Wednesday
Jun202012

Backstage with Reggie Brown

By Miles Leicher

Reggie joins us backstage to talk about the joys – and dangers – of being the best Barack Obama impersonator in town.

Check out more of Reggie’s work at his website, or follow him on Twitter @iamreggiebrown

Tuesday
Jun192012

The Endth Degree

By Bill Maher

Is going to college still even worth it? College grads are coming out with degrees, yes – and herpes – but also with student loan debt totaling $60,000, $80,000, $100,00. These kids haven’t even gotten started in their careers and they’re already saddled with what’s tantamount to a full mortgage. In this sucky economy, graduates find themselves back in their old bedrooms at their parents’ homes, taking jobs in the service industry that they could have gotten without a college degree.

The cost of higher education in the US has soared in recent decades while median incomes have stagnated. The California State University schools raised their tuitions for the second time in less than a year, making this year’s tuition over 23% higher than the previous fall’s. And those are just the most recent increases. Attending a Cal State school now costs twice what it cost just back in 2007. And that’s not even counting the price of weed.

The old canard is that people with bachelor’s degrees make twice as much as high school graduates over their careers. But average starting salaries for college graduates just fell 10% and, if you take into account the higher income taxes paid by college grads and the four to six years they spend out of the job market getting their degrees, is that $60,000 to $100,000 in college loan debt really worth it?

And is the degree really worth it? A new comprehensive study of college grading over the decades finds that just about everybody who pays their tuition bills is deemed exceptional. 43% of letter grades awarded today are A’s as compared to just 15% back in 1960. By 2008, A’s and B’s represented 73% of all grades awarded at public colleges and 86% of all grades awarded at private colleges. It’s Lake Wobegon, “Where all the children are above average.” And that’s in spite of studies that show college students spend far less time studying today than they did decades ago.

If everybody is a genius, aren’t you paying $100,000 to $150,000 just to get your ticket stamped? You’re not buying an education so much as you’re buying a degree with a commendable GPA. Has the college degree with a B average become just a consumer product you can buy with a $100,000 loan? Wouldn’t a bright, industrious kid be better off in this economy to just jump into the job market and try to excel through merit?

 

Tuesday
Jun192012

Overtime: June 15, 2012

Panel: Bill Maher, Joseph Stiglitz, David Frum, Karen Finney, Kristen Soltis, Alan Thicke

Bill and the panel discuss Republican youth, Exceptionalism and who’s really living the American Dream.

Have a question for this week’s panel? Ask away at HBO.com.

Monday
Jun182012

The Right Shift

By Bill Maher

Good news: last month, for the first time in weeks, Congress passed a bill! And wait until you hear what you get: by a vote of 78 to 20, the Senate voted to extend the life of the U.S. Export-Import Bank. …People, please! Control yourselves!

Yes, the Import-Export Bank. It’s been around for 80 years. They re-upped it for another three. Now, what do you 80% of Americans who disapprove of the job Congress is doing have to say about that?? Hit the links, Speaker Boehner! You’ve earned it.

Now, if I were a Washington pundit, I’d launch into some boring speech about how both sides are equally to blame, and then I’d call it a day and we’d all meet at Katherine Graham’s house for cocktails. Which is weird because Katherine Graham is dead. But this is why you never see us booking George Will and Peggy Noonan on my show (besides the fact that they wouldn’t do it): Because the same old Washington pundits haven’t said anything interesting since disco. Also because the idea that the blame for our government’s dysfunction is equally shared by the parties just is a giant, steaming mound of horseshit and anyone who has paid attention to politics over the last 20 years knows it. Or as I like to call it, “The Rise of the Party of the Apes.”

In fact, recently Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein, two old wonks who have been in Washington as long as the Potomac, wrote a book called “It's Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided With the New Politics of Extremism” in which they basically say, flat out, what I say every week: it’s the Republicans who are crazy. And they wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post to go along with the book called, “Let’s Just Say It: The Republicans Are the Problem.”

They write: “We have been studying Washington politics and Congress for more than 40 years, and never have we seen them this dysfunctional. In our past writings, we have criticized both parties when we believed it was warranted. Today, however, we have no choice but to acknowledge that the core of the problem lies with the Republican Party.” And they’re not saying Democrats are blameless and perfect. We all know there’s only been one perfect man in human history. And that’s David Beckham.

But it reminded me of something Barney Frank recently said: “…people have said to me, well, why can't you work things out with the Republicans, and my answer to my friends has been: Exactly on what issues do you think Michele Bachmann and I can compromise?” Basically Barney is saying, look, how do you expect me to work on the 2+2=4 bill when their side believes math is a liberal plot to turn your kid queer?

