Ron Placone-Madness in the Message
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Ron Placone-Madness in the Message

Nashville, Tennessee, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2014

Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Established on Jan, 2014
Solo Spoken Word

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"Comedian Ron Placone takes on media manipulation in his new one-man show. Madness in the Message deconstructs the news."

Ron Placone wants to help you escape your TV.
Ron Placone performs
THE MADNESS IN THE MESSAGE: START TALKING

8 p.m. Sat., June 23.

Also July 21, Aug. 25 and Sept. 22.

808 Tripoli St.,
North Side.
$5.
412-322-1000
or ronplacone.com

Ron Placone recalls the time he was interviewed by CNN. A camera crew asked him about an incident at a club where he was doing standup-comedy gig. But the footage wasn't used, and CNN later apologetically told Placone why: Apparently, the unassuming Pittsburgh comic looks too much like a serial killer.

"That's OK," Placone replied. "It's the first time anyone at CNN's been honest with me."

Video of Placone telling the story onstage opens Madness in the Message: Start Talking, his new one-man show about how mass media is undermining democracy. Placone calls the hour-long show "an edutainment performance piece." It blends lecture, storytelling and videotaped comedy sketches to explore: corporate consolidation; the homogenization of media; and how media manipulates messages. It premieres June 23 and runs monthly through September at Steel City Improv Theater.

Placone says that the problem is that our media is profit-driven, with news serving shareholders, not the public. "Our media is pretty much up for sale to the highest bidder," he says in Madness.

Moreover, thanks to corporate mergers and lax regulations, the majority of our media are now owned by just a handful of mega-corps. (Think Comcast, Time Warner and Disney.) That disconnects media from real people and real places. And, Placone says, such companies know they'll attract the most eyeballs by presenting "news" that privileges scapegoating over analysis, and anecdote over real reporting.

If this sounds rather heady for a standup comedian — even one as busy as Placone — well, he has a degree in this stuff. The Forest Hills native, 27, just earned his master's in rhetoric and communication from Duquesne University. Madness in the Message even shares its title with an independent-study project he completed at Duquesne; Placone presented the scholarly paper at the 2012 convention of the Eastern Communication Association, in Cambridge, Mass.

Placone's interest in media criticism predates his professional comedy career. In 2004, communications classes at Indiana University primed him for the fevered rhetoric of that year's presidential campaign. He also got into Robert Greenwald's Fox News expose Outfoxed, not to mention The Daily Show and British satirist Charlie Brooker (How TV Ruined Your Life). And the new show's title nods to famed theorist Marshall McLuhan.

Placone began doing standup seriously when he lived in Seattle. After the recession began (costing him the freelance writing and editing work that paid his bills), he returned to Pittsburgh for grad school in 2009. Now the Swissvale resident largely supports himself with regional comedy gigs. His one-minute comedy-news segment "Thoughts, Rants & Cold Coffee" is featured in outlets including web-based New Dissident Radio, and his writing appears in the Huffington Post Union of Bloggers. (Sample Placone headline: "Congress Push for ‘No Fat Chicks' and More as Recognized White House Mottos.")

Much of Madness involves Placone simply talking about things like the history of American media: In the early Republic, for instance, cities had mulitiple partisan newspapers because it took little capital to start one and their owners didn't expect profits. Placone also includes short video interviews with local radio personalities Lynn Cullen, John Phillips and Mike Wysocki, discussing the ill effects of the federal Telecommunications Act of 1996. The act weakened caps on how many radio or TV stations a single corporation could own. Thus arose Clear Channel, the talk-radio behemoth and Rush Limbaugh employer that owns more than 850 radio stations (and is itself owned by none other than former Mitt Romney employer Bain Capital).

Madness also includes homemade comedy videos. In one skit, to illustrate how media scapegoating works, Placone frets over a mishap at a comedy show in which a customer was injured. He solves the problem by blaming a "contractor" — his web-designer, who wasn't even at the club.

Other videos visit "Monopoly Metropolis," a fictional town where a media mogul (Placone) molds public opinion with the help of a pliable journalist. A parody of a public-service ad, for instance, mimics anti-drug PSAs to demonize energy drinks for the benefit of the mogul's soft-drink-industry pals.

So where does Placone get his news? His preferred sources include Alternet, an online clearinghouse for independent media.

Meanwhile, the Telecommunications Act notwithstanding, he's less interested in reforming media legislatively than in helping people recognize its manipulations, and the powers-that-be behind it. "You kind of have to be your own filter," he says.

"People need to demand a more deliberative, citizen-driven media in the - Pittsburgh City Paper


"Comedian Ron Placone takes on media manipulation in his new one-man show. Madness in the Message deconstructs the news."

Ron Placone wants to help you escape your TV.
Ron Placone performs
THE MADNESS IN THE MESSAGE: START TALKING

8 p.m. Sat., June 23.

Also July 21, Aug. 25 and Sept. 22.

808 Tripoli St.,
North Side.
$5.
412-322-1000
or ronplacone.com

Ron Placone recalls the time he was interviewed by CNN. A camera crew asked him about an incident at a club where he was doing standup-comedy gig. But the footage wasn't used, and CNN later apologetically told Placone why: Apparently, the unassuming Pittsburgh comic looks too much like a serial killer.

"That's OK," Placone replied. "It's the first time anyone at CNN's been honest with me."

