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The Boat Race on TV

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Happy HTBS times with Lisa…

23 April 2020

By Tom Weil

Tom Weil finds a familiar blue sinuous curve on TV – and then not!

If one believes that television news counts as real news, one of the flagship stations in the U.S. for reliable essentially non-partisan broadcasts is the PBS NewsHour, watched every night by perhaps 1 million people, who may well constitute the majority of the informed, intelligent, culturally sophisticated and caring among the U.S. population who own TV sets. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has driven its numerous reporters to broadcasting from their homes. Other than often showing packed bookcases in the background, the camera usually reflects relatively little about the individual, but one glimpse of a wall in the home of one of the key reporters last week gave rise to an HTBS moment.

Lisa Desjardins is one of the most consistent voices on the NewsHour, regularly covering news of national import – especially Congressional happenings – in Washington, D.C. Depending on the camera angle, watching Lisa last week gave one some comfort that certain rowing institutions are stamped on our collective psyche in the most unexpected places. From a distance, one first noticed a familiar blue sinuous curve, and then the main title became clear – the Boat Race, reminding us and another 1 million or so viewers of one of the most iconic institutions in rowing…

Unhappy HTBS times with Ms. Desjardins.

But the collateral damage of the pandemic can be as unpredictable as it can be tragic. This week, having absorbed their morning diet of HTBS, delivered, notwithstanding COVID-19, with few interruptions by the remarkable Mr. Buckhorn, HTBS devotees could have reacted with horror as the camera now revealed some anonymous wall candy behind the unfaithful Ms. Desjardins. Why would someone choose to re-decorate their home broadcast niche in the midst of such a crisis, and why, oh why, would that choice involve the removal of such a happy reminder of good times past and to be hoped for again? Whether or not Judy Woodruff will conduct an investigation into the removal of the Boat Race image, we can only guess, but we can certainly mourn the infelicitous decision that has robbed us of this poignant comfort.


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