Posted on 07/23/2007 9:07:20 AM PDT by COUNTrecount
When Hollywood producer Rod Lurie created fictional president Mackenzie Allen in 2005 for the show Commander in Chief he made no mistake about one of his goals: tilling the soil of popular culture so that it would soon be easier for a real woman to take root in a nonfiction Oval Office.
CBS News had no such goal in 2006 when it gave Katie Couric the anchors chair once occupied by Walter Cronkite. But it was a vivid example of the glass ceiling being shattered in one of societys most prestigious platforms.
So will television be a leading indicator of politics in 2008? Hillary Rodham Clinton had better hope not. The ratings of both the struggling CBS Evening News and the now-canceled ABC drama Commander in Chief call into question one of the premises of Clintons political strategy: that women are eager to reward role models who break down gender barriers.
On TV, at least, it hasnt happened.
An analysis of ratings by Nielsen Media Research for Politico showed that competitors to the Evening News and Commander in Chief scored better with female viewers. The results undermine calculations by ABC and CBS that placing accomplished women in roles traditionally owned by men would be a ratings hit because of the number of female viewers drawn to one of their own.
In particular, white women--a key swing bloc Clintons campaign says it intends to focus on should she win the nomination--responded with a shrug to both Couric and Commander in Chief.
Efforts to extrapolate political implications from Hollywood studio sets and network news desks should perhaps be taken cum grano salis. But some commentators say the experiences of Couric and Geena Davis, who played the president on the ABC drama, do indeed offer a cautionary tale for Clinton.
You cant simply plug a woman into a drama, a sitcom, or an anchor position and expect women are going to watch it, says Robert Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University. The same is true for a female candidate. The presence of a woman does not make women vote or watch just because its a woman.
Polling also underscores the complexity of the gender dynamic for Clinton.
Clinton wins roughly the same number of male voters as Illinois Sen. Barack Obama in the Democratic primary race, according to a variety of surveys. But she wins Democratic women nearly 2-to-1 over Obama, who remains her closest challenger.
But the support she expects to win from Democratic women in the primaries does not necessarily translate to big benefits in a general election. In a hypothetical matchup against former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, the Gallup Organization found women favoring Clinton by a modest margin, 53 percent to 47 percent.
But Giuliani had a 16 percent lead over Clinton among male votersa margin larger than President Bushs lead over Democrats Al Gore and John F. Kerry in the previous two presidential elections.
Given the historic nature of having a female Democrat running against a socially liberal Catholic Republican, it is remarkable how similar it appears the results would be to the 2004 election in which two white males representing the mainstream politics of the two parties faced off, a mid-June Gallup Poll report found.
Most notably, it appears Clinton would run no stronger among women than Kerry did in 2004--or, for that matter, than Al Gore did when running against Bush in 2000.
These numbers suggest a lesson Hollywood has already learned the hard way: that symbolism alone goes only so far in influencing public opinion.
Lurie, the creator and executive producer of Commander in Chief, is strikingly direct that from the first episode of the show he hoped Hollywood could be a lever for changing Washington.
Those of us who were intimately involved in the show did have the agenda of trying to get a woman in the White House, not necessarily Hillary Clinton but any woman, he says. What we liked was that the audience kept hearing the term Madame President. But not that many people heard the term, especially once it left the air after 19 episodes.
Six in 10 white viewers of Commander in Chief were women for the season from September 2005 to August 2006, according to Nielsen data. Yet the Fox competitor in the same time slot, House, the story of an anti-social maverick male doctor, earned 1.6 million more white female viewers. More black and Hispanic women also watched House.
Courics experience is similar. From Aug. 28, 2006, shortly before Courics debut, to June 10, 2007, both NBC and ABC, under male anchors, had more female viewers, white women especially, Nielsen found.
Like both shows, Clinton has tailored her campaign style in a variety of explicit and subtle ways to draw women. She announced her run for the presidency in a living room, asked voters to join her for a conversation, and offers herself as a mother with a Midwestern upbringing.
In a similar vein, Courics broadcast initially featured more conversational segments, and aimed to project her trademark big-sister warmth in the broadcasts concluding comments.
But Couric has not attracted more female viewers, regardless of race, compared with when Dan Rather anchored the CBS Evening News three years earlier. In fact, slightly fewer women view Couric than Rather. Although all networks are hemorrhaging viewers, CBS had hoped Couric could at least serve as a tourniquet for the loss of women.
Whether Couric or Clinton, what were talking about is casting, says Howard Suber, a professor emeritus of film at the University of California at Los Angeles.
