Today's Oprah show

mitchinson

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Oct 4, 2000
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83
Anyone see today's Oprah show? Is it just me or does anyone else get the idea that all the celebs on that show will be voting for the same candidate? I felt the show was not as unbiased as it should have been.
 
Yes, I agree. I switched back and forth but from what I saw, they were hinting quite well, without actually saying any names, who they, and we should vote for.

For example, Cameran Diaz's talk about if you want to be 'raped' don't vote and if you don't want to be 'raped', then vote.

Did they actually say any candidate's name??

I'm all for getting out the vote movement as long as there no influence on who they should vote for.
 
Aren't must hollywood people in the same political party? Sure seems that way.
 
I am just so sick of this election :rolleyes: I really can't wait till it it over. I started watching Oprah and then turned it off when I realized what it was about!
 

In general, people who find themselves rich without having actually worked for it, often don't mind the platform of a party that takes money away from those who earn it in order to supplement those who don't.
 
I'm all for people registering to vote but I don't think I'd like to be cornered by Jake Gyllenhall (sp?) to register! C'mon. If these people are so easily persuaded by "celebrities" (and I use the term loosely), should they really be voting? When they couldn't even care enough to register on their own? I don't know - seems strange. I remember going to town hall on my 18th birthday to register because I wanted to, not because someone like P.Diddy told me to. :crazy:
 
I agree that there was an underlying tone but I can't tell you how sad it makes me that such a huge, huge number of women eligible to vote in 2000 didn't. :(
 
I turned it off because Cameron Diaz was making me ill. She sounded so stupid and ill-informed that I couldn't believe Oprah wasted her time having her on the show. They all pretty much came out and said vote for Kerry without actually mentioning any names.

As of now, I'm still an undecided voter, but it's stunts like these that make me lean towards Bush.
 
Originally posted by Jeafl
I turned it off because Cameron Diaz was making me ill. She sounded so stupid and ill-informed that I couldn't believe Oprah wasted her time having her on the show. They all pretty much came out and said vote for Kerry without actually mentioning any names.

As of now, I'm still an undecided voter, but it's stunts like these that make me lean towards Bush.

why would the decisions of some voters sway who you vote for? sorry, just doesn't make sense to me... you're voting for the MAN not the people who follow him... there are a few crazies in every bunch ;)

I watched the show, sorta. I think it's nice of Oprah to put a big emphasis on voting, esp since so many women value her opinion as gold. It was sad to hear how many women don't vote - and their reasonings. So, I figure that if the show got ONE woman to vote that hasn't before, then it was worth it.

I never care much about what celebrities say or think, personally, but evidentally lots of others do...
 
I had to laugh when Drew Barrymore mentioned something about voting being something about inner discovery? What the heck does voting have to do with finding yourself? :confused: :confused:
 
I watch the news for information and television to be entertained. I don't understand why celebrities think that the general viewing population CARES ABOUT or WANTS TO listen to their political views. They think because they are famous, people want to hear what they have to say. Frankly, I think most of them sound really ignorant. When it comes down to it, they have no idea WHAT they are talking about. Let's discuss issues!

Come on, Oprah! If you want to encouraged people to vote, then get some guests that actually have half a brain!
 
I guess I 'm just a little disappointed that Oprah seemed to use her show and influence in voting for a certain candidate under the guise of getting out and voting. The subject of exercising your right to vote was a good idea. It just seemed to have a hidden agenda.
 
I really would have preferred to see some women of intelligence convincing other women to vote. Sandra Day O'Connor, Hillary Clinton, Condoleeza Rice, ANYONE but the simpering Cameron Diaz and the not-so-bright P. Diddy. I just think Oprah dropped the ball on this one.

Poohkinandpiglet, I totally agree with you.
 
I understood why Oprah had on the people that she did. She was appealing to the younger voters. Did you see the statistics - only 36% of 18-24 year olds voted in 2000?!?!?! Really depressing figures!

True she could have had more articulate guests on, better informed - but what she had were celebrity women who were just like those uniformed, never registered to vote women.

Makes sense to me - she hopes that younger women (she made a comment that in particular - young, single women don't vote - probably the target audience for people like Cameron Diaz and Drew Barrymore, Christina Aguilara - young, uniformed, single themselves).

I too hope that at least one woman that never voted, votes now thanks to this show.
 
I didn't see Oprah but discussed it with my friend who did see it. She mentioned Cameron Diaz in particular, too. Her "get out to vote" message seems to be really a ruse for "get out to vote for Kerry and the Dem platform".

Earlier this year, I read a book called Spin Sisters, by Myrna Blyth. Here's a quick review from Amazon:
The story that began as an exciting movement for equal rights and morphed into a wonderful celebration of opportunity today has become a depressing, discouraging gains-means-pain tale of woe sold to women readers as the grim new reality of their lives," writes Blyth, editor-in-chief of Ladies' Home Journal from 1981 to 2002 and former publishing director of More, in this juicy insider's look into the $7-billion-a-year industry of women's magazines. These glossy rags, she says, peddle the message that women are the unhappy victims of a stress-filled world: they are too fat and too wrinkled, prone to disease, and overworked by their jobs and families. And, according to Blythe in this mea culpa, all the fear-mongering is underlined by the subtle, liberal message that more government will alleviate women's problems. The media divas who run what she calls this "Girls' club," from Harper's Bazaar editor Glenda Bailey to Katie Couric, are out of touch with middle-class American women, Blyth charges: they command the print and broadcast worlds from their sleek Manhattan offices, pay indulgently for an army of domestic help at home and, even worse, vote overwhelmingly Democratic. If her conclusion is a stretch and her critique of colleagues often catty and vituperative, many of Blyth's jabs at women's media seem to have merit. She challenges what she sees as the assumption by much of the media that all women think alike and are interested only in diet, fashion, sex appeal or stress relief. Whether this superficial content is the fault of liberals or conservativesâ€"or whether it's the market simply feeding demandâ€"remains less clear.

Oprah follows that same format.
 
I saw the names in the tv guide and read the writing on the wall. I didn't watch it. How disappointing that Oprah would do that.

I did watch Dr. Phil when the Bush family was on and plan to watch again when the Kerry's are on. I thought he did a good job of keeping it nonpolitical and just talking about the topic of the day - family life.
 
Kendra....I read that book, too! It's all about major journalists like Katie Couric, Diane Sawyer, Oprah, Barbara Walters, etc.... and how they made their money by catering to women, telling women how stressed life is for them and how misunderstood women are. Very interesting book!
 
Originally posted by gr8tpanther
I had to laugh when Drew Barrymore mentioned something about voting being something about inner discovery? What the heck does voting have to do with finding yourself? :confused: :confused:

Is that the same Drew Barrymore who married Tom Green and 3 others before him.....??:jester:

Quite Frankly, i've always been very sick of celebrities shoving their opinions down my throat....who cares who Drew Barrymore is voting for? She's not living in my world and doesn't care about the things I care about.
 


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