Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Greenspan on Meet The Press
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CAwireman.
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August 2, 2010 at 10:38 PM #586675August 2, 2010 at 11:39 PM #585652
sd_matt
Participant[quote=eavesdropper][quote=Rich Toscano]How many times does a guy have to be catastrophically wrong before people will stop listening to him?[/quote]
It would appear that, to the media, Alan Greenspan has no shelf date. As long as the mass media offers Greenspan a soapbox, a large percentage of the citizenry will assume that what’s coming out of his mouth is believeable. Sad, but oh, so true.
I’m not sure who is charged with finding and booking “experts” to appear on televised news media, but I would be willing to bet that it’s the unpaid 20 year-old intern.
What was NBC thinking? (Of course, that, in itself, is a broad assumption on my part) You have the guy who is considered to be responsible in large part for the financial mess……on your well-respected, widely-viewed Sunday morning news show to ask him about our current and future financial health??? Really? There wasn’t another economist, financial journalist, or econ professor available? Maybe if Greenspan would have been one of 3 or 4 economists on a panel, or if they had had Greenspan interviewed by a hard-hitting financial journalist (no, not Jim Cramer. Someone who actually knows something about finance.)
No, so long as the mainstream media (and, yes, I am including Fox News in this group) continue to book these leeches, advertise their appearances heavily, and lob softball questions at them, people in America will take it for granted that they’re experts, and worth listening to. It’s so much easier doing that than reading a number of sources, weighing the content of each against the other, and coming up with one’s own thoughts and opinions.[/quote]
It’s funny, or maybe not, how many times I repeat myself “….the people who saw it coming..” Sigh.
August 2, 2010 at 11:39 PM #585745sd_matt
Participant[quote=eavesdropper][quote=Rich Toscano]How many times does a guy have to be catastrophically wrong before people will stop listening to him?[/quote]
It would appear that, to the media, Alan Greenspan has no shelf date. As long as the mass media offers Greenspan a soapbox, a large percentage of the citizenry will assume that what’s coming out of his mouth is believeable. Sad, but oh, so true.
I’m not sure who is charged with finding and booking “experts” to appear on televised news media, but I would be willing to bet that it’s the unpaid 20 year-old intern.
What was NBC thinking? (Of course, that, in itself, is a broad assumption on my part) You have the guy who is considered to be responsible in large part for the financial mess……on your well-respected, widely-viewed Sunday morning news show to ask him about our current and future financial health??? Really? There wasn’t another economist, financial journalist, or econ professor available? Maybe if Greenspan would have been one of 3 or 4 economists on a panel, or if they had had Greenspan interviewed by a hard-hitting financial journalist (no, not Jim Cramer. Someone who actually knows something about finance.)
No, so long as the mainstream media (and, yes, I am including Fox News in this group) continue to book these leeches, advertise their appearances heavily, and lob softball questions at them, people in America will take it for granted that they’re experts, and worth listening to. It’s so much easier doing that than reading a number of sources, weighing the content of each against the other, and coming up with one’s own thoughts and opinions.[/quote]
It’s funny, or maybe not, how many times I repeat myself “….the people who saw it coming..” Sigh.
August 2, 2010 at 11:39 PM #586278sd_matt
Participant[quote=eavesdropper][quote=Rich Toscano]How many times does a guy have to be catastrophically wrong before people will stop listening to him?[/quote]
It would appear that, to the media, Alan Greenspan has no shelf date. As long as the mass media offers Greenspan a soapbox, a large percentage of the citizenry will assume that what’s coming out of his mouth is believeable. Sad, but oh, so true.
I’m not sure who is charged with finding and booking “experts” to appear on televised news media, but I would be willing to bet that it’s the unpaid 20 year-old intern.
What was NBC thinking? (Of course, that, in itself, is a broad assumption on my part) You have the guy who is considered to be responsible in large part for the financial mess……on your well-respected, widely-viewed Sunday morning news show to ask him about our current and future financial health??? Really? There wasn’t another economist, financial journalist, or econ professor available? Maybe if Greenspan would have been one of 3 or 4 economists on a panel, or if they had had Greenspan interviewed by a hard-hitting financial journalist (no, not Jim Cramer. Someone who actually knows something about finance.)
No, so long as the mainstream media (and, yes, I am including Fox News in this group) continue to book these leeches, advertise their appearances heavily, and lob softball questions at them, people in America will take it for granted that they’re experts, and worth listening to. It’s so much easier doing that than reading a number of sources, weighing the content of each against the other, and coming up with one’s own thoughts and opinions.[/quote]
It’s funny, or maybe not, how many times I repeat myself “….the people who saw it coming..” Sigh.
