British television, especially after one episode broadcast mocked the way the news covered stories aboutpedophilia. Previous news satire shows in Britain include:The Late Edition withMarcus Brigstocke, on digital stationBBC Four, which was heavily influenced byThe Daily Show;News Knight with Sir Trevor McDonald, which parodied news differently by using an actual newsreader as the host; andBroken News, which featured several sketches of different news channels blending into each other.[citation needed]

As of 2018, current British news-related programs that have been described as satire include:Have I Got News for You andMock the Week on theBBC;Channel 4'sThe Last Leg;ITV'sNewzoids; andDave'sUnspun with Matt Forde.[citation needed]

Recent news satire television series in Australia includeWorking Dog Productions'Frontline,Shaun Micallef'sNewstopia, and the many programs created byThe Chaser since 2001. As of 2017, current programs of theAustralian Broadcasting Corporation includeShaun Micallef's Mad as Hell andThe Weekly with Charlie Pickering.[citation needed]

In Canada,This Hour Has 22 Minutes is an ensemble news satire show with four anchors onCBC. TheRick Mercer Report is a spinoff of22 Minutes with former anchorRick Mercer, and is also shown on CBC.CBC Radio One featuresThis Is That, an improvised news satire program which mimics the style of actual CBC Radio public affairs programs. The 1960s seriesThis Hour Has Seven Days, although primarily a real newsmagazine, included some satirical features in its format, such as political humor songs by actress and singerDinah Christie. On French-language television networks in Quebec, noted news satire shows have includedLa Fin du monde est à 7 heures,Et Dieu créa... Laflaque andInfoman.[citation needed]

In Germany,heute-show (ZDF), and formerlyWochenshow (onSAT.1) are popular news satires on TV.[citation needed]

TheEgyptian showEl Bernameg, hosted byBassem Youssef (onCapital Broadcast Center 2011-13 andMBC MASR from 2014 on), is modeled onThe Daily Show. Launched in the wake of theEgyptian Revolution of 2011, it has been quite popular, but also a source of tremendous controversy, as Youssef has repeatedly been under investigation by the authorities for his willingness to poke fun at powerful people.[citation needed]

Online

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News satire has been posted on the web almost since its inception, withThe Onion foremost among recognized news satire sites due to its enduring and profitable business model.[8] The content of the website, which started in 1996, is syndicated through mainstream media sites such asCNN andCNET. Today there are hundreds of news satire sites online, among whichThe Babylon Bee, considered the politically conservative counterpart of The Onion and also the more visited of the two.[9] Sites such asHollywood Leek specialize in satirical articles about celebrities and Hollywood entertainment news.[10] Sometimes fake news reporters influence real world politics, likeCitizen Kate whose 90 episodes covered the 2008 presidential campaign trail. She commissioned a butter bust of Obama presented to him by the Butter Cow Lady of Iowa, making international headlines.[11]El Koshary Today is an Egyptian website that carries fake international news stories.[12] Other satire sites attempt to emulate a genuine news source of some sort; these sites now take a variety of forms.[13]

Because interesting stories are often emailed and can quickly become separated from their point of origin, it is not uncommon for news satire stories to be picked up as real by themedia, as happened with aFaking News story about a lawsuit against Axe by an Indian man after having failed to attract a girl.[14] Additionally, a parody post on Al Sharpton's parody News Groper blog was quoted as if real by MSNBC.[15] Another satire publication,The Giant Napkin, published an article about a man literally fighting his house fire with more fire, a story taken seriously by several social networking sites. ThatGoogle News accepts news satire sources helps contribute to this phenomenon; while Google News does mark such stories with a "satire" tag, not all readers notice the tag; moreover, sometimes satirical sources may not carry the tag.[16] At least one site,thespoof.com, relies onuser-generated content in aWeb 2.0 manner.

Some websites likeLiterally Unbelievable post the genuine and shocked reactions of individuals who believe the satirical articles are real. The reactions are taken fromsocial media websites, such asFacebook, in which users can directly comment onlinks to the article's source.

Multi-author Indian websiteNews That Matters Not, launched in November 2009,[17] won aManthan South Asia Award for socially responsible e-content (Digital Inclusion for Development), organized by Digital Empowerment Foundation.[18] InIndia, several community-based news satire websites have crept up in recent times. Their popularity onFacebook defines that they are popular amongst the masses. Very new websites such as The Scoop Times, Fakekhabar.com, Sunkey.co.in andThe UnReal Times also claim to be run by students, and were covered inThe Times of India in July 2011.[19]

A plethora of news satire sites participate in a hosted community site, which additionally runs its own satire news feed on HumorFeed. HumorFeed is notable for its relatively high standards of admission and active community involvement.[citation needed] At present,[when?] over 60 sites are contributing members, at least eight of which have published books and two of which publish regular hard-copy periodicals. Several HumorFeed members also runCheck Please!, an online journal devoted to the serious examination of online satire, ranging from its role in relation to actual journalism to practical considerations of producing an online satire site.[citation needed]

