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The Truthiness of The Colbert Report …

… Is in the eyes of the beholder, who, it turns out, sees what the beholder wants its eyes to see.

Three researchers at The Ohio State University say that when holding a mirror up to the political satire on The Colbert Report you probably see your own perceptions staring back at you. (Comedy Central)

So … Stephen Colbert doesn’t really mean all those wacky liberal-bashing things he says, does he? Comedy Central’s The Colbert Report is obviously a parody of a wing-nut right-wing talk show. Right?

Or … is it? (Cut to devilishly quizzical chin-grabbing stare.)

He can’t be serious.

Or … can he sort of be? (Cut to screeching bald eagle.)

Well, apparently Colbert is just that good. His character is so pitch-perfectly ambiguous that, according to a new study, what it is you see in him is whatever it is you want to see in him. If you are liberal, he is a liberal, too. If you are a conservative, he is a conservative, just like you.

And if you are a bear, well, good luck.

Colbert is, it would appear, a fun-house mirror to the deepest recesses of your political soul.

In order to test this scientifically, Heather L. LaMarre, along with Kristen D. Landreville and Michael A. Beam (all communications doctoral students at The Ohio State University), subjected 322 participants with a mix of political ideologies to a three-minute 2006 video clip of Stephen Colbert discussing media coverage of the Iraq war with “super liberal lefty” radio host Amy Goodman.

Media, Politics, Stephen Colbert, Comedy

Researchers believe when someone looks at Stephen Colbert, they see their own views staring back at them, whether that makes Colbert a Bolivarian revolutionary or a truthiness-teller in the Archie Bunker mold. (Comedy Central)

They then asked participants to evaluate Colbert’s ideology and his attitude towards liberalism. What they found was that the more liberal participants reported their own ideology to be, the more liberal they thought Colbert was. And the more conservative they reported their own ideology to be, the more conservative they thought Colbert was. Both, however, found him equally funny. The results are published in the April edition of the International Journal of Press/Politics.

“Liberals will see him as an over-the-top satire of Bill O’Reilly-type pundit and think that he is making fun of a conservative pundit,” LaMarre explained. “But conservatives will say, yes, he is an over-the-top satire of Bill O’Reilly, but by being funny he gets to make really good points and make fun of liberals. So they think the joke is on liberals.”

How can this be? Are they really both watching the same Stephen Colbert? Actually, the reason is pretty simple. It is a phenomenon that has been familiar to social psychologists for a long time: confirmation bias. “When you look at social psychology and you see how people process information, people see what they want to see,” said study co-author Landreville. “They take whatever they want out of that message. So if I’m a liberal, I’ll have my liberal goggles on when I’m watching The Colbert Report and I’ll think he’s a liberal.”

Confirmation bias is likely to be especially pronounced in satire because one of the things about satire — especially the deadpan, bald-eagle satire of Colbert — is that it is chock-full of ambiguity and uncertainty. This leaves lots of opportunities for a viewer to fill in the blanks — a kind of choose-your-own-truthiness, if you will.

“The nature of satire, when you boil it down, is that messages are to varying degrees implied messages,” explained Lance Holbert, a professor of communications at The Ohio State University who studies the intersection of entertainment and politics. “It requires the audience to fill in the gap, to get the joke. And it requires a certain bit of knowledge to fill in the gap. … Certain types of humor are much more explicit. In satire the humor is very complex.”

LaMarre got interested in the question of how audiences interpret Colbert back in 2007, when she started puzzling over how several appearances by Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee had seemingly helped to jump-start Huckabee’s campaign from out of nowhere. Was it a joke? Or what?

“[Huckabee] would publicly thank Stephen Colbert,” she said. “So, from a research point of view, you can ask is this because there are a lot of conservatives who watch Colbert and are now suddenly interested in Mike Huckabee? Is it because they think Colbert is supporting Huckabee?”

One parallel study the authors note is a 1974 article on perceptions of the television show All in the Family. In the piece, professors Neil Vidmar and Milton Rokeach found that although the show’s creator, Norman Lear, had intended to use the Archie Bunker character as a gentle way to poke fun of and discredit racist attitudes, audience members who held racist attitudes never quite got the joke — instead they sympathized with Archie Bunker and may have even found his folksy prejudices to justify their own.

In general, communications researchers are now only beginning to explore the implications and impacts of the new and growing domain of late-night political comedy. Though political satire is nothing new, it was typically encapsulated in larger comedy programming, for example as a sketch on Saturday Night Live. But both The Colbert Report and The Daily Show are primarily about politics. And their widespread audiences — both average more than a million nightly viewers (mostly in the 18-to-49 demographic) — give them the potential to have an impact on American politics.

“Satirists provide a unique perspective to what’s going on with elite decision-makers,” said Holbert. “They’re holding them to the fire a bit. There are discussions to whether they can be too powerful, but those discussions have been around for a long time, and their influence ebbs and flows.”

Most studies have focused on the The Daily Show. One ongoing debate, for example, is between those who think that Jon Stewart promotes a level of cynicism that is ultimately harmful to democracy, and those who think that Stewart actually gets citizens engaged in politics and helps them to feel more politically efficacious.

But this Colbert study is the first to focus exclusively on The Colbert Report. So what, exactly, does it matter if people see in Colbert only what they want to see? One consequence LaMarre and colleagues discuss is that Colbert may actually be reinforcing existing prejudices and polarization. If his goal is to persuade, he is doing a poor job of it.

