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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMorning Joke=Eddie Haskell=change the channel
I freely admit that MSNBC has been my morning background noise for years.
No longer. It's been off 3 weeks now.
The production concept is an epic failure, trying to bring late night-talk show style programming with political over tones to morning TV - in the Morning Joe style, is stale. The boring inner circle of backslappers along with the syphancont Mika - have become a cartoon.
While many of you are smarter than me - abandoning Morning Joke long ago - I have to be honest, having MSNBC on was a bad habit.
Joe has ALWAYS portrayed Ed Haskell to me - I had long held hope that Mika would provide the counter balance - but no - her role continues to be sexualized, body language and her deference to Joe along with promo photos shows that - and she has allowed herself to become the biggest cartoon of all of them - sickening because I think she is smarter than allowed to be.
i hope the Eddie Haskell sinking ship doesn't take down the entire lineup.
on point
(2,506 posts)Every time they start to get into an interesting in depth conversation, Joe Scarborough inserts himself like some bratty attention grabbing kid. It has to be about him, so he grabs center stage inserts inane, usually right wing wacko nonsense, and breaks up what might have been an intelligent discussion. The show is only tolerable when he is off the set and out of the picture.
Ninga
(8,275 posts)If you ever watched "Leave it to Beaver" you would know Eddie Haskell....
Via Wiki...
Eddie was known for his neat grooming[2]hiding his shallow and sneaky character. Typically, Eddie would greet his friends' parents with overdone good manners and often a compliment such as, "That's a lovely dress you're wearing, Mrs. Cleaver." However, when no parents were around, Eddie was always up to no goodeither conniving with his friends or picking on Wally's younger brother, Beaver. Eddie's two-faced style was also typified by his efforts to curry favor by trying to talk to adults at the level he thought they would respect, such as referring to their children as Theodore (Beaver's much-disliked given name) and Wallace, even though the parents called them Beaver and Wally.
A weaselly wise guy, Eddie could be relied upon to connive and instigate schemes with his friendsschemes for which they would be in the position of blame, if (and usually when) caught. One of his most infamous pranks with the Cleaver boys involved fastening a chain around the rear axle of their friend Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford's car, causing unplanned damage as the entire third member and wheels became detached when he tried to move the car. The prank has been repeated on police and gangster cars in scenes in the films American Graffiti (1973) and Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), respectively.