April 16 - April 29, 2008
In this edition of the Entertainment Mailbag, MSN readers sound off on our feature Dr. Phil: The Doctor Is Out (of Touch), which was written by Barbara Card Atkinson.
From Valorie Tresner, Gig Harbor, Wash.:
Now, I will not tune in to Dr. Phil. He has sold his soul to the devil, no
longer seems to be rooted in doing what is right and good, but has given in to
greed and the outrageous media hype to attract viewers who seemingly revel in
seeing the worst of humankind on television. I no longer see him as a
professional, but an egocentric human being who likes to call attention to
himself by exploiting the worst of humanity. The individuals who agree to appear
on "Dr. Phil" are not looking for help, they are looking for attention and are
getting it in a big way. From Susan Jakubowski, Sarver, Pa.:
From Susan Jane:
From Michael Jaumott:
From Vicky Private, Canada:
From Mary Orem, Piedmont, S.C.:
From Janice Nelson, RN:
From Ann Spangler, Atlanta:
Maybe there should be a disclaimer at the beginning of the show that says the
following show is nothing more than theatrics. From Richard Stone, Chandler, Ariz.:
My wife is really angry with me over a host of issues, some of them
legitimate, but it is hard to make amends when every Dr. Phil show just stokes
her anger. She is a real fan, and I think I know why. I don't know if his show
does more good than harm, but I can see where it can do some real harm if it is
biased toward one viewpoint. I think the show is a good idea, but it could use
some internal checks and controls in the form of a board of professional
advisers. From Doris Day, New York:
From George Pehl, Houston:
He should have stayed just far enough back in the shadows of obscurity to
continue his ruse. His big, fat, ugly ego got the best of him. But that is how
criminals are always found out. They think they can do it over and over, until
they're caught. Oprah is not a bad person for using people like him for her
show. She just liked his so-called straight talk just like the rest of us. But
we all should have realized that his showmanship had reached its limit.
I was a
huge fan of Dr. Phil. I felt that he gave very sound, responsible, sensible
advice to the common person who had gone astray. In my opinion, I thought that
it was a good thing that psychotherapy was being brought to the masses, because
good was being done.
I have
believed for a long time that this guy is an opportunist. Oprah brought on Dr.
Phil to give him some exposure, initially. Now, you say that Oprah is distancing
herself from him. In my opinion, Oprah has gone too far herself as being an
"expert" in so many areas as in politics, education, literature, addictions,
etc. I just don't find Oprah or Dr. Phil creditable sources for topics that
interest me. The only thing that Oprah hasn't done yet is have a coronation.
I used to
watch Dr. Phil fairly regularly until the day he talked to a young couple who
were disagreeing over the cost of their upcoming wedding -- which they were
paying for themselves. At the end of the segment, Dr. Phil told the young man
that girls dreamed about their weddings from the time they were little and that
$26,000 "wasn't all that much, really." If THAT'S not out of touch, I don't know
what is!
Dr. Phil is
a moral, Christian man and the latter is the reason he is attacked.
LEAVE THE
GUY ALONE!!! OMG, he has been entertaining and helping us for a few years now.
The problem I have is with Robin. She is just his wife and that's it. Why is she
featured on the show sometimes? And who cares about her problems? Who is she to
write a book about her life? She's not an expert. Just because she's married to
Dr. Phil doesn't mean that she is somebody.
I loved
your essay on Dr. Phil. It is so refreshing to see a well-written critical
analysis on one of society's bozos. The problem is that so many people do not
have information to see through these folks and it takes a voice of reason to
balance the scale.
All of us
licensed professionals thank you.
Congratulations on a great factual report. It seems that anything Oprah
says, does, thinks, recommends, likes or has anything to do with has the "goose
with the golden egg" syndrome. People don't actually look at the credentials or
the professional experience, they just take it for granted that whatever Oprah
says is the gospel. And let's not overlook the fact that quite a few Dr. Phil
"big bucks" are flowing into the Oprah cash bucket.
I think Dr.
Phil knows his audience really well. He loves to get scumbag husbands on his
show and teach them a lesson. This is exactly what some women like to see. They
have problems in their own lives that they would love to blame on their
husbands. Before you know it, their husbands are taking on some of the
characteristics of some of the scumbags on the Dr. Phil show.
It's time
people realized that Dr. Phil is as human as the next. The issue of his license
to practice isn't valid: It doesn't matter as long as he isn't practicing as a
psychiatrist for monetary gain. Right now all I can see of Dr. Phil is a
television host who has a background in psychology, doling out common-sense
concepts to people who can't or won't take responsibility for their own bad
personal decisions. The Dr. Phil show will exploit someone's misery as well as
the next television host.
Maybe Dr.
Phil didn't realize that he would become so famous that his past would come back
to haunt him. This is sort of like the old hucksters who move from town to town
and then one day they get national attention and become too well-known for their
own good.













