Thursday, September 20, 2007

Keeping Truthiness





During her appearance on the NBCC's panel "Grub Street 2.0" on Friday, (thanks Emily), Emily Lazar, producer of The Colbert Report, made it clear that Stephen Colbert needs books, but he doesn't really read them. That's her job. "Stephen doesn't read books. [His character doesn't read books.] Most of the ideas we discuss on the show start in books. Book reviews are hugely important to me. I get sixty books a day, and it would be impossible to read all of them. Book reviews quickly gve me the idea behind the book and how the idea fits into the context of other books on the subject, whether the book goes over old ground or advances ideas. We don't usually allow novelists on the show, because you can't usually understand their ideas off the bat. We're not about storytelling. We're about entertainment. We had Garrison Keillor on the show because he's an iconic figure. He represents folksiness, banjo playing public television folksiness, something Stephen could easily make fun of. Salman Rushdie was on the show not for a specific novel but for an idea. [Rushdie appeared in support of the NBCC Campaign to Save Book Reviewing]"


It's my job to figure out who will be a good foil for his character and figure out a way in. If it were up to me, I'd have bumped Garrison Keillor. But Stephen said, 'I'm going to outfolksy him.' He likes nothing more than the challenge of a situation when it seems he has nothing to say to this person. The hardest person to interview is the one he likes to interview the most."


Lazar also commented on the tone of some reviews. "I'm the wife of a writer," she said. (Her husband is Newsweek's Jonathan Alter.) "Have any of you reviewers written a book? I read all the reviews of my husband's book when it came out. Some of them were so petty, trying to find minor factual errors to discredit the book. A real problem with book reviews is some reviewers feel pressed to feel superior to the book."

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