‘He lied and lied and lied’ / Bissed off / ‘Hitler did it, too’

‘He lied and lied and lied.’ Columnist and former Tribune editor Charlie Madigan on President Trump’s primetime address last night: “I knew it would be bad, but not this bad!
 USA Today’s Rex Huppke: “What stood out was his frenetic, angry delivery. It was like he had somewhere to be and was hacked off that he had to deal with some speech thing.”
 Pod Save America cohost Dan Pfeiffer says the address backfired bigtime: “A tone-deaf victory lap at the absolute wrong time.”
 CNN’s fact-check finds a series of lies—“false claims … most of which have been debunked before.”
 Same from The New York Times (gift link).
 What Did Donald Trump Do Today? calls it “the sound of a presidency trying to talk over its own polling, insisting that everything is perfect precisely because voters increasingly believe it is not.”
 Maybe the most substantial thing he announced: The feds will send U.S. troops a $1,776 bonus check for Christmas.
 California Gov. Gavin Newsom paraphrased it with one word repeated 731 times.

‘Shame on the TV networks.’ Picayune Sentinel proprietor Eric Zorn says they shouldn’t have aired “a mendacious infomercial.”
 Columnist Mary Geddry says the networks whiffed: “There was no advance transcript requirement, no conditional airing, no editorial threshold beyond ‘Well, he is the president.’”
 Popular Information notes that the networks have declined to air primetime speeches from the last two Democratic presidents, claiming they were too political.
 Stephen Colbert: “We talked about doing the show live tonight to cover the speech, but we decided not to, because—and just to give you a little peek behind the showbiz curtain—we would had to have watched it, and I don’t want to do that no more.”

‘Proof beyond a reasonable doubt.’ That’s what the AP says former Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith told lawmakers his team had on charges that Trump criminally conspired to overturn the 2020 election.
 Wonkette’s Marcie Jones on four Republicans’ alliance with Democrats to force a vote on Obamacare subsidies: “In one of the greatest loosenings of House Speaker Mike Johnson’s grip since his family installed Covenant Eyes, Republicans are revolting.”

‘I’m really disturbed.’ Count at least one Republican senator among those troubled by the insulting and partisan plaques Trump’s added to the White House portraits of his predecessors.
 Author and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich: “If Trump was once rational, he no longer is.”

‘The FCC just admitted it’s not independent anymore.’ Minutes after chair Brendan Carr suggested that in a contentious Senate hearing about his threats to ABC before it suspended Jimmy Kimmel’s show—the commission’s website was edited to remove that word.
 Poynter’s Tom Jones sees that as cause for rising concern about political pressure on the media.
 Kimmel was disappointed more senators didn’t press Carr: “No one admitted to anything, nothing was done to prevent it from happening again, no one was held accountable … and your freedom of speech is only guaranteed depending on what you have to say.”
 Contrarian Jennifer Rubin’s list of “The ‘powerful’ who cowered in 2025” leads off with CBS as the worst of news outlets.
 Ahead of his cancellation by CBS, Stephen Colbert’s auctioning off his show’s stuff for charity …
 … including VIP tickets to his final show in June, going as of this morning for more than $30,000.

Bissed off. As Border Patrol Greg Bovino’s minions swept through Chicago and the suburbs yesterday, he got into it with the mayor of Evanston …
 Bovino told a Trib photographer, “We’re, for the first time, receiving some assistance from both Chicago PD and Evanston Police Department.”

‘Happy Public Domain Day.’ It doesn’t roll around until Jan. 1, but Cory Doctorow says the 2026 edition will bring much to celebrate—including release into the wild of “some spectacular works.”
 Here’s a detailed list of books, movies, cartoons, characters, sound recordings, musical and artistic compositions that will legally become sharable, performable and screenable without permission or fee.

Oscars online. For the first time since the rise of television, the Academy Awards won’t be broadcast over the airwaves in 2029—because they’re moving to YouTube.
 M.G. Siegler at Spyglass: “I think Netflix is going to be allowed to buy Warner Bros. In fact, it feels like they might need to … to have any shot against YouTube.”
 Penn State media entrepreneurship professor Tom Davidson: “PBS may be nearing a systemic collapse.”

‘Hitler did it, too.’ Journalism professor Jeff Jarvis didn’t have to look hard to find a historic parallel for the State Department’s return to its old typeface.
 Trump’s deputy chief of staff is firing back after critics compared his haircut in that Vanity Fair photoshoot to Hitler’s.

