据闻Newsroom(新闻编辑室)第三季将是最终季,HBO不打算继续跟金牌编剧Aaron Sorkin在Newsroom上合作下去。在剧中一直若隐若现的SNS(社交媒体)幽灵,正在慢慢地向传统的媒体网络(剧中的ACN是一个全媒体网络)伸出它的毒手。就像第三季第四集中的大款老板Pruit叫嚣的那样:数字时代已经来临,众包将替代传统新闻生产。 众包其实是一个从社交网络时代兴起的热词,意思是让更多的人来一起共同完成某件事情(比如:众筹、翻译)。用在媒体领域,就像是Pruit所说的那样:把资源交给大众(更多的大众、普通人),让他们来生产喜闻乐见的新闻:娱乐、体育或者更多形式的内容(视频等多媒体)。 如果众包时代来临,那么传统的新闻生产商:媒体——将有更多人失业,尽管在社交网络时代,媒体已经有很多人失业:信息渠道的增加(信息爆炸),人们不再常常去看报纸、电视。而即使看电视,人们会有更多的选择,也就是说,某个电视节目的替代性产品越来越多。如:你如果觉得中国好声音不好看,就会有另一个节目给你选择:中国好歌曲;还有诸如爸爸去哪儿、奔跑XX之类的节目。如果都不好看?OK,关闭窗口,打开新的浏览器窗口,就好像整个世界都在等着你。 而新闻呢?由于(经过审查的)信息渠道(不是信息来源)越来越多,作为信息渠道某一款产品也拥有着非常多的替代性方案。如果你不喜欢新浪,你可以看网易,你可以看搜狐,如果都不喜欢,你还可以看今日头条。如果你累了,还可以看各门各类的垂直新闻网站,还有一大批的本地新闻网站等着你打开而你或者根本不知道它们存在着(过)。 众包时代就意味着,你会拥有更多的信息传播渠道,更甚至你也会参与其中的信息编辑或传播。这么听着是不是很耳熟?没错,这里说的(可能)就是Micro Blog,即更广义上的微博客:新浪微博、Twitter、Facebook(一部分功能),还有更多可能是SNS网站,甚至是微信。在这里,众包时代把媒体门槛踏破,为普罗大众提供更便捷的的工具和传播途径。也就是说:明天,只要你也会一些简单的编辑操作,你也可以成为主播、编辑、记者,每个人都可以成为新闻的在场者。 每个人都可以成为记者,生产内容——这其实就是一个用户生产内容(UGC)的升级版。但是,我就想Newsroom里的新闻总监Charlie那样对此报以怀疑态度:当每个人都是内容生产者的时候,谁来作double check?当每个人都是第一信息源,那谁来作为Second Source(当然,每个人都可以作second source)?更重要的是:普罗大众真的能产生更宽泛范畴上的新闻观点么?诸如某个政党的选举(当然这里说的是美国、台湾什么的)背后的利益集团问题,诸如某个政客背后的世界观、偏见以及关于公平、公正的讨论等等。 聪明的你或者注意到这样一个悖论存在:如果有着这样一个人,他可以知晓天文地理,可以谈论以上我所列举的一切,他可以做出很多很好的新闻节目,可以剖析得非常到位,那么,他/她还是普罗大众么?这样的举例如果太抽象,可以搜索一下前段时间很火的某个女穷游学家(猫力)的事迹:当一个女生可以奢侈地住各种豪华酒店“穷游”的时候,她就不再是在穷游。 那么,我的意思就是:不是人人都可以成为记者和编辑的?所以我们就应该鼓励诸如澎湃新闻这样的存在?这又不得不变成另一个范畴的讨论:如果是在一个自由出版的环境里(如美国),可以强调“并不是所有人都可以做媒体新闻”的;而在一个不能自由出版的环境里(你懂的)如果你再强调“不是所有人都可以媒体/新闻”的,那就显得装外宾了。 或者到了下结论的时候:当每个人都可以生产内容的时候(如在微信),你可以看到非常多的信息,这些信息包括各类鸡汤和生活指南。当然,这并不是微信的错。 最后,在SNS时代,(自由世界的)普罗大众是可以拥有真相的么?或者说,更形而上地,普罗大众是可以接近真相的么?就像Newsroom里的Pruit说的那样,新闻(剧中Pruit所说的应该是面向18-24岁的青年人的新闻内容)是可以众包的么?当SNS幽灵把剧中的ACN淹没的时候,Aaron Sorkin可能已经想到了另一个出路,以个人博客起家的huffingtonpost已经成为大众媒体。这个媒体里既有类似纽约时报的“阳春白雪”般的内容,也有Buzzfeed“下里巴人”般的搞笑幽默。而且,重要的是这家媒体使用的就类似于“众包”模式:让更多人参与到新闻的编辑和传播中去。 可是悖论又会随之而来,当huffingtonpost成为网络新贵(被AOL以3.15亿美元收购)之后,它就失去了其普罗大众的基础:它开始像其他权威媒体一样,收拢大量的精英人士,搜罗大量的专业编辑记者——很明显,他们都不是乌合之众。
Newsroom这部剧在美媒下还是有很大争议的,这种争议甚至不是对这部剧的for being liberal,更多来源于liberals for not doing enough。编剧Aaron Sorkin(如同你能从他的写作中看到的那样)常被描述成一个prick,一个smug,或一个chauvinist(比如一个记者曾写一篇文章来叙述Sorkin对她本人采访时候的condescension和不尊重,她说“In Sorkinville, the gods are men." 详见“How to get under Aaron Sorkin’s skin (and also, how to high-five properly)” //www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/television/how-to-get-under-aaron-sorkins-skin-and-also-how-to-high-five-properly/article4363455/),并且因为他的写作局限而被批评(说教性太强、自我陶醉...)
我感觉这些critic比豆瓣上目前看到的影评要成熟更多,并且也更加有效率、progressive。这篇影评来源于New Yorker的Emily Nussbaum (她本人在本剧第一季开始就发表过影评"Broken News"。见//www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/06/25/broken-news,或我的转载//movie.douban.com/review/12970899/)。Nussbaum在2016年因为她在纽约客写的影评获得普利策奖。她个人肯定了第三季的一些进步(比如她比较喜欢的Maggie & morality debate on the train),同时也特别分析批评了Sorkin对于Princeton女大学生 & rape的处理。
newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/the-newsroom-crazy-making-campus-rape-episode
As this review indicates, I wasn’t a fan of the first four episodes of Aaron Sorkin’s “The Newsroom.” In the two years since that blazing pan, however, I’ve calmed down enough to enjoy the show’s small pleasures, such as Olivia Munn and Chris Messina. When characters talk in that screwball Sorkin rhythm, it’s fun to listen to them. As manipulative as “The Newsroom” ’s politics can be, I mostly share them. There are days when an echo chamber suits me fine.
For the first two seasons, the show stayed loyal to its self-righteous formula, which many viewers found inspirational. Sorkin’s imaginary cable network, Atlantis Cable News, would report news stories from two years before, doing them better than CNN and Fox News and MSNBC did at the time. Characters who were right about things (Will McAvoy, Sloan Sabbith, the unbearable Jim Harper, the ridiculously named MacKenzie McHale) strove for truth and greatness, even when tempted to compromise. They bantered and flirted. And each week, they debated idiots who were wrong. These fools included Tea Partiers, gossip columnists, Occupy Wall Street protesters, and assorted nobodies enabled by digital culture—narcissists, bigots, and dumbasses. Sometimes, the debates included sharp exchanges, but mostly, because the deck was stacked, they left you with nothing much to think about.
Often, the designated idiot wouldn’t even get to explain her side of an argument: she’d get to make only fifteen per cent of a potential case, although occasionally, as with an Occupy Wall Street activist, the proportion climbed closer to fifty per cent. There were other maddening aspects of the show—a plot in which a woman who worked in fashion believed that she wasn’t good enough to date a cable news producer, the McAvoy/McHale romance, the Season 2 Africa-flashback episode. So, you know, I had complaints. But I tried to stay Zen and enjoy Munn and Messina. And, in all sincerity, I was happy when the third and final season débuted, because it was such an obvious step up. The early episodes were brisk and self-mocking. There was a nifty, endearingly ridiculous grandeur to the story arc about McAvoy going to jail to protect a source. Even more satisfying, the show's debates with idiots had undergone a sea change. In Season 3, the people who were wrong were allowed to be actively smart (like Kat Dennings’s role as a cynical heiress) and funny (as with B. J. Novak’s portrayal of a demonic tech tycoon who ended up taking over ACN). In certain scenes, they got to make seventy-five per cent of an argument, leading to fleet and comparatively complex debates.