Take Dick Lugar. Who was always a staunch conservative, just not the modern-day insane variety. He was just throttled in the Republican Senate primary in Indiana by a Tea Party guy named Richard Mourdock. And after Mourdock won he said this about working with the other side: “I certainly think bipartisanship ought to consist of Democrats coming to the Republican point of view.” Which is sort of like saying to your girlfriend, “I think both our sexual needs will best be fulfilled by you blowing me.”

Or take Allen West. Seriously, take him to the padded cell and give him 20 CCs of the high test. Ornstein and Mann start off their Post op-ed by noting that recently Rep. Allen West said that there are “78 to 81” Democrats in Congress who are members of the Communist Party. And not one Republican said, “Allen, come on. You’re making us look dumb.” Not one of the Republican candidates for president said anything. Because in today’s Republican Party, that’s not even edgy anymore. They probably saw him later on and were like, “Word, Allen. Word.” Because that’s how they think black people talk.

Friday
Jun152012

Backstage with John Waters

By Miles Leicher

Author and director John Waters took a minute after last Friday’s show to talk to Real Time’s Natalie Barbrie about hitchhiking, cannibals and, of course, foot fetishes.

Friday
Jun152012

Guest List: June 15, 2012

By Miles Leicher

Tonight’s top-of-show interview will be with author and Nobel Laureate in Economics, Joseph Stiglitz. His new book is The Price of Inequality. Stiglitz recently did a Q&A with The Oregonian, in which he said, “We've moved more to a politics democracy, which is characterized closer to ‘one dollar, one vote’ than ‘one body, one vote.’”

The Panel:

Karen Finney is a Democratic Strategist, MSNBC Political Analyst, and columnist for The Hill. In her latest post, she wrote that Democrats must recognize the ability of Republicans to rally behind their leader, raise untold amounts of Super PAC money and exploit their opponent’s every mistake.

David Frum is a Contributing Editor and columnist for Newsweek / The Daily Beast and author of Patriots [BOOKSHELF]. This week he wrote that Mitt Romney’s Mormon religion may prove to be more of an asset than a liability come Election Day.

Kristen Soltis is a Republican pollster and Vice President of The Winston Group. She contributed a chapter to Margin of Victory and just tweeted, “Oh no. My dad just signed up for HBO to watch me on Maher tomorrow, and he's watching old episodes on demand. This won't be good.”

Joining the panel mid-show will be actor and “America’s Dad,” Alan Thicke. He appears in Adam Sandler's new movie "That's My Boy" and writes a blog for The Huffington Post.

Don’t forget to submit your Overtime questions now on HBO.com!

Thursday
Jun142012

Downtime: Bill Tweets Back (6-14-12)

Bill weighs in on the Ecstasy vs. Bath Salts debate, shares some of his Vegas secrets and considers an invitation to join the “Occupy Guitarmy” in his latest interaction with the Twitterverse.

Have a question for Bill? Tweet him @BillMaher!

Tuesday
Jun122012

Supreme Contort

By Bill Maher

The Supreme Court will soon rule in the case of Arizona v. United States: Turn That Damn Music Down, We're Trying to Sleep. It's a hot tamale, because it's about Latinos, who are an important voting block, and because it looks like the second case this year -- along with Obamacare -- where the Supreme Court could hand the President his ass. Here's what's at stake:

In 2010, Arizona -- land that was Mexican, after it belonged to Spain, after it belong to the Anasazi -- passed a law designed to make life as unpleasant as possible for anyone whose skin is less pink than gum. The law was pretty openly intended to make illegal aliens self-deport, and take the legal aliens with them, while they're at it, so that Arizona can be what God intended -- a nice sunny place for angry white people to get skin cancer and die.

Another irony? The Spanish also gave us the word "vamoose."

The law encourages cops to check the immigration status of anyone they suspect of being in America illegally. Nothing racist about that. Your suspect could be an illegal Canadian, giving himself away by wearing cross-country skis. The law requires all noncitizens to carry a federal registration card at all times, and produce the document on demand. The law authorizes Arizona cops to arrest any immigrant without a warrant if they have probable cause to believe the immigrant committed a deportable offense.

The law has only two exceptions: Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber. Some Mexicans have a little Canadian in them.

It’s a repulsive law that redefines "probable cause" as "not being white." Latino Americans hate it, for good reason, and the Obama administration filed a lawsuit seeking a temporary injunction against it. A federal judge agreed, the Ninth Circuit affirmed, and now the Supremes get their say. A decision is expected very soon.

It could be bad for Obama if he loses, because it makes him look like a weakling and a fuck-up. It could be good for Obama, if it reminds Latinos that Republicans aren't their friends. We'll see.