Video of Placone telling the story onstage opens Madness in the Message: Start Talking, his new one-man show about how mass media is undermining democracy. Placone calls the hour-long show "an edutainment performance piece." It blends lecture, storytelling and videotaped comedy sketches to explore: corporate consolidation; the homogenization of media; and how media manipulates messages. It premieres June 23 and runs monthly through September at Steel City Improv Theater.

Placone says that the problem is that our media is profit-driven, with news serving shareholders, not the public. "Our media is pretty much up for sale to the highest bidder," he says in Madness.

Moreover, thanks to corporate mergers and lax regulations, the majority of our media are now owned by just a handful of mega-corps. (Think Comcast, Time Warner and Disney.) That disconnects media from real people and real places. And, Placone says, such companies know they'll attract the most eyeballs by presenting "news" that privileges scapegoating over analysis, and anecdote over real reporting.

If this sounds rather heady for a standup comedian — even one as busy as Placone — well, he has a degree in this stuff. The Forest Hills native, 27, just earned his master's in rhetoric and communication from Duquesne University. Madness in the Message even shares its title with an independent-study project he completed at Duquesne; Placone presented the scholarly paper at the 2012 convention of the Eastern Communication Association, in Cambridge, Mass.

Placone's interest in media criticism predates his professional comedy career. In 2004, communications classes at Indiana University primed him for the fevered rhetoric of that year's presidential campaign. He also got into Robert Greenwald's Fox News expose Outfoxed, not to mention The Daily Show and British satirist Charlie Brooker (How TV Ruined Your Life). And the new show's title nods to famed theorist Marshall McLuhan.

Placone began doing standup seriously when he lived in Seattle. After the recession began (costing him the freelance writing and editing work that paid his bills), he returned to Pittsburgh for grad school in 2009. Now the Swissvale resident largely supports himself with regional comedy gigs. His one-minute comedy-news segment "Thoughts, Rants & Cold Coffee" is featured in outlets including web-based New Dissident Radio, and his writing appears in the Huffington Post Union of Bloggers. (Sample Placone headline: "Congress Push for ‘No Fat Chicks' and More as Recognized White House Mottos.")

Much of Madness involves Placone simply talking about things like the history of American media: In the early Republic, for instance, cities had mulitiple partisan newspapers because it took little capital to start one and their owners didn't expect profits. Placone also includes short video interviews with local radio personalities Lynn Cullen, John Phillips and Mike Wysocki, discussing the ill effects of the federal Telecommunications Act of 1996. The act weakened caps on how many radio or TV stations a single corporation could own. Thus arose Clear Channel, the talk-radio behemoth and Rush Limbaugh employer that owns more than 850 radio stations (and is itself owned by none other than former Mitt Romney employer Bain Capital).

Madness also includes homemade comedy videos. In one skit, to illustrate how media scapegoating works, Placone frets over a mishap at a comedy show in which a customer was injured. He solves the problem by blaming a "contractor" — his web-designer, who wasn't even at the club.

Other videos visit "Monopoly Metropolis," a fictional town where a media mogul (Placone) molds public opinion with the help of a pliable journalist. A parody of a public-service ad, for instance, mimics anti-drug PSAs to demonize energy drinks for the benefit of the mogul's soft-drink-industry pals.

So where does Placone get his news? His preferred sources include Alternet, an online clearinghouse for independent media.

Meanwhile, the Telecommunications Act notwithstanding, he's less interested in reforming media legislatively than in helping people recognize its manipulations, and the powers-that-be behind it. "You kind of have to be your own filter," he says.

"People need to demand a more deliberative, citizen-driven media in the - Pittsburgh City Paper


Discography

Still working on that hot first release.

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Bio

Ron Placone is a media scholar, radio personality, writer, and comedian. Ron developed Madness in the Message as a final project to earn his Master's degree and through the project he has become an investigative reporter into the contemporary media landscape and has developed a lecture/performance bound to challenge the way we the people interact with news and the corporate media. Since launching Madness in the Message in June of 2012, Ron has performed for colleges, advocacy groups, enjoyed several sold-out theater shows, and recently presented at the College Media Advisers Conference alongside Amy Goodman, his favorite journalist. Ron's daily news segment, "Thoughts, Rants & Cold Coffee," is nationally syndicated via the David Pakman Show, and his weekly radio show, "MediaBytes: The Madness in the Message Radio Hour" airs every Sunday on Radio Free Nashville 107.1 FM. Ron's content can also be found via his YouTube Channel where he is a proud member of The Young Turks YouTube Network, the network generates over 30 million views per month and has over a billion lifetime views. In addition to touring the country constantly, Ron recently earned a Masters degree in Rhetoric and Philosophy from Duquesne University. His academic work has been published in the Journal of Contemporary Rhetoric.

Ron Placone was a great performer. His presentation certainly grabs your attention and makes you think in a whole new light. - Kim Mariotti, Lake Erie College, Painesville, OH

Ron Placone was a fantastic guest speaker. He brings a fresh new topic to enlighten college students on how mass media has changed from a historical view and taught the students how to think critically about how the media  in the US is "all about profit." My students asked questions for 40 minutes after Ron was done, that says it all! Bring Ron to your campus! - Sandi Pope, Germanna Community College, Fredericksburg, VA

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