In the single best scene of the whole series, the number jumped to a hundred per cent. Maggie (Allison Pill)—now rehabilitated from last season’s horrible post-Africa, bad-haircut plot—took an Amtrak train from Boston. In a plot cut-and-pasted from the headlines, she overheard an E.P.A. official's candid cell-phone conversation, sneakily took notes, and then confronted him with follow-up questions. Both sides made a solid case: she pointed out that he was in public and her obligation was to be a reporter, not a P.R. conduit. Also, had Maggie gone through “official” routes, he would have lied to her. He argued that by quoting an unguarded, personal discussion, she was making the world a less humane, more paranoid place. So when Maggie threw her notes away, it wasn’t as simple as, “He was right and she was wrong”—she’d made a real moral choice. Given the kind of show that “The Newsroom” is, there was plenty of wish-fulfillment—Maggie got the interview anyway, plus a date with an admiring ethicist—but those elements felt fairy-tale satisfying.
After the Amtrak scene, I turned downright mellow, even fond of the series, the way you might cherish an elderly uncle who is weird about women and technology, but still, you know, a fun guy. My guard went down. So when I watched Sunday’s infuriating episode, on screeners, I wasn’t prepared. What an emotional roller coaster! I will leave it to others to discuss the mystical jail-cell plot, the creepy reunion of Jim and Maggie, the fantasy that even the worst cable network would re-launch Gawker Stalker, and, more admirably, the way that B. J. Novak’s evil technologist character seems to have broken the fourth wall and stepped into reality to disrupt The New Republic. Someone should certainly write about Sorkin’s most clever pivot: he’s taken the accusations of sexism that are regularly levelled at his show and pointed the finger at Silicon Valley, in a brilliant “Think I’m bad? Well, look at this guy” technique.
Yet when it comes to disconcerting timeliness, no scene from this episode stands out like the one in which the executive producer Don Keefer pre-interviews a rape victim. When Sorkin wrote it, he could not have known that CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi and, later, Bill Cosby would be accused of sexual assault by so many women, some anonymous, some named. He couldn’t have known that an article would be published in Rolling Stone about a gang rape at the University of Virginia or that this story would turn out, enragingly, to have been insufficiently vetted and fact-checked. The fallout from the magazine’s errors is ongoing: it’s not clear yet whether Jackie, the woman who told Rolling Stone that she was gang-raped, made the story up, told the truth but exaggerated, was so traumatized that her story shifted due to P.T.S.D., or what. The one thing that’s clear is that the reporting was horribly flawed, and that this mistake will cause lasting harm, both for people who care about the rights of victims and people who care about the rights of the accused. Key point: these aren’t two separate groups.
Anyway, there we are, with Don Keefer—one of the few truly appealing characters on the show and half of the show’s only romance worth rooting for, with Munn’s Sloan Sabbith—in a Princeton dorm room, interviewing a girl, Mary, who said she’d been raped. In a classic “Newsroom” setup, she wasn’t simply a victim denied justice. Instead, the woman was another of Sorkin’s endless stream of slippery digital femme fatales; she created a Web site where men could be accused, anonymously, of rape. The scene began with an odd, fraught moment: when Don turned up at her dorm room, notebook in hand, he hesitates to close the door, clearly worried that she might make a false accusation. But since this is Season 3, not 1 or 2, the Web site creator isn’t portrayed as a venal idiot, like the Queens-dwelling YouTube blackmailer on a previous episode, who wrote “Sex And The City” fan fiction and used Foursquare at the laundry. The Princeton woman got to make seventy-five per cent of her case, which, in a sense, only made the scene worse.
