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SelfTaught
12-23-2009, 09:08 AM
http://jewishworldreview.com/1209/stossel.php3


Dump the Audience?
By John Stossel


After my first two new Fox Business shows, I'm taking a break for Christmas and the New Year's holiday. We resume Thursday, Jan. 7.


Again, I ask your help. Last time, most of you said: Go with global warming for the first show — "Atlas Shrugged" can wait — and so I did. "Atlas" will be the first show after the holidays.


Today, I need your help in deciding what to do with the studio audience. I wanted an audience because I enjoy speaking on college campuses and I love the spontaneous give-and-take.


Students passionately pose questions like, "How can you defend business when free markets brought us to the crisis we suffer now?!"


I like explaining that what I defend isn't business but economic freedom and markets. Businessmen — with some honorable exceptions — are usually happy to collude with government to stifle competition and harm consumers and workers. I hate that.


And anyway, it was not free markets, but meddling politicians, bureaucrats and central bankers, along with their corporate cronies, who created today's problems.


I even think I convince some of the students. It's lots of fun.


But I haven't done so well with my studio audience. Viewers have noticed.


Rob: "Ditch the audience! I had to stop watching the show last night on health care "reform" as I couldn't take any more of the stupid comments from the audience. "Lower audience interruption (applause and booing) to allow more discussion. Your 2007 health care special 'Sick in America, Whose Body Is It Anyway?" was more informative than the interruptive health care show tonight.


Brad Jones: "Love the show, hate the audience. Where do you find these people? I think you're better to do the show without an audience!"


Kevin: "John, PLEASE get rid of the live studio audience and get back to reporting. The audience makes your show rather cheesy."


OK, I hear you. I admit I am "clunky with the audience," as one viewer put it. On the other hand, maybe I'll get better. I'm new at it. And as several emailers said, allowing the opposition to speak is a better way to convince people:


Mark: "Love the show! Like the format. It gives the opportunity to directly address and confront opposing ideas.


Tim: "I like to hear what real people have to say about topics."


So do I. So did Ben Franklin, who wrote in his autobiography: "By the collision of different sentiments, sparks of truth strike out, and political light is obtained" ("The Completed Autobiography," p. 335).


I agree. It's intellectually lazy to do shows where everyone is in agreement. There are plenty of those on other networks. We libertarians thrive on debate with the statists. Bring it on!


So I'll try the audience a few more times. I'll search out statists who make their case more clearly, and I'll experiment with the role of the audience.


One of the many advantages of working for Fox is that they're willing to try things. They're eager to experiment. If it doesn't work, we'll drop the audience.


Economist Mark Skousen made some other good points about last week's health care show:


"Imagine if LBJ had pushed through Congress a program called 'Food Care' along with Medicare? Food prices would be going through the roof, and food would be a major political football.


"Why isn't food a major debate issue? Because LBJ only gave us the Food Stamp program, which has a means test to it, so that it applies only to the poor (family of four making $25,000 or less).


"… I also like the idea of converting Medicare (and Medicaid) into HSAs (health savings accounts), as Steve Forbes recommends in his new book, 'How Capitalism Will Save Us' (excellent book)."


I don't favor "Medicine Stamps." I'd rather work to remove the dozens of ways government makes medical care and insurance artificially expensive. In the meantime, charitable institutions will help the poor.


But Skousen makes good points. I should have mentioned them. Every time I finish one of these live TV programs, I think of eight things I should have said.


I'll keep working at it. Maybe I'll get better.

Austrian Econ Disciple
12-23-2009, 09:16 AM
Stossel keep up the good work, but I would hasten to add, what we need to do with Medicare, Medicaid, SCHIP, VA, etc. is ABOLITION. We are the modern-day abolitionists. We don't need nor want to try and tinker. Let each individual make their own decisions with their own money in the free-market.

Steve Forbes is horrible. He's akin to monetarists. What we need is more Jim Rogers, Marc Fabers, Peter Schiffs, Hoppes, etc. for you to take economics from.

Other than that, Stossel you are the man :p

Derek Johnson
12-23-2009, 09:20 AM
Stossel always gets better John Stossel is the man in a world of boys.

If he wants them ditched, let it be as he wants...muzzle the yelping, howling dogs.

Libertarianism does not go off in people's head like a light bulb over the head of cartoon characters. Libertarianism is an effort to overcome generations of statist propaganda.

powerofreason
12-23-2009, 09:41 AM
Stossel always gets better John Stossel is the man in a world of boys.

If he wants them ditched, let it be as he wants...muzzle the yelping, howling dogs.

Libertarianism does not go off in people's head like a light bulb over the head of cartoon characters. Libertarianism is an effort to overcome generations of statist propaganda.

Yes, exactly. Libertarianism is the process of undoing the brainwashing. Most are resistant, and understandably so. What Stossel needs to do is find people who have already opened their minds and started down the path of enlightenment. Not yet libertarian, but curious people who ask good questions and aren't complete economic ignoramuses.

angelatc
12-23-2009, 09:49 AM
Just have Fuck you Frank pick his audiences. Problem solved.

ClayTrainor
12-23-2009, 09:57 AM
I like Stossel's approach so far. I don't want him to change a thing.

Bruno
12-23-2009, 10:29 AM
that's great that he is soliciting and listening to the feedback

Thrashertm
12-23-2009, 11:01 AM
I like the audience. They often trot out the same tired statist lines that my friends and family use, and it's helpful to see them refuted. I think it will make it more effective for a statist that is watching the show for the first time.

RM918
12-23-2009, 11:09 AM
I'm all for opposing views, but in my mind the Jerry Springer set-up as it were with the applauses and such seems to cheapen the whole affair.

BenIsForRon
12-23-2009, 12:04 PM
I say keep the audience, it legitimizes the show because he is discussing opposing viewpoints. If a liberal watches the show, and hears their idea from an audience member, and then promptly sees it get stomped on, then they will be more inclined to change their mind.

SelfTaught
12-23-2009, 12:13 PM
I say keep the audience, it legitimizes the show because he is discussing opposing viewpoints. If a liberal watches the show, and hears their idea from an audience member, and then promptly sees it get stomped on, then they will be more inclined to change their mind.

Bingo!