Crossballs! The Debate Fraud

Oh, this is rich. BoingBoing reports that a pundit named Lauren Weinstein narrowly avoided being skewered on a fake “debate” show called “Crossballs.” Whew! Crisis averted.

However, it appears that at least one conservative pundit was contacted to appear on the show, but was warned off in time by another conpundit that wasn’t so cautious.

There follows a lengthy tirade in the “Bush-bashers are traitors, all critics of the Administration are evil, Hollywood is part of the Vast Left Wing Conspiracy” vein. Read, or don’t read, it’s your choice.

But it’s funny to think that at least one neocon fell for the dodge. I wonder if they got any bleeding heart liberals? It’s only fair and balanced.

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  1. Today: Huntington Beach Independent (subscription required) – A debate in the wrong environment – Local environmentalist Joey Racano was a pawn in a Comedy Central TV show debate show spoof.

    By Andrew Edwards, Independent

    Surf City environmentalist and one-time City Council candidate Joey Racano thought he was going to take his message to the airwaves on a serious debate show. But he and other community activists were tricked by an elaborate prank.

    On June 2, Racano, who often pedals his way across town on a black bicycle, was taken to Hollywood and back in a limousine under the pretenses he would appear on MTV network’s “The Debate Show.”

    He thought that meant he would appear on MTV, bringing political discourse to the rock ‘n’ roll network.

    The show Racano and others will actually appear on is “Crossballs: The Debate Show,” said Tony Fox, a spokesman for Comedy Central. The show is a spoof of political shows like CNN’s “Crossfire” and MSNBC’s “Hardball” and is set to debut on Comedy Central on July 6.

    Both MTV and Comedy Central are part of the Viacom-owned MTV networks.

    A press release from the comedy group the Upright Citizens Brigade promoted the show, of which group member Matt Besser, is the executive producer.

    The episode Racano taped will not be the first one aired.

    Planned shows listed on the press release include discussions on earth-shattering issues such as “we should all have the right to marry food,” “sports stars should be kept in cages,” and “fixing bad neighborhoods starts with dressing the homeless as clowns.”

    SPOILERS FOR EPISODES BELOW

    Racano, however, did not get the joke during his time on the set. When he initially discussed his Hollywood experience, he described the show as an entertainment-driven forum for topical debate.

    “It was set up like a game show, and the prize was the Earth,” he said. “There were very serious undertones.”

    But Racano said he didn’t care if the show was a joke as long as he had a chance to speak his mind, regardless of the format.

    “You gotta remember one thing about TV, it’s geared to like, second-graders,” he said. “Even though it was done in the context of a comedy, they let me speak my piece.”

    And the show definitely had some weird moments, Racano said. At one point in the show, Racano said, a woman said environmental groups used their funds to buy fancy hats for park rangers.

    But not all of the guests tricked into being on the show are taking it in stride as Racano is. Second Amendment activist Jim March of Sacramento said he realized the show was a parody and was angry with the producers for trying to fool him. March’s attorney sent a cease and desist order to Viacom demanding a taped show where he argued the case for firearms ownership not be aired since he was tricked when asked to be on the show.

    March said he became disgusted with the show after a guest suggested his pro-gun stance was a manifestation of sexual anxieties, and he was handed a male-enhancement pump as a substitute for a firearm.

    “I’m sitting here holding it, saying, ‘What the [heck] is this?'” March said.

    Moments that outrage the guests and create “the shock and surprise of disbelief” are what the show is all about, Fox said.

    “The real fun on the show is having experts debate people who think they are experts, but are really improv actors,” he said.

    Fox said most guests would not agree to be on the show if they knew it was all for laughs, but Racano doesn’t mind the gag at all.

    “Maybe the only way to get a radical environmentalist like me on TV is under the pretense that it’s a joke,” he said.