Sep 06

written by Sherri Joubert

Check this video out. It’s a two-segment section with Rachel Maddow on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon after her bought with swine flu.

If you’re sick in bed, what do you do when you don’t have TV? Rachel reads non-fiction graphic novels, watches movies based on classic literature, oh and sleeps a lot. If you want titles, Rachel can hook you up. She posted the websites where you can find such graphic novels: Blame Joe Sacco: http://is.gd/2KEMO and AD: http://is.gd/2KF0t.

Rachel and Susan have a TV and cable (including internet) at their apartment in New York, but don’t have TV at their home in Massachusetts. Cable doesn’t reach to where they live, and they don’t want two satellite dishes on the house. They already have one for high speed internet access. Susan can watch Rachel’s show in the city, and they can watch Red Sox games when they can’t go to them in Boston. They don’t really watch TV when they have it.

Part of the reason they don’t get TV at the house is they want to get away from it all on the weekends (and they both have a TV phobia that they’ll become addicted if they watch it more than a few shows once in awhile). Getting away from TV for Rachel means getting away from work at MSNBC. Even if you don’t really watch TV, if you work in TV you watch some of it.

Getting away from TV gets you away from quite a lot, I have found. When our cable has been out after hurricanes for weeks until the company can fix it, life is very different. We spend a lot of time when the TV is out working around the house, talking, cooking, reading and watching DVDs. The peace and quiet, change in activities and interpersonal communication are so relaxing. Even turning on talk radio doesn’t glue you to the machine like TV does.

After such experiences, I have been tempted to turn off the cable TV service and just leave the cable internet service on. I had two packages removed from our digital plan last week because we really don’t watch much more than 6 channels, and only 2-3 most of the time.

I want a TV option where you choose only the channels you want to watch and don’t get any of the others. Would it be cheaper or more expensive? Probably more expensive. I can think of a bunch of equipment and computer stuff that would have to happen to bring such a service to us.

Anyway, being sick with the flu (Influenza A, strain H1N1 in this case) puts you in bed. You don’t get up except to eat and go to the bathroom. You have to drink lots of fluids or the fever will dehydrate you, but you have to do that in bed. Believe me, you aren’t well enough to be out of bed for long. Not being distracted from dozing off is probably a much faster way to get well than lying around like a lump watching TV.

I had pneumonia my senior year in high school and had to stay in my room where the vaporizers were to keep my lungs open. I didn’t have a TV in my room, so I read, did homework and slept a lot. I don’t know that I got well faster, but I got a lot of required reading done for English literature class. I was ahead when I got back to school and caught up on everything else. It’s amazing what you can get done without TV. No wonder we never watched it in college, even though every dorm had a huge TV in the lobby.

Tamiflu is a fantastic drug. I was on it the last time I caught the flu and I got well much faster. It shortened the illness from two weeks to 5-6 days, and after that time I was completely back to normal, not just dragging around like I would usually be after a bought with the flu. As you can see in the video, Rachel is back up to snuff after one week. She was well enough to do one show at the end of the week she was sick from a studio in Massachusetts close to home. She sounded horrible, but was nonetheless on TV hosting her show.

Get your flu shot. If you get the flu, go to the doctor early and get one of the flu antiviral drugs. You will get better much faster. Then have a White Lady after you get well to celebrate your recovery! Watch the video to learn how to make it.

Reference: rachel.msnbc.com

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3 Responses to “When news anchors get sick–Rachel Maddow on Late Night”

  1. swine flu faq Says:

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  3. Peter Says:

    Hi, please note that videos on Hulu can only be viewed in the US…

    Peter