But, what is Colbert’s purpose, anyway? LaMarre said she’d love to interview him to find out what he’s up to. (Miller-McCune.com tried to talk to him but hasn’t had any luck so far.)

But then again, would Colbert ever give a straight answer? And if he did, wouldn’t that ruin the whole effect?  “I think what I enjoy most about Colbert is that he is true to this character,” said LaMarre. “I think he’s brilliant. He always leaves you wondering a bit how serious he is.”

Or … is he?

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  • dan lee

    this is all great and that….but i can’t help thinking these researchers would have saved themselves a lot of time (and money) if they’d simply looked at the Colbert interviews on youtube that he has given out of character and explained the character a little more, i.e the one with the harvard political institute; the one on charlie rose; or even the backstage clip before his John Kerry interview. In all of them he says the character is an ‘idiot’ who speaks about things he has little or no knowledge of, but with a raised voice and an arrogant manner, and with all his interviews, especially the liberal ones, he gives his guests plenty of opportunities to make the character seem foolish and misguided. I think it’s clear this is supposed to be an unashamedly ‘conservative’ character, but through the eyes and mind of someone who feels that is a position to mock.

  • Bender Sue

    LaMarre doesn’t need to interview him to find out what his purpose is, as he has already mentioned in several interviews that his goal is to be funny. For example, from Newsweek “I just want to be funny. I’m a comedian, not a political thinker”.

  • george becker

    I think much of the time we get all the news that we need on the Daily Show and the Colbert report. The scary thing is the millions of viewers who watch Fox news and think they are watching a news program and not propaganda. Hitler would be proud of fox news.

  • Anonymous User

    Watch the video of the Whitehouse Correspondents Dinner where he roasted Bush. It’ll all be very clear.

  • Anonymous User

    If fox news is propaganda rather than simply news with a bias, The Daily Show and The Colbert Report are the same … there is a clear liberal bias in The Daily Show while The Colbert Report mocks the extremes of conservativism. If these are the sources of “all the news that we need,” each is guilty of being propaganda desguised as comedy.

  • Anonymous User

    I think the answer is simpler – and more complex – than “confirmation”. When comedians were asked if the election of President Obama and a sturdy Democratic majority in the Legislative Branch would signal a dearth of raw materiel for political comedy, they all replied with a resounding “No!” To wit: Congressional sexcapades and hand-in-the-cookie-jar revelations would continue (as they have), the new Administration would issue equivocations and half-truths (it has). If you can achieve enough distance from it, all politics is fodder for comedy, and both Colbert and Stewart seem to have embraced this. If they tend to highlight the far right more often …well, let’s face it: Michelle Bachmann, Bobbie Jindal, Eric Cantor, Michael Steele, Glen Beck and Sean Hannity are (unconsciously) funnier, more bizarre, more self-contradictory and less self-aware and informed than Bernie Sanders, Sharrod Brown, Dennis Kucinich, Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow. Those in the former group don’t seem to listen to what they’re saying themselves, let alone to dissenting voices.As regards All in the Family, Norman Lear has said that he was satirizing Mike’s knee-jerk liberalism as much as Archie’s insulated bigotry. For instance: In one episode, graduate student Mike loses a fellowship to an equally qualified black candidate, solely due to affirmative action. Mike’s professor explains that for a while at least, the scales will have to be tipped artificially. The situation forces an angry and bitterly disapointed Mike to examine his own attitudes: It was so much easier to favor equality and affirmative action until he felt himself the victim of it.

  • Anonymous User

    You rlogic is flawed in this study. Both sides see it in line with their views, but one side is correct and one side is wrong. What the study shows is comservtives lack good reasoning and judgement skills and often just dont get it.

  • Anonymous User

    That clip of Amy Goodman is one of his staunch-ier right acts and in no way embodies the whole show. I’d have a hard time believing that a conservative watching the whole show wouldn’t feel poked-fun-at. I DO however have a right winged father who thinks Colbert is really funny…when he’s received clips of him in his email.

  • Anonymous User

    Consider this: the comic geniuses behind Stephen Colbert (including the writers, producers and Colbert himself) are not anti-liberal or anti-conservative. They are anti-ideology and anti-hypocrisy, which is the natural home of all satire.Ideologues (that is, people whose reason, tastes in art and sense of humor are obscured by their belief system) of all stripes see him as “theirs.” Their ideological filters protect and re-affirm their world view. Naturally, Colbert chides Amy Goodman. Her ideologically blinded rants and sermons to her choir beg for ridicule. The fact that Colbert is simultaneously criticizing Goodman, satirizing punditry and mocking Bill O’Reilly only makes it more delicious.What boggles my mind is that anyone had “study” the matter to realize this. I would think it was obvious to anyone who has read Swift.

  • Anonymous User

    I watch Colbert a lot and find him funny but have never really been interested in the side Colbert is on I am a conservative but i found many of john Stewarts shows funny if they were against me. Tonight in the colbert Report Colbert seemed very liberal but i have seen both sides. I personally think that he stays in between for the money no mark on him.

  • Anonymous User

    I watch Colbert a lot and find him funny but have never really been interested in the side Colbert is on I am a conservative but i found many of john Stewarts shows funny if they were against me. Tonight in the colbert Report Colbert seemed very liberal but i have seen both sides. I personally think that he stays in between for the money no mark on him.