I could have written this today instead of 3 years ago.
There was no one moment when Jon Stewart knew it was time for him to leave what he describes as “the most perfect job in the world”; no epiphany, no flashpoint. “Life,” he says, in the lightly self-mocking tone he uses when talking about himself, “doesn’t really work that way, with a finger pointing at you out of the sky, saying, ‘Leave now!’ That only happens when you’re fired, and trust me, I know about that.”
Instead, he describes his decision to quit The Daily Show, the American satirical news programme he has hosted for 16 years, as something closer to the end of a long-term relationship. “It’s not like I thought the show wasn’t working any more, or that I didn’t know how to do it. It was more, ‘Yup, it’s working. But I’m not getting the same satisfaction.'” He slaps his hands on his desk, conclusively.
“These things are cyclical. You have moments of dissatisfaction, and then you come out of it and it’s OK. But the cycles become longer and maybe more entrenched, and that’s when you realise, ‘OK, I’m on the back side of it now.'”
…
If anything, it was the prospect of the upcoming US election that pushed him to leave the show. “I’d covered an election four times, and it didn’t appear that there was going to be anything wildly different about this one,” he says.Ah, but who could have anticipated the excitement over Hillary Clinton’s deleted emails?
“Anyone could, because that story is absolutely everything that it’s supposed to be about,” he says, with a groan; as a revelation, it managed to be at once depressing and completely unsurprising.
As Philip J. Fry says, “It’s just a matter of knowing the secret of all television: at the end of the episode, everything is back to normal.”
When News Overtook the Bahrain Grand Prix
By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times
APRIL 17, 2015
By 2012, Formula One had long been selling its Grands Prix to governments throughout the world as a way to showcase the host country or city and receive an economic windfall from visiting spectators. It had been done in Abu Dhabi, China, South Korea and Turkey, but one of the first of this new wave of host countries had been Bahrain, in 2004.
The Bahrain Grand Prix had been a successful race from the start. It helped shed new light on the Gulf state, an island kingdom that was home to the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet and known for its oil and financial industries.
Through the years, those who regularly attended the race knew that there were also social disturbances in Manama, the capital city, which is about a 30-minute drive from the Formula One circuit. Traffic was sometimes jammed by anti-government demonstrations. But only rarely were those events mentioned in coverage of the race. Until 2011.
In Manama that year, amid the wave of Arab Spring uprisings throughout the region, the mostly Shiite opposition protests grew and the Sunni government clamped down on them with force, leading to bloodshed.
Bahrain had been run by the same ruling al-Khalifa family, of Sunni origin, since the 18th century. But in recent decades, the kingdom had invited foreigners to live and work there, and soon the Shiites grew to be a majority of the 1.2 million population. They wanted equal social treatment with the Sunnis.
The demonstrations in Manama had begun just a month before the 2011 Bahrain Grand Prix was scheduled to run. The race organizers eventually decided to cancel the race.
In 2012, however, the Bahrain government planned to go ahead with the race. So the opposition groups decided that if for nearly a decade the government had hosted the race to promote its image of the country, they, too, could use the race to publicize their own cause.
In the preceding year, there had been a reported 70 deaths and many people imprisoned. With the expanded media coverage of the Grand Prix, the demonstrations picked up before and during the race weekend. Although the government was generally not allowing reporters into the country, visas had been granted to sports journalists who came to cover the race. But most of them had little or no experience covering geopolitical stories.
In the days before the race, while in central Manama there were no demonstrations, members of the opposition took journalists to areas where there were protests. Reports and images of dissent quickly went global.
A demonstrator was killed by security forces during the protests, but there was no violence at the race track or in central Manama, where most of the sports journalists were staying. Several members of the Force India team were caught in a hail of Molotov cocktails while driving back to the city from the track, but no one was injured.
Despite public calls from British politicians, human rights groups and other organizations around the world to cancel the race, Formula One remained adamant that the show would go on.
“I can’t call this race off,” said Bernie Ecclestone, the series’s promoter. “Nothing to do with us. We’ve an agreement to be here, and we’re here.”
The Formula One drivers either made no comment or, like Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel, the reigning world champion, said that they could not understand what all the fuss was about.
“I haven’t seen anyone throwing bombs,” he said. “I don’t think it is that bad. There is a lot of hype, which is why I think it is good that we start our job here, which is the sport and nothing else.”
Nice guy that Sebastian. Always a pleasure to see him get his ass kicked.
Formula One: Bahrain GP goes ahead but human rights concerns remain
by Giles Richards, The Guardian
Friday 17 April 2015 18.00 EDT
After less than 24 hours in the country, the Guardian was told by a number of sources this week that the anti-government protests, far from having gone away, continue on an almost daily basis and have increased in numbers and volume with the arrival of Formula One. They also attest that the Bahraini state’s response has been arrests and a crackdown on dissent.
