Hulu has new mini-series of the Joseph Heller novel, Catch-22. It looks intriguing, but I don't know if I'll check it out. It's summer in Michigan for goodness sake — there will be plenty of winter for screen-based entertainment. But also because I read Catch-22 at exactly the right time in my life, as a 17 year-old primed and ready to learn just how ludicrous the world can be. I don't want to mess with the perfect picture in my head.
For those of you unfamiliar with the term "catch-22" or in need of a refresher, I can explain it this way: Say the president of your country tells lies. He or she (let's go with "he" for simplicity here) says and even tweets things that are demonstrably not true. A lot. Like, a staggering amount of times.
Now say you're a journalist, a real one with training and ethics and everything. All this lying is a problem. He's the elected leader of the country! So you do your job, report the lies, and provide the objective facts you have researched to back this up.
The President doesn't like this, so he says something like, "Fake News!" But when you point out that this is a lie, he says, "Fake News! Fake News! Fake News!" The more you report the lies, the more he lies. And if you didn't report the lies, he would say his lies are true because nobody reported them as lies.
That's the catch. Catch-22.
John Auchter is a freelance political cartoonist. His views are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of Michigan Radio, its management, or its license holder, the University of Michigan.