Before describing the scene between Keefer and the Princeton student, it’s important to note that the scene’s theme of sexual gossip about powerful men has been an obsession since this show began. For a while, Will McAvoy was tormented by a Page Six reporter who first got snubbedby him, then placed gossip items in revenge, thenslept with him, then blackmailed him. There was a similar plot about Anthony Weiner; just last week, Jim’s girlfriend Hallie sold him out in a post for the fictional Web site Carnivore. You’d have to consult Philip Roth’s “The Human Stain” to find a fictional narrative more consistently worried about scurrilous sexual gossip directed at prominent men. It’s a subject that replicates Sorkin’s own experiences, from “The Newsroom” on back to “The West Wing.”
The scene between Don and the student takes place in four segments, as Don reveals to her why he was there: not to talk her into going public, but to talk her out of it. His boss, under pressure to appeal to Millennials and go viral, insisted that the segment be done in the most explosive way possible—as a live debate between the student and Jeff, the guy she claims raped her. As Don and she talk, the woman tells him her story. She’d gone to a party, took drugs, threw up, passed out—and then two men had sex with her while she was unconscious. The next morning, she called “city police, campus police, and the D.A.’soffice.” She can name the guys; she knows where they live. She had a rape kit done. “That should be the easiest arrest they ever made,” she says. At every juncture, Don is sorrowful, rational, gentlemanly, concerned about not hurting her feelings, and reflexively condescending, in a tiptoeing, please-don’t-hurt-me way. Eventually, he tells her that Jeff, the accused rapist, has also been pre-interviewed: Jeff told Don that she wasn’t raped—in fact, she’d begged to have sex with two men.
Back and forth they go, discussing a wide range of issues—legal, moral, journalistic, etc. The dialogue conflates and freely combines these issues. First, there is the question of anonymous accusations, online or off. There is also the question of direct accusations, like the one this student made against a specific guy, in person, using her own name—in a police station and the D.A.’soffice, and then online. There is the question of how acquaintance rape is or isn’t prosecuted in the courts; there is the question of how it's dealt with, or covered up, within the university system; and there is a separate question about how journalists, online and on television, should cover these debates. But a larger question hovers in the background, the one hinted at when Don came in the door: Does he believe her?
When I first watched the scene, I was most unnerved by the way their talk mashed everything together, suggesting that there were only two sides to the question—a bizarrely distorted premise. It’s possible, for instance, to believe (as I do) that a Web site posting anonymous accusations is a dangerous idea and to also think it’s fine for a woman to describe her own rape in public, to protest an administration that buries her accusation, and to go on cable television to discuss these issues. It’s possible to oppose a “live debate” between a rape victim and her alleged rapist and to believe that rape survivors can be public advocates. There was also something perverse about the way the student was portrayed, simultaneously, as a sneaky anonymous online force and also an attention-seeker eager to go on live TV. (And, given the way that Rolling Stone’s Jackie is now being “doxxed” online, it’s grotesque that the episode has the Princeton woman praise Don for tracking her down, “old-school.”) The actress was solid, but the character behaved, as do pretty much all digital women on the show, with the logic of a dream figure, concocted of Sorkin’s fears and anxieties, not like an actual person.
“The kind of rape you’re talking about is difficult or impossible to prove,” Don tells her. It’s not a “kind of rape,” the woman responds sharply. She argues that her site isn’t about getting revenge, that it’s “a public service”: “Do not go on a date with these guys, do not go to a party with these guys.” Don cuts her off: "Do not give these guys a job, ever." He argues that she’s making it easier for men to be falsely accused, but the woman says that she's weighed that cost and decided that it’s more important that women be warned. “What am I wrong about?” she asks. “What am I wrong about?”
I’d love to see a show wrestle with these issues in a meaningful way, informed by fact and emotion. But eventually, the “Newsroom” episode gets to the core of what’s really going on, that shadow question, and this is when it implodes. The law is failing rape victims, says the student. “That may be true, but in fairness, the law wasn’t built to serve victims,” argues Don. “In fairness?” she says. “I know,” he says, sorrowful again, eyes all puppy-dog. “Do you believe me?” she asks him suddenly. “Of course I do," Don tells her. “Seriously,” she presses. He dodges the question: “I’m not here on a fact-finding mission.” She pushes him for a third time: “I’m just curious. Be really honest.”
