Jim: Roundtable time again. .  Remember our e-mail 
address is thethirdestatesundayreview@yahoo.com.  Participating in our roundtable are  The Third Estate Sunday  Review's Dona, Ty, Jess, Ava, and me, Jim; Rebecca of Sex and Politics  and Screeds and Attitude; Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great  Man; C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday  Review; Kat of Kat's Korner (of The  Common Ills); Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix; Mike of Mikey  Likes It!; Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz); Ruth of  Ruth's  Report;  Wally of The Daily Jot;  Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends; Isaiah of  The World  Today Just Nuts and Ann of Ann's  Mega Dub. Betty's kids did the 
illustration. You are reading a rush  transcript.

 
Jim (Con't):  So GLAAD announced their GLAAD Media Award nominees last week, C.I. posted it at THE COMMON ILLS and then we got: "Candace Cameron Saddle Burr and GLAAD's nominees for Outstanding Comedy Series," "GLAAD's nominees for Outstanding Documentary," "Thoughts on WSWS and (good going) GLAAD's Outstanding Drama Series nominees." "GLAAD's Outstanding Reality Program - Competition," "TV and streaming grab bag" -- which notes the nominees for the talk show category, "GLAAD's Outstanding live action Kids and Family programming, Graham Elwood, Woah Joe Biden," "GLAAD's nominees for Outstanding film -- streaming or TV," "glaad's nominees for outstanding new tv series," "GLAAD's Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series" and "GLAAD's Outstanding film nominees."  This was an attempt to really get the word out so check those out if you haven't already.
Elaine: And give Ann and C.I. credit because they talked about it and decided that the awards and GLAAD could be amplified, it was their idea.
Jim: Thanks, Elaine.  Ann, how did that come about?
Ann: Stan, for example, was highlighting various award nominations and I think I highlighted one myself.  Then C.I. and I were talking about BROS and it getting a nomination from GLAAD.  We talked about how GLAAD would probably be lucky to get a write up or two and how we could highlight in the community and do our part to make sure it got more than just a little attention.  Be the change you want to be and all of that.  So we ended up grabbing categories and highlighting.
 
Jim: Alright then.  THE DAILY SHOW is trying out new hosts.  Among those
 competing to be host?  Chelsea Handler, Kal Penn, DL Hughley, Leslie 
Jones, Wanda Sykes, Hasan Minhai, Sarah Sliverman, Marlon Wayans and 
John Leguizamo.  Any thoughts?  Leslie Jones went last week.  
Wally:
 Al Franken is awful and he's way too old.  He was part of the team 
writing SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE back in the 70s. He's 71 years old and needs
 to buy a clue.  
Betty: I 
wasn't following on COMEDY CENTRAL.  But I did stream the clips that 
C.I. posted at THE COMMON ILLS.  I thought DL was surprisingly good and 
had a real energy.  I thought Leslie Jones was fantastic and I've 
quoted, at work, some of her stuff from THE DAILY SHOW.  I could handle 
it if Chelsea Handler got it but, for me, if it's anyone other than 
those three -- Leslie, DL and Chelsea -- the wrong person has been 
selected.
Rebecca: Those 
are three strong choices but, for me, it's really got to be Leslie 
Jones.  I've been surprised at how good she's been.  She'd funny, 
absolutely, but she's been on point and just wonderful.  When she was 
the chicken -- is that one you've talked about at work -- giving the 
demands if people want eggs?
Betty: Yeah, that's one I've mentioned at work.  I love it when she says they have to get rid of Sally in that skit, "Sell Sally to Popeyes" is one of the demands. 
Cedric: 
 She really has been hilarious.  DL was as well.  With Chelsea, too much
 is going to be about her signaling.  I just want to laugh people.  And 
what about when she went off the correspondent?  Wally and I were 
talking about that.  Wally?
Wally:
 The bit in that skit was that her best friend had dated him and he'd 
dumped her.  And she just went to town.  Even though it was her friend's
 fault.  It was so funny.  
Betty: I loved that.  They need to put that skit in its own YOUTUBE clip.  I'm going to post her this week regardless.  
Ty: Not tonight? 
Betty: Not tonight.  We're doing this roundtable on a Monday and I've got to hurry and post after we get done.
Isaiah:
 I've been watching THE DAILY SHOW and, listening to everyone talk, I 
think my vote's for Leslie Jones as well.  She's so funny.  And I've 
laughed repeatedly watching her but hearing Betty, Rebecca, Cedric and 
Wally talk about it, it really is obvious that she's the best choice.  
She has taken it elsewhere and that's what the show needs.  Trevor Noah 
never worked for me because he was just a copy of Jon Stewart.  Leslie 
has really made it her own each time she's gotten behind the desk.
 
Ann: Yeah, I'd agree. She really has made it her own, more than anyone else who has attempted it. 
Jim: Okay, new topic, Carson is upset that we didn't do a piece on Barbara Walters' passing.  
Ava:
 Is Carson the same Carson that's your cousin?  We shared our thoughts 
on Barbara repeatedly over the years.  There was no coda required.  