Like sharing links on Facebook? The company’s testing new limits on how much you can do that …
 … another reason Chicago Public Square’s shifted to sharing news on Bluesky.


Thanks. John Herrbach made this edition better.

‘Groundbreaking transit reform’ / ‘Appropriate for our country’ / Have a news Christmas

‘Groundbreaking transit reform.’ Streetsblog Chicago’s John Greenfield is overjoyed at Gov. Pritzker’s signature on legislation to overhaul Chicago and Illinois’ splintered mass transportation systems …
 … combining them under a new Northern Illinois Transportation Authority—without raising fares or cutting service …
 … but likely triggering an increase in drivers’ tollway charges.
 Here’s what’s in it.
 Tribune columnist Laura Washington (gift link): “Let’s hope the pressure from the feds will pump up the volume on safety and security on the CTA.”

‘Get used to it.’ Politico’s Shia Kapos rounds up reports of federal immigration agents’ renewed show of force around the Chicago area Tuesday.
 Border Patrol ringleader Greg Bovino seemed to be having fun—telling a crowd of bystanders shouting insults, “We love Chica-ho-ho-ho.”
 Now that he’s back, Bovino has an invitation from the governor.
 The Evanston church whose nativity display supporting migrants was vandalized—twice—isn’t giving up.

‘She offered us a glimpse behind the White House walls. And it’s every bit as bad as we feared.’ Daily Beast national correspondent David Gardner assesses Chief of Staff Susie Wiles’ tell-all to Vanity Fair …
 … which media writer Tom Jones says may go down as the interview of the year.
 Politico: Her words have proven “extremely demoralizing” at the White House.
 Wonkette:Wiles So Mad At Vanity Fair She Might Not Give Them 11 Interviews Next Time.” (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)
 Columnist Charlie Sykes sees Wiles’ words as evidence of Trump’s effect on those closest to him: “To know him is to … warn the country against him.”

‘We will commit ourselves to bringing their murderer to justice.’ The Los Angeles County district attorney has filed first-degree murder charges against Rob Reiner’s son Nick, who was to appear in court today in connection with the deaths of his parents.
 A person close to the family gives The New York Times “a detailed account of what occurred in the Reiner house after a massage therapist received no response at the gate.” (Times gift link, courtesy of those who support Chicago Public Square).
 Author Stephen King: After he saw Rob Reiner’s adaptation Stand By Me, “I … surprised the hell out of myself by giving him a hug.”

‘If the economy isn’t working for us, then who is it working for?’ A University of Chicago staffer laid off around the same time her husband was laid off from a digital health startup exemplifies what The Wall Street Journal sees as job security slipping away from white-collar workers.
 Ahead of Trump’s address to the nation tonight, Pulitzer winner Paul Krugman delivers a report card on the administration’s economic policies: “An A+++++ economy, my A++.” (Cartoon: Jack Ohman—still offering those who support his *free* newsletter cool, customized art.)
 Author and tech watchdog Cory Doctorow sees a disenshittification opportunity in the collapse of U.S. consumption.

Yeah, but his name remains stuck to the Museum of Science and Industry. Billionaire and Illinois expat Ken Griffin is shrinking his company Citadel’s Chicago footprint (Trib gift link).
 Presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner’s private equity firm is reportedly backing out of the fight to take over Warner Bros. Discovery …
 … whose leadership is rejecting Trump-allied Paramount’s “illusory” bid in favor of Netflix’s offer.

‘Appropriate for our country.’ Thumbing its nose at the Trump administration, an Illinois advisory committee has voted unanimously to recommend that all newborns in the state be vaccinated against hepatitis B.
 ProPublica: Attorney General Pam Bondi “dismissed charges against a surgeon who falsified vaccine cards. It emboldened others with similar cases.”
 Even as workers warn that Chicago-area Veterans Administration hospitals are understaffed, the Trump administration is cutting hundreds of unfilled jobs.

How to beat the bots. Stuck in a standoff with a customer service automaton? The Current newsletter offers phrases that may help you reach a human faster.
 A report prepared by three state agencies warns that, as AI computing demands more and more power, Illinois could be just five years away from electricity shortages.

Have a news Christmas. A group of Chicago journalists—from, among others, Block Club, Chicago magazine, NPR, the Better Government Association and Borderless—has banded together under the banner Chicago Media Chorus to release a compilation of holiday songs on Bandcamp.
 They’re free to stream online, but pay $7 to download ’em and your money benefits Streetwise, the weekly magazine that supports and employs the homeless.

Thanks. Matthew Tarpy and Chris Koenig made this edition better.

Square up.

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