Is ‘The View’ Actually Serious About Presenting More Than One ‘View’?
Why isn't 'The View' auditioning more conservative women? Some of those women are fantastic, but some of them are not remotely conservative.
"The View" co-host Meghan McCain issued a scathing rebuke of her anti-gun rights co-hosts on Friday after she clashed with some over the Second Amendment.
During the segment, the co-hosts addressed gun violence in America.
At one point during the segment, co-host Sunny Hostin said that Americans' Second Amendment rights were couched in racist roots and were initially designed to "protect slavery."
In the early moments of the segment, co-host Joy Behar asked Hostin what she believed was the heart of the country's "gun problem."
"I think it's a cultural problem and ... for decades, the [National Rifle Association] has pushed legislation that not only supported a lot of gun ownership and the proliferation of guns, but also stifled the study and spread of information about the causes of gun violence," Hostin said. "I'm reading an incredible book called 'The Second' by professor Carol Anderson, and she describes that ... the right to bear arms was designed to protect slavery because our Founding Fathers, and others, wanted to be able to empower a local militia group to basically put down a slave revolt and protect plantation owners."
Co-host Ana Navarro chimed in, "It's very much an American problem, and we've got to study it as such. Republican members of the legislature have got to get from under the grip of the NRA — which, today, is far from the club that started centuries ago. Today, it is a grift and a way for people to make a lot of money. A lot of funding is coming from the gun manufacturers. It is a special interest group, and they are holding up any progress that could be made on this issue."
Hostin also added that gun ownership is only on the rise in the black community nowadays because of the fear of white supremacy and police violence.
McCain fired back, "Well, what makes me feel unsafe is rising crime [in home state Arizona]. ... But you aren't seeing people fleeing Arizona. In fact, Arizona is gaining a new congressional seat because so many people from California want to come over to Arizona because of the different kind of laws."
She continued, "You aren't seeing people flooding to places like New York City, you're seeing them flood to places like Florida and Texas, and that's because of the crime spikes and other things that happened post-pandemic."
McCain added that she's a proud gun owner as well as a proud member of the NRA.
"I never want to be lectured by people who don't own guns, who didn't grow up in gun culture, who don't understand why women like me want to be armed, want to feel safe in my home, want to know that if there was an intruder that my husband would be able to protect me and my baby," she continued. "It's a very hard thing for people to understand that don't believe it. ... But going forward, I will always vote for any person and any party that continues to defend the Second Amendment no matter what happens. It is the cornerstone of who I am and what I believe America should be."
ADDRESSING ROOT CAUSES OF GUN VIOLENCE: With gun violence in the headlines every single day in America, @TheView co… https://t.co/BMmJpoIjFe
— The View (@TheView) 1627057652.0
(H/T: Decider)
"The View" co-hosts Joy Behar and Meghan McCain clashed over vaccinations on Thursday's broadcast of the hit daytime TV show, prompting co-host Whoopi Goldberg to prematurely shut down the segment.
At one point during the heated discussion, Behar insisted that conservatives are avoiding the vaccine simply in order to "own the libs."
The remarks didn't sit well with McCain, the sole conservative on the panel.
Early in the segment, which was about COVID-19 vaccines, vaccine lotteries, and the contingent of population who are receiving the vaccines, co-host Sunny Hostin argued that people who refuse the vaccine are "selfish," and insisted that we are "supposed to be our brothers' and sisters' keeper."
"We're supposed to take care of each other," Hostin reasoned. "We have to incentivize people to get vaccinated so they not only protect themselves and their families, but their fellow citizens — I guess I can't make sense of something like that when you have a country like India where there are 4,500 deaths every day from COVID and people there are begging for the vaccine."
Hostin concluded her tirade by insisting that people who wish to be incentivized for receiving the vaccine are "sad and selfish" and "frankly kind of absurd."
Behar's remarks came after the show played a clip of infectious diseases expert Dr. Anthony Fauci saying that Americans were misinterpreting updated mask guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
On Wednesday, Fauci said, "They are feeling that we're saying 'You don't need the mask anymore.' That's not what the CDC said. They said 'If you are vaccinated, you can feel safe — that you will not get infected either outdoors or indoors. It did not explicitly say that unvaccinated people should abandon their masks."
Behar chimed in, "It's not that complicated, people. It's not nuclear physics. All you have to do is get the damn vaccine. When you go inside, wear a mask even if you have the vaccine. There might be variants around. Get the damn vaccine! Get the booster when that time is coming! What is the complicated problem here with people?
"I don't understand," she continued. "Is this just to own the libs? Maybe they're not seeing enough on television the way people suffer when they get the disease. Even though the numbers are going down, people are still dying. ... You're not 'owning the libs' by not getting the shot. Nobody is growing an extra arm or head. Everybody is fine. It's the people not taking it who are not fine. I'm sick of it!"
