talk shows
I really like to watch talk shows, because its like a radio but we could see body language, some music of the most famous current pop singers, why are these the guests, how come they get invited? What sort of content will be allowed? How do the guest use these precious few minutes? Talk formats, are like
David Letterman
Oprah
Jin Xing
Apostrophe - literature book show 1990
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostrophes_(talk_show)
and many others, including french shows, hk shows,
its an entertainment format, not your thesis writing discussion.
Chatty in nature, what are some of the memorable chat shows? They are basically showing us, in the duration of our life time, say 100 years , counting large, who has seen and done what? Where did they go?
We are no longer about "discovering truth or who is lying", people have smart phones today, you could see so much tik toks, real life surveying cameras, self tapes, learning online games, online discussions in real time. Talk shows are more and more like a mini spectacle, it is not about sitting down and discussion, you need images. The literature show Apostrophe used to be so interesting because we see real writers in image form, this is not your piano playing, dancing show, its somebody showing their real face, because their art is in writing.
Its also a place to study the voice, who is saying things to make the scene interesting? and with all the various real docus, how will a talk show survive?
More:
song writer round table https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O88CrYUPW2M
Apostrophe, w Bernard Pivot
The hour-long show was devoted to books, authors and literature. The format varied between one-on-one interviews with a single author[2] and open discussions between four or five authors.[1][2] Notable authors who appeared on the show included: Vladimir Nabokov, Norman Mailer, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Marguerite Yourcenar, Susan Sontag, Neil Sheehan, Milan Kundera, Georges Simenon, William Styron,[3] John Le Carré, Tom Wolfe,[1] Umberto Eco, Marguerite Duras. Charles Bukowski's appearance on the show (22 September 1978) is famous for his being visibly drunk, insulting the host and walking off in the midst of the broadcast.[4] The show also invited political figures (Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, the Dalai Lama, Robert Badinter, François Mitterrand), intellectuals, historians, sociologists (Pierre Bourdieu, Claude Lévi-Strauss), actors and directors (Marcello Mastroianni, Roman Polanski, François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard) to discuss their books and literature.
At the end of each broadcast, Bernard Pivot traditionally asked his guests to answer the Proust Questionnaire. (Inspired by Pivot, James Lipton, the host of the U.S. TV program Inside the Actors Studio, gives an adapted version of the Proust Questionnaire to some of his guests.)
https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E9%94%B5%E9%94%B5%E4%B8%89%E4%BA%BA%E8%A1%8C
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