Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Brodhead, Colbert, and Questions
Richard Brodhead will be appearing Thursday night on Comedy
Central’s Colbert Report. Let’s set
aside the obvious: why would a group
that wants to promote increased public support for the humanities select as
its spokesperson a figure best known outside the academy for this disastrous appearance on 60 Minutes?
Instead, since Brodhead himself has said that he sees
the interview as “a good chance to show off Duke,” perhaps Colbert could
find the time to ask him why, in his first
public appearance after their arrest, he said that even if
Reade Seligmann and Collin Finnerty were innocent, whatever they did was “bad
enough.” Does he continue to believe what he told the Durham Chamber of Commerce
in April 2006, and if not, why did he never retract or apologize for his
remarks?
Some other items that remain unanswered:
(1) Why specifically did Brodhead and the Duke Board of
Trustees demand Mike Pressler’s resignation in early April 2006? What did they
expect the public reaction to their move to be? Did they recognize at the time that
the forced resignation would likely be interpreted as a sign of the players’
likely guilt?
(2) When did Brodhead and the trustees first learn of the
conduct of former SANE-nurse-in-training Tara Levicy? After so learning, what
steps did the Duke leadership take to ensure that Levicy would not affect any
additional sexual assault cases?
(3) What steps, if any, did the Duke administration take
against either Wahneema
Lubiano or the African-American Studies Department for their decision to improperly
use Duke funds to pay for an ad denouncing the school’s students, and for their
falsely claiming that numerous Duke departments officially endorsed the ad? If,
as is widely believed, the university took no disciplinary steps on the matter,
should Duke professors interpret this inaction as an implicit statement that
Lubiano and her department really didn’t do anything wrong?
(4) Why didn’t Duke administrators reveal to the Coleman
Committee the university’s
then-secret arrangement with the city for Duke students—and only Duke
students—to be prosecuted to the maximum for alcohol-related offenses?
(5) Does the university continue to stand by the Bowen/Chambers
report as the best analysis for how the administration should have handled
the case? If so, how can the university explain the millions of dollars in
settlements and legal fees for administrators’ conduct that Bowen and Chambers
ignored? If not, why did the university never elect to commission a Freeh
Report-style white paper for Duke?
Somehow, I doubt any of these questions will get asked. And in
the unlikely event they were asked, I can all but guarantee they would generate
a non-responsive reply.
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12 comments:
people will be laughing at him not with him ... or at their stupid palor jokes ... or not at all since most are not (and never have been) amused
Unfortunately - as in the recent Zimmerman prosecution - the public fixes its opinions on its first impressions received from the print and TV media, which in both cases (Zimmerman and Lacrosse) was little removed intellectually from a lynch mob brandishing ropes outside the jailhouse.
Colbert will be banking on those first impressions in his 'humor', and not at all on the exonerating evidence presented at both trials.
Brodhead says he welcomes this opportunity! Is concerned because he says Colbert doesn't always 'stay on topic'. Doesn't he know Stephen is going to make mincemeat of him just like he has so many national congressional representatives.
I can't wait.
RL '75
Is Brodhead a communist?
KC, I am just reading Tom Wolfe's , "I am Charlotte Simmons" , and it (DuMont) certainly fits the picture of Duke
Corwin
Couldn't watch it last night because it came on at 11:30PM and I go to bed at 9:30PM. Anybody have a YouTube link?
Big Al
You can find the episode here:
http://www.colbertnation.com/full-episodes/thu-august-15-2013-richard-brodhead
Let's take a read of what the other blog that monitors Duke (though in a much less deranged manner) had to say about this:
http://dukecheck.com/
"Brodhead’s quick mind was on full display, as he squeezed Colbert out of the picture and produced several very articulate statements about the purpose of the commission and the role that humanities should play in our lives."
OH SNAP!
duke sucks
it sucks d dicks under s88theads leadership
Could hardly enjoy that last night because it came up upon at 12:30PM and that i go to sleep at Nine:30PM. Any individual possess a Facebook hyperlink? Sex Toys
Anonymous said...
Let's take a read of what the other blog that monitors Duke (though in a much less deranged manner) had to say about this:
http://dukecheck.com/
"Brodhead’s quick mind was on full display, as he squeezed Colbert out of the picture and produced several very articulate statements about the purpose of the commission and the role that humanities should play in our lives."
OH SNAP!
8/16/13, 10:19 AM
As they say, there's no reason to let the facts get in the way of a good narrative.
To the 8/16 9:35AM: thanks for the link.
To the 8/16 10:19AM: I agree with the quote. Colbert played into him and Brodhead hit a home run each time - almost like it was rehearsed.
I have seen other interviews like this where the guest had written a book and the host was pushing it by providing air time; never an unkind word about the book.
Big Al
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