Suber and Lurie say that Courics poor ratings at CBS may have less to do with her gender than Courics persona being rather soft, as Lurie puts it.
Lurie notes that he attempted the opposite strategy in Commander in Chief. And indeed, the show did achieve strong ratings early on.
What early success the show enjoyed, Lurie believes, was based in emphasizing the strength of its main character. Davis, as President Allen, immediately established her national security bona fides in the shows title and script. We were trying to eliminate the concerns about a female president right off the bat, Lurie recalls.
He surmises that, This is why Hillary Clinton talks a little tougher, a little more jingoism and a little more militarism than the other Democratic candidates. She must hype her rhetoric because shes a woman.
In the pilot episode of Commander in Chief, the first executive act of President Allen was to send special forces into Nigeria to free a persecuted woman from execution. But some felt these compensatory gestures felt forced and overdone.
So much of the show was about her being a female president, not about her being president, says Marita Sturken, a cultural studies professor at New York University. Commander in Chiefs failure to win more women than its lead competitor reflects an ambivalence toward gender among the audience in a show that was consumed with gender, Sturken adds.
The show may have had other problems sustaining audience beyond gender politics. Davis never conveyed the gravitas of actresses such as Meryl Streep or Glenn Close, who once played a vice president.
To Clintons benefit, her demeanor may be closer in character to Close than Davis. Clinton will get another marker for comparison next fall, when actress Cherry Jones joins Fox drama 24 as its next president of the United States, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
UCLAs Suber predicts that Clintons success or failure, like that of Couric and Davis, will ultimately hinge less on gender identity than other factors, tangible and more ephemeral, that influence whether voters believe Clinton fits the part.
Its not that different from the discussion producers have when they are talking about casting actors, Suber says. Who is believable in a role? Well, what have they done? is always the first question. Everybody typecasts.
At least he is honest about it. Most blatant propaganda attempts by the liberal TV producers are denied.
So does this mean a “fairness doctrine” would’ve required the network to offer a second series where Ann Coulter became president?
To Clintons benefit, her demeanor may be closer in character to Close than Davis.Actually, I think Clinton's demeanor is closer to that of Krusty the Clown.
Ohhhh....
Chris Matthews.
I would vote for a good, strong, intelligent, credible woman for President. That woman however is NOT hillleree.
When she turns out to be a traitor, it does make you wonder what methods Jack will use to interrogate her.
I only happened to pay special attention to that because it was opposite my favorite TV show, "House," and it would infuriate me to see media outlets like "Entertainment Weekly" put "CIC" on the cover while trying to bury "House." One year, Hugh Laurie won the Golden Globe as Best Actor on TV (voted by foreign journalists who weren't in on the "elect Hillary" conspiracy), yet EW's Entertainers of the Year issue lauded Geena Davis and didn't even mention Hugh. It was only after "CIC" was finally cancelled that they even began to put "House" into their weekly TV listings.
Of course, quality eventually won out. "House" is now the #1-rated scripted show on TV, and "CIC" is but a bad memory. It gave me hope that there actually are limits to the brainwashing abilities of today's mass media (Al Gore's 2000 vote total notwithstanding), and that maybe we Great Hairy Unwashed in flyover country aren't as gullible as the Bi-coasters think we are.
“House” is my favorite too.
So the first act of this woman was to send highly trained and extremely expensive super soldiers to save the life of one woman being executed unfairly in Africa? Was this supposed to show how tough she was? Send SF into a meat grinder to save the life of one African woman convicted of a crime worthy of death according to the laws of a sovereign nation.
Maybe the writers and actors of this show were just morons.
Surely, if our country ever elects a woman President, it will be a conservative woman--to test the waters of how a woman will do as Chief Excecutive--as opposed to some far-left nutcase like Hilary.
That's ridiculous. The Glenn Close role they're talking about was in Air Force One, and she played the Veep -- who was effectively acting as President -- as cool, competent, loyal and principled. Nothing like Hillary.
He'll make her watch The Golf Channel or ESPN News? My wife hates those channels!
I flipped through the boob tube and caught that guy Carlos Mencia on Comedy Central doing his “Man In The Street” thing, where he asks people questions.
He must have asked 10 or 12 women if they’d vote for a woman for POTUS and he was astonished that they all said NO! He couldn’t find any women to answer the way he thought they should. He made a sexist joke about it and moved on.
You mean this hasn't been their plan since "Dr. Quinn: Medicine Woman" and "Murder, She Wrote"?
-PJ
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.