McCain interjected and said that Behar's remarks weren't helpful in mending division between conservatives and liberals and that Fauci's messaging on the vaccine and mask-wearing has been utter "garbage."
"And it's not just about owning the libs, the demographics on who is vaccine-hesitant — it crosses the gamut," McCain fired back. "The White House and the CDC have done a terrible job, and just saying, 'What do you want to own the libs' and that's that? It's not productive. That's why people keep going to their corners and this is coming from a place of fear. I don't think it's coming from a place of politics."
McCain added that there has been so much miscommunication surrounding the pandemic that it's easy to see why some Americans are hesitant or skeptical of a new vaccine.
"People don't understand and don't know," McCain defended. "I don't like to judge people who aren't accessible to the same resources and education I am. This is a serious, serious problem in this country."
Behar reasoned that vaccine hesitancy in black Americans is legitimate, but added that white conservatives aren't getting the vaccine because they're watching Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson.
"A lot of people of color have every right to be skeptical of the government," Behar insisted. "They have been burned for generations by various policies and so they're nervous. That's different."
McCain interrupted, "Republicans have reasons to be nervous for other [reasons]. I'm not trying to judge. I want as many people vaccinated in as many ways, but I think when you come on the show and just say we're 'owning the libs,' it's just factually inaccurate about the demographics who are not getting the vaccine. It crosses the gamut."
As McCain continued shutting her down, Behar fired back, "A lot of these people that you're talking about, Meghan, are watching Sean Hannity ... and Tucker Carlson, who are telling them that it's danger — Excuse me, can I please finish the sentence?"
McCain, however, refused to back down, and shouted, "They are not! They are not!"
She continued, snapping, “Some of these women that I know are highly educated women."
As the two women continued shouting at each other, Goldberg cut the fiery segment off and went to commercial break.
(H/T: Rawstory)
Daytime TV host Wendy Williams said that "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" cancellation was not unexpected because television "exposes you for the person that you really are."
"The Wendy Williams Show" host said that DeGeneres is leaving not because she felt like retiring, but because of the hostile and toxic workplace claims that surrounded the show over the past year.
During her Thursday "Hot Topics" segment, Williams said, "Nineteen years is a very good run, congratulations to you, Ellen. All you've been through all those 19 years, including the workplace conditions, which ... by the way, I believe she's leaving because [of] the workplace conditions. You know? I mean, we all know people who've worked there."
Williams pointed out that during her time as a daytime talk show staple, DeGeneres revealed her true self.
"Here's the thing, I'm glad that you thanked your 'Ellen' fans, or whatever you call your 'nation.' But 19 years on TV doesn't ... change your life. It exposes you for the person you really are."
"I'm not sure all the guests are happy," Williams added. "I was a guest. I wasn't happy. ... People called me out on it before I was able to say anything about it. I don't know whether she told her current staff, though. She seems like the type of person who could come out on stage and announce it to everybody."
Earlier this week, a former producer for DeGeneres' show recalled the toxic environment to which employees and guests — save for prolific celebrities — were reportedly subjected.
Two-time Emmy Award-winning producer Hedda Muskat told the Australian show "Sunrise" that she believes DeGeneres "duped" her fans and viewers into believing that she is a "nice person."
"The viewers have spoken," Muskat said of the show's cancellation. "Her ratings have been in the toilet for a long, long time now, her show has not been fun, it has not been interesting, and she's not, really, by the way, stepping down. The viewers fired her."
She added, "I feel that the viewers feel duped, in a way, that she's not this nice person. The viewers are not going to put up with the backstage racism that goes on and the backstage bullying that goes on. So I think the viewers have woken up, finally."
Muskat concluded, "I'd like to see her work on a farm where she can relate with all of the animals, and the pets, and the dogs, and the cows, and the pigs, because she can relate to animals far more than she does with people."
Following the reports, DeGeneres told Savannah Guthrie on NBC's "Today" that she was not concluding the show because of the workplace allegations.
"If I was quitting I would not have come back this year. I really did think about not coming back. It was devastating. I am a kind person. I am a person who likes to make people happy. I just kept saying to Portia [de Rossi, ] if I was a fan of somebody and even if I wasn't, I would think there must be some truth to it because it's not stopping," DeGeneres insisted. "Right on the heels of that, I read in the press that there was a toxic work environment. I had no idea. I never saw anything that would even point to that."
She also suggested that the allegations could have been "orchestrated."
"I thought something was going on because it was too orchestrated. It was too coordinated. People get picked on but for four months straight for me," DeGeneres insisted. "And then for me to read in the press about a toxic workplace environment when all I've ever heard from every guest that comes on the show is what a happy atmosphere this is and what a happy place it is."
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