Finally, he reveals his real agenda. He’s heard two stories: one from "a very credible woman” and the other from a sketchy guy with every reason to lie. And he’s obligated, Don tells her, to believe the sketchy guy’s story. She's stunned. “This isn’t a courtroom,” she points out, echoing the thoughts of any sane person. “You’re not legally obligated to presume innocence.” “I believe I’m morally obligated," Don says, in his sad-Don voice. WTF LOL OMFG, as they say on the Internet. Yes, that's correct: Don, the show’s voice of reason (and Sorkin, one presumes), argues that a person has a moral obligation to believe a man accused of rape over the woman who said he’d raped her, as long as he hasn't been found guilty of rape. This isn’t about testimony, or even an abstract stance meant to strengthen journalism. (“Personally, I believe you, but as a reporter, I need to regard your story with suspicion, just as I do Jeff’s.”) As an individual, talking to a rape survivor, Don says that on principle, he doesn’t believe her.
At this point, Don gets to make his win-the-argument speech about the dangers of trial by media, lack of due process, etc. “The law can acquit; the Internet never will. The Internet is used for vigilantism every day, but this is a whole new level, and if we go there, we’re truly fucked,” he says. He warns her that appearing on TV will hurt her: she’ll get “slut-shamed.” She begins to cry and tells him that, while he may fear false accusations, she’s scared of rape. “So you know what my site does? It scares you.” Her case will be covered like sports, he remarks with disgust. “I’m gonna win this time,” she replies with bravado. And so Don goes back to ACN and he lies, telling his producer Charlie that he couldn’t find the woman at all—and then Charlie throws a tantrum and dies of a heart attack, but that’s a matter for a different post.
Look, “The Newsroom” was never going to be my favorite series, but I didn’t expect it to make my head blow off, all over again, after all these years of peaceful hate-watching. Don’s right, of course: a public debate about an alleged rape would be a nightmare. Anonymous accusations are risky and sometimes women lie about rape (Hell, people lie about everything). But on a show dedicated to fantasy journalism, Sorkin’s stand-in doesn’t lobby for more incisive coverage of sexual violence or for a responsible way to tell graphic stories without getting off on the horrible details or for innovative investigations that could pressure a corrupt, ass-covering system to do better. Instead, he argues that the idealistic thing to do is not to believe her story. Don’s fighting for no coverage: he's so identified with falsely accused men and so focussed on his sorrowful, courtly discomfort that, mainly, he just wants the issue to go away. And Don is our hero! Sloan Sabbith, you in trouble, girl.
Clearly, I’ve succumbed to the Sorkin Curse once again: critique his TV shows and you’ll find you’ve turned into a Sorkin character yourself—fist-pounding, convinced that you know best, talking way too fast, and craving a stiff drink. But after such an awful week, this online recap might be reduced to: Trigger warning. The season finale runs next week and thank God for that. Like poor old Charlie Skinner, my heart can’t take it anymore.
Emily Nussbaum 本人在本剧第一季开始就已经发了一篇比较critical的影评"Broken News"。见//www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/06/25/broken-news(我的转载//movie.douban.com/review/12970899/)。
在当时,对此,她同编辑室的New Yorker colleague David Denby也写了一篇简短的回应as counterargument.
In Defense of Aaron Sorkin’s “The Newsroom” //www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/in-defense-of-aaron-sorkins-the-newsroom
I loved Emily Nussbaum’s negative review of Aaron Sorkin’s new HBO series, “The Newsroom,” which had its première last Sunday night, but I also enjoyed the show—certainly more than she did—and, afterwards, I felt a kind of moviegoer’s chagrin. Movie audiences get very little dialogue this snappy; they get very little dialogue at all. In movies we are starved for wit, for articulate anger, for extravagant hyperbole—all of which pours in lava flows during the turbulent course of “The Newsroom.” The ruling gods of movie screenwriting, at least in American movies, are terseness, elision, functional macho, and heartfelt, fumbled semi-articulateness. Some of the very young micro-budget filmmakers, trying for that old Cassavetes magic (which was never magical for me, but never mind) achieve a sludgy moodiness with minimal dialogue, or with improvisation—scenes that can be evocative and touching. But the young filmmakers wouldn’t dream of wit or rhetoric. It would seem fake to them. Thank heavens the swelling, angry, sarcastic, one-upping talk in “The Newsroom” is unafraid of embarrassing anyone.
