Baldo by Hector D. Cantú and Carlos Castellanos for December 16, 2016
Transcript:
Dad: Gracie, the sky is blue. As a journalist, you should know that. Gracie: But papi, at night, the sky is black! During a storm, it can be gray! And at sunset, it's a fiery orange! Gracie: Sometimes, questions don't have simple answers. Dad: I think you'll make a find journalist, Mija.
Carl Premium Member about 8 years ago
You can justify anything as long as it fits your agenda. This is CBS material.
drycurt about 8 years ago
The “sky” can also be green. But you have lucky enough to catch the “green flash” under only certain conditions – which last only a few seconds. Have seen it twice.
Tue Elung-Jensen about 8 years ago
not really, at night you cant see the sky due to the sun being gone. During a storm it is clouded – at sunset it is the sun that affects the sky over the horizon. While it certainly is true that there are no simple answers, the precious few days prove that she won´t be a good journalist, especially yesterday that said she would adapt her answer to fit her audience.
ottod Premium Member about 8 years ago
A good journalist understands that the facts are often more complicated than they seem at first glance and does the hard work of explaining the complexity and detail. A mediocre journalist mixes facts and opinion without differentiation. A phony journalist uses selected facts to support a position or opinion. I think Gracie shows promise.
Sailor46 USN 65-95 about 8 years ago
A clear, cloudless day-time sky is blue because molecules in the air scatter blue light from the sun more than they scatter red light. When we look towards the sun at sunset, we see red and orange colors because the blue light has been scattered out and away from the line of sight.
This is settled science, unless you lean toward conspiracy theories, and the internet says different..
Gracie, The sky isn’t gray, that’s clouds you see.
hippogriff about 8 years ago
timbob2313
I have seen the red of an aurora twice (not the rest, just red on the northern horizon) at dusk, in Dallas, and on the Red River. Six years in Canada, nothing.