Carson, Jim also wanted us to write about her.  We didn't see the 
point.  Enough people were covering her and most were doing so in a good
 way -- covering her career.  
Dona:
 On THE VIEW, I do want to stress that Star Jones married a gay man and 
divorced him.  I want to stress that because Star Jones was opposed to 
gay men marrying -- each other.  She was firmly against marriage 
equality.  Apparently, she wanted to save all the gay men for herself.
Jess:
 We actually 
quoted the e-mail she sent out after people criticized her 
for that on THE VIEW -- when she was saying that she voted God and that 
God didn't want two men to marry and all her other nonsense.  
Ty:
 It's hilarious and telling and justice that she ended up married to a 
gay guy.  And she turned that sham wedding into a gimmie-gimmie as she 
got companies to pay for this or gift her with that.  She was a grifter 
and then some.  Okay.  Sam Smith is a great singer.  Smith is also 
non-binary.  He was calling for the Brit Awards to go genderless on 
categories.  They did.  And now?  
Best Artist has five nominees and not one is a woman.  Gale e-mailed wondering Ava and C.I.'s thoughts considering they wrote "
Hard Pass on one Best Acting Academy Award (Ava and C.I.)."
Ava:
 C.I.'s pointing to me to start.  Okay.  First, I have no opinion on The
 Brit Awards.  It's a UK award organization.  It should represent the UK
 and they should make the decisions about their categories.  I have no 
comment regarding British awards or how they are determined.  Now hold 
for me, I'll take notes and C.I. can speak.
C.I.: What Ava said 100%.  In terms of what we wrote, we were referring to the Academy Awards.  
Ty: Summarize it for any who didn't read it.
C.I.:
 There is a push by some -- including THE LOS ANGELES TIMES editorial 
board -- for Best Actor and Best Actress to become one award.  In our 
piece, Ava and I spoke about how the nominees for Best Actress, for 
example, could be for any performer who defines as a woman and, for Best
 Actor, any performer who defines as man.  The role of actress has 
historically been different from that of actor.  Best Actor isn't about 
acting.  It's about what you represent and do you make the country feel 
good.  That's how really bad actors -- John Wayne, Gary Cooper, etc -- 
have won the award.  For Best Actress, a woman has to actually act -- 
generally a wide range of emotions.  Due to societal conditioning, a man
 wins for suppressing emotions while a woman wins for exploring.  Due to
 this, you really can't lump the two categories together at this point 
and see it as being in any way fair.  The two awards come with different
 expectations of the type of performance.  We are opposed to them being 
put into one role.  Back to Ava.
Ava:
 We've talked to Ty about what we wrote before because it resulted in a 
lot of e-mails.  We didn't touch on non-binary performers.  There aren't
 a lot of actors in lead roles using that definition currently.  If we 
work on this issue -- societal expectations -- and move towards one 
category, this could be done in around five years -- if the industry was
 serious about it.  By that time, it could be single category and 
incorporate binary performers.  At present, there are not that any who 
could garner a leading acting nomination. 
Ann: I don't know though, I think the points you both made are important ones and I don't see how the historical roles of women can 'compete' against men when they're being judged by different criteria.  
Betty: You are right.  Especially if the actor isn't a method actor, 
they're doing little more than stone faces and people -- voters -- are 
responding to their character and their character's meanings, not to the
 actual performance.  A Marlon Brando or a Dustin Hoffman is the 
exception in the actor category.  In the actress category?  Bette Davis 
is expected to pull out all stops, for example.  Jane Fonda's 
performance in KLUTE explores everything.  I think that's why we see 
that performance as the finest acting in film of the 20th century.  We 
expect so much more from the actress.  They have to grab us and rip our 
emotions from us.  A male actor just has to be a tour guide through the 
better parts of our nature.
Ty: Well said, Betty!  
Elaine:
 If I could, Sam's album GLORIA comes out on Friday.  In addition, this 
Friday sees the release of Carly Simon's LIVE AT GRAND CENTRAL -- the 
first time the album -- audio -- has been released.  And Diana Ross' 
SURRENDER, from 1973, gets a re-release.
Kat:
 Elaine and I have ordered our copies.  Noting that because Diana's 
album is a limited edition release.  You have been warned.
Jim: Betty, did you order as well?  
Betty: I did a three way sweep as well: Carly, Diana and Sam.
Jim: And you all used AMAZON.  Why?
Kat:
 Because we did not want to order from Carly Simon.  That's not me being
 mean.  Holly Near enraged people when they wanted to buy her album with
 Emma's Revolution.  That was a digital purchase but, even so, it left a
 bad taste in my mouth.  People were e-mailing me about it and they were
 upset because it was paid for but did not arrive.  That really ticked 
me off -- I'd promoted and reviewed the album.  So since then, it's just
 AMAZON for me.  Yes, Carly is selling physical copies at her website.  
But I don't want to order from artists' websites after the Holly Near 
debacle.  I don't want to be mad at the artist.  So I just use AMAZON, 
sorry.  I will say, for anyone who wants to order from Carly, she does 
have two different versions of the vinyl.  One may be clear vinyl, I 
can't remember.  
Jim: Alright.  TV watching.  Did anyone catch anything good last week?