艾伦·索金的编剧水准依旧很高。能让人看得既欢乐又伤感,既激昂又感动。每一个角色都是那么可爱而鲜活,让人敬佩,让人喜欢。即使有坑没填,但闪回的结尾配上动听的插曲,依旧让人潸然泪下,依依不舍。再见了,新闻编辑室
向懂得见好就收的美剧致敬。
波士顿爆炸案。本集再次讨论了一个问题,现在这个信息爆炸的时代,作为传统的新闻应该怎么运行?特别是在这种突发事件面前,各种社交媒体点对点的速度要远远快于电视台,但同时也导致真假信息的参杂,需要我们更有一双慧眼来看清。。。。个人评价:A。
不完美的完美
一个完美的环,看完立刻重返一季循环直到第三遍,可见对此剧方方面面的倾心。客观地说剧集整体的优点和缺点一样明确而突出,但也正因如此,反而更凸显出情感与价值观上的契合。无论是否新闻人,对理想主义的忠贞以及理想遭遇现实的残酷都令人无限敬佩加慨叹,也甘愿成为剧终那个奔走相告的孩子。
这就是那种每句台词都深深回荡在你心里的好剧,看得我都想含一片硝酸甘油。一个英雄倒下了,一个时代逝去了,一种理想失据了,一部神剧终结了,我也好像失恋了。艾伦.索金大人,请收下我的膝盖儿。整部剧都像是他的夫子自道。而英雄们,什么时候才能从树上走下来呢?
依旧好看到哭!燃到哭!爱每一个人!
我們都在笑話Don Quixote,實際上我們都羨慕Don Quixote。
如果一个国家的影视工业和意识形态已经强势到一部美剧就可以让每个国家的知识阶层都患上精神家园的思乡病,那当它真的拍起统战宣传片时该有多可怕?或者说,正因为每部电影和剧集都已作为主旋律的声音被世界各地无障碍接受,它又何须再费力去拍什么统战宣传片呢?
“你知道堂吉诃德么?那个骑士,好吧其实他是个疯子,他自以为自己在拯救世界,但大部分人都认为他是傻蛋。”
Sorkin的理想主义还是不如他的自恋来得明显。整剧里的女性角色靠Sloan和Leona挽回,自打把ex糗事写进自己剧本后,他剧里的女性角色就全是槽点。
这剧从开播就不招人待见,等到了第三季就只剩下索金一个人在战斗。No matter how much I dis/agreed with him, I don't want to fight against him, or beside him. I just want to stand there watching and admiring. Because no one else can fight like Aaron Sorkin.
理想主義到最後還是貫徹到了底 Aaron Sorkin還是沒有讓它走悲劇結局 Charlie用了三年時間將這群理想鬥士聚集起來變成了瘋子 他卻先行離去了 謝謝這群飛蛾撲火的浪漫理想主義者 Thank you Don Quixote. Good Evening.是時候重頭再看
悬念迭起,酣畅淋漓。迷这剧不仅为唇枪舌战的交锋和妙语连珠的犀利,更重要的是敬畏它传递的勇气、信仰和气节。也许它理想化得不合时宜,信仰和节气这东西可能我已经没有了,但看别人有,也是极大的满足和欣慰。
岸边观望者的脸上写满畏惧和嘲讽,而真正活在洪流里的人们只顾日复一日孤勇搏击。
虽然总被说理想主义,但每次还是看的热血沸腾
作为臭屌丝却在为身患精英癌晚期的索金倾倒,就像一个男的幻想着自己得了子宫癌一样有戏剧效果,普遍上认为,《堂吉诃德》是一部喜剧。
只有两种办法可以实现艾伦·索金的世界:1. 人人都是理想主义战士 2.人人都吸毒过量,语速惊人脑袋不清白。
"He identified with Don Quixote, an old man with dementia, who thought he can save the world from an epidemic of incivility simply by acting like a knight. His religion was decency. And he spent lifetime fighting his enemies." This is not just for Charlie, this is for all of you.
"他并不想诅咒没有英雄的时代会如何堕落,但他希望所有人都看到,你们到底在失去什么"。最后一集突然很伤感,回首往昔,让我们看到堂吉诃德是怎么死的,在这个时代里,精英主义是如何的沦为大众的笑柄的,我们的英雄最后都已经死了,好在这群理想主义者依旧战斗着。★★★★