According To Schiff Americans Are Too Stupid To Pay Attention Without A Little Help
Can anyone logically explain why we need to pay some Hollywood movie producer to cover the J6 clown show? To a normal person, one would think that interested parties wouldn't need coaxing to watch Liz and her Dem buddies push epic cliffhangers like; can they work a way to condemn Trump.
Hell, one might even worry that the J6 crew needs a movie producer to try and sell a narrative but according to Adam Schiff, the producer is there because Americans are too stupid to care.
Host Stephen Colbert asked, "Now, you guys hired a fancy TV producer, a guy who used to work at ABC, to help with the broadcast. In what way is this fella helping you? And—and--, secondly, did you think you needed a fancy TV producer because the American people aren't interested in whether democracy survives?"
Schiff responded like the turd we all know him to be, "We're not commenting on the internal staffing or how we're structuring the hearings, beyond a certain degree. But, look, this is a very different era than Watergate. I wish we were back in the day when the American public would sit for hours and hours at a time and watch hearings of national consequence, and they would be presented, you know, by major networks, rather than, you know, the talking heads on Fox News. But we're in a different world now, where most people get their information from social media, where we have to be able to tell the story in an engaging way, tell it in a limited period of time."
Watch
Transcript
ADAM SCHIFF: We want the public to understand how close we came to losing our democracy. And most important, the fact that we are not out of the woods. It’d be one thing if what started on January 6 or culminated on January 6, that violent attack had ended on the sixth. It didn't end. The effort to use the lie that resulted in that violence has continued. And if anything, our democracy is even more vulnerable today than it was on January 6.
STEPHEN COLBERT: Now, you guys hired a fancy TV producer, a guy who used to work at ABC, to help with the broadcast. In what way is this fella helping you? And—and--, secondly, did you think you needed a fancy TV producer because the American people aren't interested in whether democracy survives?
SCHIFF: We're not commenting on the internal staffing or how we're structuring the hearings, beyond a certain degree. But, look, this is a very different era than Watergate. I wish we were back in the day when the American public would sit for hours and hours at a time and watch hearings of national consequence, and they would be presented, you know, by major networks, rather than, you know, the talking heads on Fox News. But we're in a different world now, where most people get their information from social media, where we have to be able to tell the story in an engaging way, tell it in a limited period of time.