Connect with us

CBS News

Bill Maher on not pulling punches

Avatar

Published

on


If you catch yourself laughing at something Bill Maher has said lately on HBO’s “Real Time,” his Friday night perch for the past 21 years, just be careful: next time, the joke could be on you. No one is spared Maher’s humor, or as he sees it, truth-telling – not the right (“If you’re gonna turn over your party to a foreign power, at least pick the right one. Russia? Are you kidding? It’s like the Republicans looked over all the companies they could merge with and picked Sears!”), nor the left (“You call yourself the resistance? Then fight behind enemy lines. That’s what a ‘resistance’ does. That’s the difference between blowing up a tank and tweeting about it. Get out of your echo chamber and infiltrate theirs!”).

bill-maher-1280.jpg
Comedian Bill Maher, host of HBO’s “Real Time.” 

CBS News


Asked if you can make an audience laugh and think at the same time, Maher replied, “Totally, of course. The great thing about laughter is that it’s involuntary, so if you laugh at something, something in you tells you that’s true. It must be true; I laughed at it! Maybe I wasn’t supposed to.

He said the throughline for everything he writes and says is, “Keep it real. Don’t be tribal. Don’t say something just because that’s going to make the audience of one side applaud, or boo. Practical solutions as opposed to ideological. And don’t pull a punch.”

The 68-year-old Maher has been swinging at targets high and low his entire career, taking his own share of knocks along the way. But he still gladly courts controversy, as when he told the “Real Time” audience, “The right response to speech you don’t like is more speech, not the lazy, cowardly response of ‘canceling’ people.”

That attitude explains the title of his new book, “What This Comedian Said Will Shock You” (to be published May 21 by Simon & Schuster). It’s compiled from years of Maher’s commentaries on “Real Time.”

what-this-comedian-said-will-shock-you-cover-simon-schuster-900.jpg

Simon & Schuster


“I wanted to see if the world had changed or I had changed more,” he said. “I was excavating, reading over all these editorials from years and years and years, and I wanted to find that answer. I speak for the normies. You know, I speak from that, I think, vast middle that is tired of the partisanship. I don’t want to hate half the country, and I don’t hate half the country.”

Costa said, “You write a lot throughout this book that the left irritates you, frustrates you at times, but the right often alarms you?”

“Yes, they’re very alarming!” Maher replied. “They’re extremely alarming. More alarming.”

But if he finds the right more alarming than the left, why not shine the spotlight on them only? “The truth isn’t one-sided like that,” Maher said. “The Democrats constantly are running against Trump with the idea, You people out there couldn’t possibly vote for this guy. And people are saying, Watch me. Hold my beer. Watch me to vote for him again. Instead of just saying, Oh, he’s lied. Like, we know he’s a liar. He’s Donald Trump! He can’t help himself. He’s crazy. I mean, I think literally crazy. I think there’s a kind of a level of malignant narcissism, which is not just a personality quirk, it’s diagnosable, and he suffers from it.”

Costa asked, “If you had him on ‘Real Time,’ what would you ask him?”

“Would you please go away?” Maher laughed.

He said that Trump has been invited to be on the show: “Of course, we’ve asked everybody, I mean, of that stature. He knows he has an open invitation to come on, but I don’t think he really hates me, because the amount of times that he goes after me.”

“He watches the show,” said Costa.

“Accidentally! It’s always accidentally,” Maher said. “He watches it ‘accidentally’ every week. It’s amazing!”

In fact, conservatives don’t shy away from “Real Time.” Trump’s Attorney General William Barr was a guest last year. Maher said the reaction from liberal circles “was exactly what I hate about this country: How dare you? How dare you platform somebody?

“So, you’re going to have to talk to people, and maybe you’ll find out that they’re not the monsters you think they are. I mean, do I apologize for Bill Barr’s (I thought) horrible behavior when the Mueller Report came out and he basically lied about it? I don’t. But look, this is what I call a good-as-it-gets Republican. He came out and said Trump lost the election. That’s the main thing in the Republican Party right now: Do you believe elections count only if you win?

“As good as it gets” could well be Maher’s motto for politics, and for life – not wishing for what could be, but recognizing what he sees is real (and taking you on if you’re not).

     
READ AN EXCERPT: “What This Comedian Said Will Shock You” by Bill Maher
The new book by the host of HBO’s “Real Time” takes aim at those who brazenly invoke the standards of today to rewrite history in ways that even “Star Trek” would think go too far.  