In July 2009, a satire piece aboutKanye West published on the website ScrapeTV was picked up by numerous media outlets and reported as factual,[20][21][22] despite disclaimers on the site.[23]

Satirical Twitter accounts of news sources are popular, and they are often mistaken as legitimate sources. Online publications have made quizzes challenging users to distinguish between the tweets of the realVice[24] and the tweets of their parodies. The @Salondotcom parody account confused so many Twitter users that the real Salon.com reported them for impersonation.[25]

In Pakistan,Khabaristan Times (KT) is a renowned satire and parody website with its commentary on Pakistani politics and the military.[26] In 2015, a satirical piece by the website went viral and international media outlets includingThe New York Times[27] reported the story as if it were true.[28][29][30] In 2017, KT was reportedly blocked in Pakistan, however, it appeared to be available to users outside Pakistan.[31][32]

In the Middle East,The Pan-Arabia Enquirer is the most widely read satirical news website. It gained notoriety in 2013 when an article about Emirates launching shisha lounges on its fleet of A380s was picked up as fact by news websites around the world.AlHudood, another middle eastern satire news publisher, has gained publicity in the region when they published an article about the Jordanian police arresting Santa Claus and confiscating all of his gifts for not paying thecustoms before enteringJordan.[33]

In Turkey,Zaytung has become a source of mass reading since the socio-political Gezi Park2013 protests in Turkey.

In the Caribbean, Trinidad and Tobago-based website Wired868 has two satirical columnists under the pseudonyms Mr Live Wire[34] and Filbert Street,[35] who comment satirically on relevant political and news stories such as the fall from power of ex-FIFA vice-president Jack Warner,[36][37] media issues,[38] general news[39] and the challenges faced by former Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and her People's Partnership coalition Government.[40][41][42]

In Australia, there are numerous satirical news websites includingThe Damascus Dropbear (Christian satire),[43]The Shovel,[44]The Betoota Advocate,[45]The (Un)Australian,[46]The Fault Report,[47]The Sauce[48] andThe Tunnel Presents.[49]The Shovel mainly satirizes the Australian political and social culture andThe Betoota Advocate satirizes the political right and Australian journalism. In February 2015,The Betoota Advocate shot to fame after the publication's editor's sneaked in to the media scrum outsideParliament House in Canberra during a leadership spill motion and managed to interview some of Australia's most high-profile media personalities and politicians, posing as legitimate journalists. The fallout fromThe Betoota Advocate stunt has led to a security increase surrounding parliamentary media and screening of all crew.[50]The Fault Report[51] was established in 2014 and also has a political editorial focus. British-born Australian author John Birmingham once describedThe Fault Report as, "LikeThe Onion. But withVegemite", on his blog Cheeseburger Gothic.[52]The Tunnel Presents, which has been online since June 2011, is by Brisbane-based satire writing team The Tunnel and has political and social satire stories with aQueensland focus.[53]

In Italy, the most famous website specialized in mock-journalism isLercio. Born as a parody of the popular press, but in addition to the tabloid press, its goals are also the domestic and foreign politics. The website was created in the 2012 and the editorial staff is composed of authors who have contributed toLa Palestra, a column wanted on his blog by the comedian and satirical authorDaniele Luttazzi. In few yearsLercio saw the publication of a book[54] with a collection of 2014 best articles. From the same yearLercio it is present on the national radio with a daily strip.[55] Thanks to the many fans the articles are shared on the social network with a good success and, mostly in the beginning of his history, some articles were taken as true by the national press.[56]

InHungary, HírCsárda[57] is the number one news satire medium. The site, started in 2010, has drawn public attention after the Hungarian government demanded that an article should be emended that dealt with the then state secretary of educationRózsa Hoffmann.[58] The page has since been threatened by various celebrities, but has remained active regardless. Also present in Hungary is Központi Újság[59] (Central News), a news satire website of the joke party,Hungarian Two Tailed Dog Party.

Popular Canadian satirical news websites includeThe Beaverton,The Daily Bonnet, andWalking Eagle News.