Elaine: Stan and I are both big fans of WILL TRENT which airs Tuesday nights on ABC.  
Stan:
 Huge fans.  And I will catch NIGHT COURT.  I've got it in the cloud but
 didn't have time to catch it.  This edition, Ava and C.I. praise it -- 
and THAT 90S SHOW -- so I'll catch them both as soon as I can.  
Ty: A question about the snapshot.  Today's "
Iraq snapshot" went up later than usual.
C.I.:
 I dictate those and it was all done but it was mistakenly posted to 
post this evening and not this morning.  At lunch, I had friends calling
 asking where it was.  "It's right there."  Oh.  It's not.  So I went in
 and posted it.  Sorry.  Things happen.  
Jim:
 Including that you and Ava wanted this week off and said you were going
 to take it.  You didn't write anything Sunday.  Then, when we were 
getting ready to do the roundtable, it turned out that you had written 
the review that Stan's read.
Ava:
 Stan got a copy of it e-mailed to him.  We wanted his take because we 
didn't think we had anything.  Then, this morning, before lunch, we 
worked on what's going up this edition.  We copied and pasted it into an
 e-mail and sent it to Stan.
Stan: And I said this is excellent, you have to post it.  And it is excellent.
Jim:
 Alright, Mike and Ruth wanted to talk about Joe Biden's documents that 
keep turning up -- over the weekend, a fourth discovery, another trove 
of classified documents.  Who wants to go first?
Mike: Ladies first.
Ruth:
 Thank you, kind sir.  So President Biden has a classified problem.  He 
was attacking former President Donald Trump last fall over Mr. Trump's 
document problem.  Turns out, he was residing in a glass house.  Four 
discoveries.  Who knows how many more are going to turn up?  Could be 
none.  Could be many more.  He is the President of the United States and
 he does not know how to handle classified documents?  This is deeply 
troubling.  
Mike: For me, 
it comes down to the point C.I. made.  Donald took documents.  Donald 
refused to turn them over.  Donald knew where they were.  If Joe's to be
 believed, he had no idea he had those documents.  They were not secure,
 don't pretend they were.  If you don't know you have them, they are not
 secure.  Donald at least had his documents secured.  Donald also 
refused the request to return them based on his understanding of 
presidential powers.  
Ruth:
 Right.  You may agree or disagree with Mr. Trump on his belief that, as
 president, he was able to declassify those and, therefore, take them 
with him when he left the White House.  Again, you can agree or disagree
 but, like Mike said, Mr. Trump was arguing presidential powers.  Mr. 
Biden does not have that excuse.  These were documents he obtained 
before he was president.  He was vice president and may have even taken 
the documents when he was a senator.
Mike:
 So there is no excuse for this.  Joe should have returned them long 
before he ran for re-election.  His refusal to do so goes to the fact 
that I do not believe Joe Biden should be allowed to handle classified 
documents.  This is another example of something he is just not up to.
Ruth:
 There is no question that President Biden mishandled classified 
documents.  They were not returned and they were not secured and he did 
not even know he had them.  By the definition, he mishandled them.
Jim: Okay.  So what do you two think should happen?  Ruth, you first?
Ruth:
 I have no idea.  I am not convinced that more documents are not going 
to pop up.  I am also not convinced of the stories the press has run 
with.  We have heard what Mr. Biden's attorneys want us to hear.  
Whether that is the truth -- let alone the whole truth -- I have no 
idea.  I think a Congressional investigation is warranted.
Jim: Okay.  And Mike?
Mike:
 I think Ruth's right but what I zoom in on is that Joe doesn't need to 
run for re-election.  He's an embarrassment.  He's senile and now we 
know he cannot even be trusted with secure documents -- and this goes 
back many years, meaning he's probably much worse today.
Elaine:
 Dona, we were talking earlier today about how if this hadn't come up, 
Joe's latest scandal, he would have already announced that he was 
seeking re-election.
Dona: 
Right.  And we were of the shared opinion that the Democratic Party can 
do much better than Joe Biden for 2024.  He is senile.  He assaulted 
Tara Reade.  He and his family are corrupt.  
Elaine: And don't get us started on Navy Joan and how Hunter is trying to prevent her from having his last name.
C.I.: (singing) "They say he gave her his child, he wouldn't give her his name."
Elaine:
 Exactly.  That's "Unwanted Number" from the film GRACE OF MY HEART.  
And he won't allow his own daughter to have his name and he's trying to 
get out paying child support again.  What's a matter, Hunter, your sugar
 bro won't give you anymore money?
Ruth:
 It is disgusting.  And do not talk to me about family values when he 
has now spent two years in the White House, President Biden, and he has 
never ever had his granddaughter Navy Joan to the White House.  That is 
disgusting.  That is appalling.  Do not pretend you care about family 
values as you ice an innocent child out of your lives.  It is 
disgusting.  We would have, as a people, crucified Ronald Reagan if he 
did that.  Or Bill Clinton.  Any of our past presidents.  But somehow it
 is okay for Joe Biden to do it?  It is outrageous and offensive.
Jim: And on that strong note, we're going to wrap up.  This is a rush transcript.