      
For more info:

     
Story produced by Ed Forgotson and Robert Marston. Editor: Joseph Frandino. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Judge in Trump New York criminal case pushes sentencing past 2024 election

Avatar

Published

on


Judge in Trump New York criminal case pushes sentencing past 2024 election – CBS News


Watch CBS News



Judge Juan Merchan has delayed sentencing in former President Donald Trump’s New York “hush money” criminal trial to occur after the 2024 presidential election against Vice President Kamala Harris. CBS News’ Graham Kates and Katrina Kaufman have the latest.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Latest news on Georgia high school shooting, father and son arraigned

Avatar

Published

on


Latest news on Georgia high school shooting, father and son arraigned – CBS News


Watch CBS News



The Apalachee High School shooting suspect and his father were arraigned Friday. Colin Gray, the 14-year-old’s father, was charged with several counts, including involuntary manslaughter and second-degree murder, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation announced. CBS News’ Anna Schecter has the latest news.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Charges against Georgia high school shooter’s dad echo precedent set in historic Crumbley case

Avatar

Published

on


Authorities continue to investigate motive behind Apalachee High School shooting


Authorities continue to investigate motive behind Apalachee High School shooting

07:21

(CBS DETROIT) – The father of the 14-year-old accused of killing two students and two teachers at a Georgia high school was charged in connection with the shooting. His charges follow in the wake of the convictions of two Michigan parents after a school shooting carried out by their child. 

Colin Gray, 54, has been charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter, two counts of second-degree murder and eight counts of cruelty to children, in the shooting that happened at Apalachee High School Wednesday morning. The 14-year-old suspect was charged with four counts of felony murder.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Chris Hosey said the charges come from Colin Gray “knowingly allowing his son to possess a weapon.” The father was in court Friday morning, where a judge told him he could face up to 180 years in prison if convicted on all counts. 

The father of the shooting suspect being charged comes after the historic case of James and Jennifer Crumbley, who were sentenced to 10 to 15 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter, becoming the first parents in the U.S. to be convicted in a mass school shooting carried out by their child. 

James and Jennifer Crumbley were held responsible for their roles in the Oxford High School shooting that killed four students — Justin Shilling, Madisyn Baldwin, Tate Myre and Hana St. Juliana — and injured seven other people on Nov. 30, 2021. 

During their trials, the prosecution argued that the Crumbley parents ignored their son’s mental health needs and purchased the gun that he used in the shooting. 

Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald, the prosecutor in the Crumbley case who set the precedent for prosecuting parents in mass school shootings, reacted to the news that the Georgia suspect’s father was charged in an interview with CNN Thursday. 

“My reaction is rage because you know it the prosecution of the Crumbleys was never, ever meant to be a floodgate of charges against parents, because it was such an egregious set of facts,” said McDonald. “I share the emotions of the entire country that, even after that well-publicized case, we’re still here.”

Former federal prosecutor and defense attorney Rick Convertino, appearing on CBS News Detroit to discuss the shooting at Apalachee before it was revealed that the shooter’s father had been charged, noted the differences between the gun laws in Georgia and Michigan and claimed “gun culture” is different in Georgia than it is in Michigan. Georgia passed a law in 2022 that allowed residents to carry without a permit, which means adults do not need to have a permit to buy or carry buy rifles, shotguns or handguns.

One of the most significant differences, according to Convertino, is with the gun storage laws. “In Georgia, there’s no specific child-preventive act that requires the guns to be secured and safe from unrestricted children to have access to it,” said Convertino. 

There is also no gun lock law in Georgia or any “red flag” laws that allow for the removal of guns from someone who is determined to be a risk for harming themselves or other people. Georgia’s laws are among the least strict in the nation, according to a CBS News analysis

“We’ve seen this 14-year-old shooter had made threats a year before. The father apparently said to the police that he bought the AR-style weapon for a Christmas present for his minor child,” Kris Brown, president of gun control advocacy organization Brady, told CBS News’ Natalie Brand, drawing a parallel to the Crumbley case.

Brown said Colin Gray’s arrest and the convictions of James and Jennifer Crumbley send a message.

“If you have a firearm in the home, you better safely store that firearm, or you will have a risk if something happens of being criminally charged,” she said.

Michigan’s new gun safety laws went into effect in February, a little over two years after the Oxford High School shooting. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.