See also

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References

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  1. ^James, Ronald (2009-07-30)."Samuel Clemens". Online Nevada Encyclopedia. Archived fromthe original on 2012-08-24. Retrieved2012-02-24.
  2. ^Rocha, Guy; Myers, Dennis."Myth # 2 - Mark Twain Flees Nevada".Nevada State Library, Archives & Public Records. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2014-08-20. Retrieved2013-08-16.
  3. ^"Goofy Movies Number Ten (Short 1934)".IMDb.
  4. ^Goofy Movies Number One (1933)
  5. ^"National Annenberg Election Survey"(PDF). Annenberg Public Policy Center. 2004-09-21. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2012-02-10. Retrieved2014-08-16.
  6. ^Young, Steve (2004-09-20)."The 1974 Cronkite".Los Angeles Daily News. Archived fromthe original on 2018-09-16. Retrieved16 August 2014.
  7. ^Kim, Young Mie; Vishak, John (2008)."Just Laugh! You Don't Need to Remember: The Effects of Entertainment Media on Political Information Acquisition and Information Processing in Political Judgment".Journal of Communication.58 (2):338–360.doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2008.00388.x.
  8. ^Geoff Keighley (2003-08-28)."CNN.com - The Onion: Funny site is no joke - Aug. 29, 2003". CNN. Retrieved2012-02-24.
  9. ^Roose, Kevin (October 16, 2020)."How The Babylon Bee, a Right-Wing Satire Site, Capitalizes on Confusion".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on October 30, 2020. RetrievedFebruary 23, 2022.
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  12. ^"And Now For The Lighter Side Of Egypt's Revolution". NPR. September 5, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2012.
  13. ^"UK | Magazine | Clicking with comedy".BBC News. 2006-10-04. Retrieved2012-02-24.
  14. ^r3vz says (2009-10-19)."Unable to attract even a single girl, frustrated man sues Axe". Faking News. Retrieved2012-02-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^Kelly, Keith J. (2007-08-29)."Msnbc.Com'S Fumble". NYPOST.com. Archived fromthe original on 2009-02-21. Retrieved2012-02-24.
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  17. ^"About". News That Matters Not. 2011-05-23. Archived fromthe original on 2012-03-03. Retrieved2012-02-24.
  18. ^"India's best e-Content Practices". The manthan Award. Retrieved2012-02-24.
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  20. ^"West debunks new 'King of Pop' rumors". Today.com. 2009-07-31. Archived fromthe original on 2014-08-20. Retrieved2014-08-16.
  21. ^Itzkoff, Dave (2009-07-31)."NY Times ArtsBeat". Artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved2012-02-24.
  22. ^Kreps, Daniel (2009-07-31)."Kanye West Angrily Blogs About "Corny" "King of Pop" Misquote". Rolling Stone.Archived from the original on 2013-02-03. Retrieved2014-08-16.
  23. ^"Kanye West declares himself King of Pop". Scrapetv.com. 2009-06-29. Retrieved2012-02-24.
  24. ^"Quiz: Real Vice headline or Vice is Hip parody?". New York News & Politics. 2013-09-20. Archived fromthe original on 2018-05-07. Retrieved2014-07-29.
  25. ^Schonfeld, Zach (2014-07-18)."#FreeSalonDotCom: The Right Wing Fight to Restore a Suspended Salon.com Parody Twitter". Newsweek. Retrieved2014-07-29.
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  28. ^"Women Wearing Jeans Are Reason Behind Earthquakes: JUI-F Chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman (Correction)".The New Indian Express. May 30, 2015. Retrieved1 February 2017.
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  32. ^Wasif, Sehrish (January 30, 2017)."Satire site Khabaristan Times blocked in Pakistan".Express Tribune. Retrieved1 February 2017.
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  37. ^"Yes Prime Minister: Kamla puts foot down on Warner issue". Wired868.com. 2013-04-02. Retrieved2013-04-02.
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  39. ^"Miracle on Stone Street: TV host Alleyne executes amazing BJ... Allegedly". Wired868.com. 2013-11-08. Retrieved2013-11-08.
  40. ^"Prime Minister's gone wild... with elation at election results". Wired868.com. 2013-10-24. Retrieved2013-10-24.
  41. ^"Political surprise on a yellow brick road". Wired868.com. 2012-09-27. Retrieved2012-09-27.
  42. ^"Behind the iron throne: The Cabal descends into chaos". Wired868.com. 2013-08-18. Retrieved2013-08-18.
  43. ^"Damascus Dropbear | Fake News For The Faithful".Damascus Dropbear. Retrieved2020-08-04.
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  49. ^"The Tunnel presents... - (Un)truth and nothing but the (un)truth".The Tunnel presents... Retrieved2016-01-08.
  50. ^Phillips, Jack (2015-02-08)."'#BetootaLive: Breaking news from Parliament House". Rural Press Holdings. Retrieved2015-05-04.
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  53. ^"Who Are We? - The Tunnel presents..."The Tunnel presents... Retrieved2016-01-08.
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  56. ^"Radio Maria trasmette i Megadeth: la bufala di Repubblica XL".Giornalettismo. 23 January 2013. Archived fromthe original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved17 October 2015.
  57. ^"HírCsárda - Hungary's premiere source of news". HírCsárda. Retrieved2016-02-15.
  58. ^"Vicclaptól kért helyreigazítást a kormány". Képviselő Funky blog. 2010-07-02. Retrieved2016-02-15.
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