In the paddock the racing weekend continues as normal, business as usual for F1, part and parcel of Bahrain’s attempt to convince the world that it is business as normal for the state as well. Yet away from the track such relatively simple tasks as meeting with fellow journalists are conducted with requests for discretion. “They monitor phones, they use it extensively to work out details of how and who we contact to prevent us from working with other journalists and human rights groups,” says Mazen Mahdi, a Bahraini journalist for the German Press Agency. “If you tried to cover a protest live and see what the police are doing, if they saw you they would stop us and take us. It’s dangerous. Technically, just talking to me is breaking your visa status.”
Dangerous it seems for others, too, with repeated attempts by the Guardian to talk to family members of those who have been recently arrested meeting with failure through fear that being seen to speak out to the media would result in harsher sentences for those already detained. None in the end were willing to put their heads above the parapet. Claims of the use of tear gas and birdshot at protests is mentioned repeatedly and, amid the fear, there is a sense of outrage that F1 arrives to make money and entertain but remains at the same time devoid of the responsibilities that its very presence demands. Some people may be afraid but they also really want Formula One to be a force for change.
The issues in Bahrain were returned to the spotlight earlier this week when Amnesty International published a report condemning the continuing human rights violations and a lack of reform that was supposed to have occurred after the 2011 uprising.
Formula One has long-insisted this is none of its business. “We’re not here, or we don’t go anywhere, to judge how a country is run,” Bernie Ecclestone pointed out two years ago. The damning Amnesty report, however, was preceded by another announcement with considerably less fanfare. In it the group Americans for Democracy on Human Rights in Bahrain said that it had concluded an agreement with F1 that the sport would begin a policy of analysing the human rights impact it might have on host nations. “Formula One Group has committed to taking a number of further steps to strengthen its processes in relation to human rights,” it read. So now it seems, to some extent, it is Formula One’s business.
John Donne, Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, Meditation 17
No man is an island, entire of itself. Each is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less; as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thine own or of thine friend’s were.
Each man’s death diminishes me, for I am involved in mankind; therefore send not to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.
Formula One Publishes Human Rights Commitment
By REUTERS
APRIL 17, 2015, 4:25 P.M. E.D.T.
Britain’s Guardian newspaper saw the statement as a victory for campaigners and compared it to the words of 84-year-old Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone two years ago.
“We don’t go anywhere to judge how a country is run. I keep asking people, ‘What human rights?’. I don’t know what they are,” he said then.
Statement of Commitment to Respect for Human Rights
1. The Formula One Group is committed to respecting internationally recognised human rights in its operations globally.
2. Whilst respecting human rights in all of our activities, we focus our efforts in relation to those areas which are within our own direct influence. We do so by taking proportionate steps to:
(a) understand and monitor through our due diligence processes the potential human rights impacts of our activities;
(b) identify and assess, by conducting due diligence where appropriate, any actual or potential adverse human rights impacts with which we may be involved either through our own activities or as a result of our business relationships, including but not limited to our suppliers and promoters;
(c) consider practical responses to any issues raised as a result of our due diligence, within the relevant context;
(d) engage in meaningful consultation with relevant stakeholders in relation to any issues raised as a result of our due diligence, where appropriate; and
(e) respect the human rights of our employees, in particular the prohibitions against forced and child labour, the freedom to associate and organise, the right to engage in collective bargaining, and the elimination of discrimination in employment and occupation.
3. Where domestic laws and regulations conflict with internationally recognised human rights, the Formula One Group will seek ways to honour them to the fullest extent which does not place them in violation of domestic law.
You have to scroll way down past all that copyright stuff to find it. Larry, get me some weak tea.
Mediums and Softs. Hamilton thinks Rosberg is not trying hard enough to beat him. Rosberg thinks Hamilton is an asshole (probably true that). Mercedes is still making race management mistakes.
Here’s an interesting “I told you so!”
F1 Engine Allowance to Be Discussed After Spain
By REUTERS
APRIL 18, 2015, 8:32 A.M. E.D.T.
A proposal to increase Formula One’s power unit allowance from four to five per driver this season will be discussed at a meeting next month, leaving some in danger of being penalised before change is agreed.
“The proposal is with the (governing) FIA and I guess it’s going to be discussed the next time around in a strategy meeting,” Mercedes motorsport head Toto Wolff said at the Bahrain Grand Prix.
…
After three races, Red Bull’s Australian Daniel Ricciardo has used three Renault internal combustion engines, one of six elements making up the V6 turbo hybrid power unit, while seven others are on two.Drivers were allowed five units last season but that was tightened for 2015. Grid penalties will be applied if allowances are exceeded.
Have I mentioned yet that Bernie Ecclestone is a senile jerk?