August 2, 2010 at 11:39 PM #586386sd_matt
Participant[quote=eavesdropper][quote=Rich Toscano]How many times does a guy have to be catastrophically wrong before people will stop listening to him?[/quote]
It would appear that, to the media, Alan Greenspan has no shelf date. As long as the mass media offers Greenspan a soapbox, a large percentage of the citizenry will assume that what’s coming out of his mouth is believeable. Sad, but oh, so true.
I’m not sure who is charged with finding and booking “experts” to appear on televised news media, but I would be willing to bet that it’s the unpaid 20 year-old intern.
What was NBC thinking? (Of course, that, in itself, is a broad assumption on my part) You have the guy who is considered to be responsible in large part for the financial mess……on your well-respected, widely-viewed Sunday morning news show to ask him about our current and future financial health??? Really? There wasn’t another economist, financial journalist, or econ professor available? Maybe if Greenspan would have been one of 3 or 4 economists on a panel, or if they had had Greenspan interviewed by a hard-hitting financial journalist (no, not Jim Cramer. Someone who actually knows something about finance.)
No, so long as the mainstream media (and, yes, I am including Fox News in this group) continue to book these leeches, advertise their appearances heavily, and lob softball questions at them, people in America will take it for granted that they’re experts, and worth listening to. It’s so much easier doing that than reading a number of sources, weighing the content of each against the other, and coming up with one’s own thoughts and opinions.[/quote]
It’s funny, or maybe not, how many times I repeat myself “….the people who saw it coming..” Sigh.
August 2, 2010 at 11:39 PM #586690sd_matt
Participant[quote=eavesdropper][quote=Rich Toscano]How many times does a guy have to be catastrophically wrong before people will stop listening to him?[/quote]
It would appear that, to the media, Alan Greenspan has no shelf date. As long as the mass media offers Greenspan a soapbox, a large percentage of the citizenry will assume that what’s coming out of his mouth is believeable. Sad, but oh, so true.
I’m not sure who is charged with finding and booking “experts” to appear on televised news media, but I would be willing to bet that it’s the unpaid 20 year-old intern.
What was NBC thinking? (Of course, that, in itself, is a broad assumption on my part) You have the guy who is considered to be responsible in large part for the financial mess……on your well-respected, widely-viewed Sunday morning news show to ask him about our current and future financial health??? Really? There wasn’t another economist, financial journalist, or econ professor available? Maybe if Greenspan would have been one of 3 or 4 economists on a panel, or if they had had Greenspan interviewed by a hard-hitting financial journalist (no, not Jim Cramer. Someone who actually knows something about finance.)
No, so long as the mainstream media (and, yes, I am including Fox News in this group) continue to book these leeches, advertise their appearances heavily, and lob softball questions at them, people in America will take it for granted that they’re experts, and worth listening to. It’s so much easier doing that than reading a number of sources, weighing the content of each against the other, and coming up with one’s own thoughts and opinions.[/quote]
It’s funny, or maybe not, how many times I repeat myself “….the people who saw it coming..” Sigh.
August 3, 2010 at 12:23 PM #585787jpinpb
Participant[quote=HiggyBaby]JP, did see it. Felt as though he was spinning overly positively despite a few open/truthful statements.[/quote]
Yeah. He definitely is trying to spin it positive. I guess at this point you have to try to get people’s psyche to be positive.
August 3, 2010 at 12:23 PM #585880jpinpb
Participant[quote=HiggyBaby]JP, did see it. Felt as though he was spinning overly positively despite a few open/truthful statements.[/quote]
Yeah. He definitely is trying to spin it positive. I guess at this point you have to try to get people’s psyche to be positive.
August 3, 2010 at 12:23 PM #586413jpinpb
Participant[quote=HiggyBaby]JP, did see it. Felt as though he was spinning overly positively despite a few open/truthful statements.[/quote]
Yeah. He definitely is trying to spin it positive. I guess at this point you have to try to get people’s psyche to be positive.
August 3, 2010 at 12:23 PM #586521jpinpb
Participant[quote=HiggyBaby]JP, did see it. Felt as though he was spinning overly positively despite a few open/truthful statements.[/quote]
Yeah. He definitely is trying to spin it positive. I guess at this point you have to try to get people’s psyche to be positive.
August 3, 2010 at 12:23 PM #586825jpinpb
Participant[quote=HiggyBaby]JP, did see it. Felt as though he was spinning overly positively despite a few open/truthful statements.[/quote]
Yeah. He definitely is trying to spin it positive. I guess at this point you have to try to get people’s psyche to be positive.
August 3, 2010 at 8:51 PM #586067CAwireman
ParticipantRich, well said!
August 3, 2010 at 8:51 PM #586160CAwireman
ParticipantRich, well said!
August 3, 2010 at 8:51 PM #586693CAwireman
ParticipantRich, well said!
August 3, 2010 at 8:51 PM #586801CAwireman
ParticipantRich, well said!
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