Posted on 09/19/2002 5:08:10 PM PDT by BrianS.Wise
Every once in awhile, someone says no to Ann Coulter, and a light-duty controversy ensues; typically youll see debate whenever some odd person or organization has the nerve to refuse a prominent womans desires, demands and / or opinions (e.g. the recent controversy over female memberships at Augusta National), but things are always different when Ann Coulter is the woman in question. The newest controversy began with a column, Battered Republican Syndrome, in which she fired off the following salvo:
This [the Kennedy family badmouthing the Bush family out of turn] is as we have come to expect from a family of heroin addicts, statutory rapists, convicted and unconvicted female-killers, cheaters, bootleggers and dissolute drunks known as Camelot. Why would anyone want such people as good friends? (Well then! Let it be said here that some of debates most unbelievable battles have been drawn around the bodies of the Kennedy boys; the most savagely your author has ever been handled in a debate was the night it came from the conservative podium, Am I supposed to respect them [JFK and RFK] because they each used Marilyn Monroe as a spittoon?)
The Centre Daily Times, a State College, Pennsylvania newspaper, took that as the last straw and dropped Coulters column from its pages, having previously informed its readers that the column was on probation (as it were) due to the frankness of her views and the manner in which they were conveyed. On The OReilly Factor, Times editor Bob Unger went to reasonable lengths to say 1) that his paper is basically a moderate paper in a largely Right-wing town, 2) that Coulter is a hater of Democrats, liberals, environmentalists and most Muslims, and that, 3) a majority of mail sent to his paper plainly stated they were okay with the columns removal because people are tired of hate. Safe to say no vote was needed on whether or not people are tired of hate.
In defense of Ann Coulter: she is an asset to a movement (conservatism) that is, generally speaking, much too plaintive and soft spoken for its own good, that refuses to recognize the rest of the world has modernized while it hasnt, that will not face its opposition (liberalism) in the same manner in which it is continuously treated. Coulters tendency is to respond to liberalism as it has responded to conservatism over the years, with open contempt. In terms of tone, she has said nothing here of the Kennedys that hasnt been said of President Bushs family, by the Left, with the accusations changed to retain relevance.
It also bares mentioning, though it should seem obvious, that Coulter gets as good as she gives; the difference between Battered Republican Syndrome and Thor Helsas old Ann of a Thousand Lays column for salon.com (in which it is suggested Coulter injects herself with her own urine to stay thin) is that Helsas piece is considered high comedy by its primary audience, while Coulters blasts are considered hate speech. (One cannot help but wonder if this is because Coulters work is actually being read by enough people to register an impact. How many bestsellers has Thor Helsa had?)
Now to the other side: The more often someone is dumped, the less likely it becomes the person being dumped is simply misunderstood (cf. Coulters previous problems with National Review Online). A certain act can play itself out in a column distributed, say, to Internet-only audiences, but when it comes to newspaper syndication, one should probably exercise a little more decorum. (Your author wouldnt, for example, refer to Marilyn Monroes being used as a spittoon had this column been written for the Wall Street Journal.)
Those who appreciate Coulter (I am one) cannot help but wonder whether or not she consistently stacks the deck against herself because she enjoys the challenge (I Stand Alone Against the World) or because she is a keener public relations maven than originally suspected. No matter the overall truth of the Kennedy statement (and theres nothing but truth in it), Coulters thought pattern doesnt always translate well to those not as vehement in their objections, especially over breakfast.
Anyone who openly defies or opposes Ann Coulter is her enemy; whether or not this is inherently healthy as a personal philosophy can be debated (though one suspects not), even if on a base level people appreciate protectionism of ones allies and beliefs. Problem is, the more managing editors she alienates, the less likely it is Coulter will be taken seriously, and the damage done then is not only to her reputation, but to conservatism in general, which her fans hope she comes to consider.
But why was Limbaugh sucessful, even on stations that no one listened or wanted to listen to? Because he had something the listeners wanted.
I was an early Limbaugh fan, and I have deep problems with some of his positions on the issues. But I'm a fan because of how he presents his positions, how he structures his show, and I listen for more than just to hear someone slap liberals around. He not only is informative, but he's entertaining.
Coulter can't claim that. Neither could Keyes. Coulter lobs her oneliner and then gloats over the attention it creates. To suceed in the business of ideas and become a player vs a periodic guest, you must be more than one dimension. Coulter only has that one dimension.
Maybe her medium is books. Sort of like Rush and his TV show. It largely was a flop after the newness wore off. It died. Even die hards that recorded it stopped after a while. It just wasn't that great of a show. His medium is radio.
But being a great book selling doesn't translate into being a great day after day media personality. And besides, I bet she has an agent plugging such opportunities to liberal tv and conservative radio opportunities.
Ann uses invective to be heard above the noise, to draw attention to falsehoods passing for truth and the tactics by which they are spread, all to the benefit of the general school of thought we at FR supposedly share. As far as I can tell she is effective.
For a conservative, whats not to like?
How can you refer to Ann's style as "scorched-Earth" like but be a fan of Michael Savage? I personally enjoy both but can't understand your connection considering your conviction.
Response: But why is that. Conservatives seem to be so one dimensional. I believe that is a major reason why the 94 congressional revolution lost so much of it's early steam. It wasn't the that the population rejected what was on the agenda, it was the messengers. Those are the people who gave the media the sound bites that killed the Gingrich revolution. When you gave the media soundbites, it then was fodder to scare off those who were on early.
Ann Coulter is part of the soundbite mentality. I don't disagree she has something to contribute, but the scorched earth presentation isn't attractive to those who don't know her.
And she even openly admits that much of what she says is designed to draw attention. When you live in a soundbite world, if you going to advance an agenda, then you've got to craft your soundbites a little more carefully.
Hmmm. . . meeth inks ewe men tut ipe "OWN OH" !!! ;-))
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