All’s Not Quiet on Formula One’s Clean-Engine Front
By BRAD SPURGEON, The New York Times
APRIL 17, 2015
The new 1.6-liter, hybrid turbo engines use a third less fuel than their V-8, 2.4-liter, normally aspirated predecessors and produce at least double the hybrid energy – as well as far less noise. But whether a team, engine provider or other interested party considers the project a success or a failure depends on the results on the track.
For the Mercedes car manufacturer and its team, which won the titles last year and is leading the series heading into the fourth race of the current season, the Bahrain Grand Prix this weekend, the program is not only an astounding success, but an essential factor in the German company wanting to continue in Formula One.
“For us, the current technology is an important part of our involvement,” said Toto Wolff, the head of the Mercedes racing program. “Our marketing strategy focuses on the hybrid technology of Formula One.”
But for Bernie Ecclestone, the promoter of the series, who has complained that the loss of the old engine roar has reduced the excitement for track-side spectators, the program is a sign that the series is in its death throes.
“The fans want the volume, the teams want the low cost – and even the racing was better,” Ecclestone recently told Sport Bild, a weekly German sports magazine. “Toto can have a lovely inscription on his gravestone that says ‘I helped to kill Formula One.”‘
Ecclestone was referring specifically to the refusal by Mercedes to agree to a vote to change the rules in the immediate future to revert to the louder, gas-guzzling engines.
Ferrari, the most vocal complainer about the engines last year, made huge progress with its engine technology over the winter. It won the second race this season and has finished with a driver on the podium in each of the first three races. Ferrari has for now ceased to complain about the new engine formula.
The Renault engine manufacturer and the Red Bull team, by contrast, have picked up where Ferrari left off last year. Having taken a step backward in engine power, both the team and the manufacturer have threatened to withdraw from the series if something is not done.
Yet it was Renault that several years ago asked Formula One to create a new, environmentally friendly engine, seeking to make the series more relevant to its effort to sell hybrid road cars.
Bernie, buy yourself a Walkman and crank the volume to eleven you deaf old bastard.
Jensen Button may or may not race due to electric problems on his McLaren Honda. He could barely practice and was unable to complete a lap in Qualifying.
Starting Grid
Grid | Driver | Team | Q-Time | Q-Laps |
1 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 1:32.571 | 16 |
2 | Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 1:32.982 | 12 |
3 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | 1:33.129 | 16 |
4 | Kimi Raikkonen | Ferrari | 1:33.227 | 15 |
5 | Valtteri Bottas | Williams | 1:33.381 | 16 |
6 | Felipe Massa | Williams | 1:33.744 | 16 |
7 | Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull Racing | 1:33.832 | 15 |
8 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India | 1:34.450 | 15 |
9 | Carlos Sainz | Toro Rosso | 1:34.462 | 18 |
10 | Romain Grosjean | Lotus | 1:34.484 | 20 |
11 | Sergio Perez | Force India | 1:34.704 | 12 |
12 | Felipe Nasr | Sauber | 1:34.737 | 9 |
13 | Marcus Ericsson | Sauber | 1:35.034 | 9 |
14 | Fernando Alonso | McLaren | 1:35.039 | 10 |
15 | Max Verstappen | Toro Rosso | 1:35.103 | 14 |
16 | Pastor Maldonado | Lotus | 1:35.677 | 7 |
17 | Daniil Kvyat | Red Bull Racing | 1:35.800 | 6 |
18 | Will Stevens | Marussia | 1:38.713 | 6 |
19 | Roberto Merhi | Marussia | 1:39.722 | 6 |
20 | Jenson Button | McLaren | DNS | 1 |
Driver Standings
Rank | Driver | Team | Points |
1 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 68 |
2 | Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 55 |
3 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | 51 |
4 | Felipe Massa | Williams | 30 |
5 | Kimi Räikkönen | Ferrari | 24 |
6 | Valtteri Bottas | Williams | 18 |
7 | Felipe Nasr | Sauber | 14 |
8 | Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull Racing | 11 |
9 | Romain Grosjean | Lotus | 6 |
10 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India | 6 |
11 | Max Verstappen | Toro Rosso | 6 |
12 | Carlos Sainz | Toro Rosso | 6 |
13 | Marcus Ericsson | Sauber | 5 |
14 | Daniil Kvyat | Red Bull Racing | 2 |
15 | Sergio Perez | Force India | 1 |
Constructor Standings
Rank | Team | Points |
1 | Mercedes | 119 |
2 | Ferrari | 79 |
3 | Williams | 48 |
4 | Sauber | 19 |
5 | Red Bull Racing | 13 |
6 | Toro Rosso | 12 |
7 | Force India | 7 |
8 | Lotus | 6 |
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Someone went down with a head injury, I don’t follow English Premier League so I have no idea.
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How the hell did that happen?
Bernie must be losing his grip. These guys are employed by F1 the same way Baseball commentators are by MLB. There is no real reporting, just the hand up the backside manipulating the mouth.
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