Posted on 11/26/2002 11:02:56 PM PST by BADROTOFINGER
Gores TV War: He Lobs Salvo At Fox News by Josh Benson
Among the many problems facing the Democratic Party, according to former Vice President Al Gore, is the state of the American media.
"The media is kind of weird these days on politics, and there are some major institutional voices that are, truthfully speaking, part and parcel of the Republican Party," said Mr. Gore in an interview with The Observer. "Fox News Network, The Washington Times, Rush Limbaughtheres a bunch of them, and some of them are financed by wealthy ultra-conservative billionaires who make political deals with Republican administrations and the rest of the media . Most of the media [has] been slow to recognize the pervasive impact of this fifth column in their ranksthat is, day after day, injecting the daily Republican talking points into the definition of whats objective as stated by the news media as a whole."
Mr. Gore has been airing his views during a nationwide promotional book tour that marks his re-emergence in public life after a self-imposed exile following his loss in the 2000 Presidential election. Now, as Mr. Gore considers another Presidential campaign, hes determined to confound his ponderous image by unveiling a new Al Goreone who doesnt hesitate, as he puts it, to "let er rip."
Hence his controversial criticisms of President Bushs foreign policy, and his surprise announcement in favor of a government-run universal health-care system. And hence, in a phone interview with The Observer, his extensive criticism of the media, which is hardly a conventional way of launching a national political campaign.
Actually, Mr. Gore may have little reason to hide his views about the media, for his re-emergence, while generating a massive amount of attention, has also inspired ridicule from commentators of all ideological persuasions. Conservatives seemed delighted by his return, remembering his awkward candidacy in 2000, and many liberals have been quite frank in wishing that he would simply disappear.
But Mr. Gore has a bone to pick with his critics: namely, he says, that a systematically orchestrated bias in the media makes it impossible for him and his fellow Democrats to get a fair shake. "Something will start at the Republican National Committee, inside the building, and it will explode the next day on the right-wing talk-show network and on Fox News and in the newspapers that play this game, The Washington Times and the others. And then theyll create a little echo chamber, and pretty soon theyll start baiting the mainstream media for allegedly ignoring the story theyve pushed into the zeitgeist. And then pretty soon the mainstream media goes out and disingenuously takes a so-called objective sampling, and lo and behold, these R.N.C. talking points are woven into the fabric of the zeitgeist."
And during a lengthy discourse on the history of political journalism in America, Mr. Gore said he believed that evolving technologies and market forces have combined to lower the medias standards of objectivity. "The introduction of cable-television news and Internet news made news a commodity, available from an unlimited number of sellers at a steadily decreasing cost, so the established news organizations became the high-cost producers of a low-cost commodity," said Mr. Gore. "Theyre selling a hybrid product now thats news plus news-helper; whether its entertainment or attitude or news thats marbled with opinion, its different. Now, especially in the cable-TV market, it has become good economics once again to go back to a party-oriented approach to attract a hard-core following that appreciates the predictability of a right-wing point of view, but then to make aggressive and constant efforts to deny thats what theyre doing in order to avoid offending the broader audience that mass advertisers want. Thus the Fox slogan We Report, You Decide, or whatever the current version of their ritual denial is."
"We understand that Gore is frustrated," said R.N.C. spokesman Kevin Sheridan. "Hes the leader of a party without a message. But if he thinks that the Republican National Committee can control the American media, then perhaps he needs a break from the book tour."
Fox spokesman Rob Zimmerman said, "We wont dignify this with a response."
A spokesman for The Washington Times didnt return calls for comment. Rush Limbaugh was traveling and not available for comment.
A Left Hook
Of course, some of the harshest criticisms of Mr. Gore have come from distinctly non-conservative quarters. Mr. Gore seemed particularly stung, for example, by an op-ed written by Frank Rich of The New York Times, suggesting that his new spontaneity was a charade. "When people write a line like one that I read this morningquote, People do not change, period, end quotewell, theres a difference between learning from experience and self-reinvention," Mr. Gore said. "People do change, particularly in America. If you dont learn from the experiences you have in life, then youre not trying very hard, and if you dont make mistakes, youre not human . If people who make their living criticizing anybody and everybody want to add me to their list, thats all right. Hell, theyve got to make a living."
Democrats sympathetic to Mr. Gore frequently maintain that "political insiders"the media, big donors, professional politicianspaint an overly pessimistic picture of his viability as a candidate and suggest that his position has been strengthened by the partys poor showing in the midterm elections several weeks ago. "There are all these people in the party who have been adamant that we need a fresh face," said Joe Andrew, who headed the Democratic National Committee during the Clinton administration. "I think a lot of those people are taking another look at Al Gore now, saying that, Well, at least theres someone out there with big ideas, who looks good on TV, who looks more comfortable with himself. I think its simply a fundamental reaction to the sense that he is a serious candidate with serious ideas."
But while Mr. Gore has a solid core of support, many Democrats do want a fresh face to take on George W. Bush in 2004. The same formal and informal polls that show Mr. Gore with substantially larger backing than any other Democratic hopeful also show that a great many donors, opinion makers and party leaders are uncommittedand leaning toward Anyone But Gore.
Its possible that no amount of criticism will keep Mr. Gore out of the race, but theres little question that "Gore fatigue" already has become a rallying point for his potential opponents. "At this point, people are uniformly looking for a different face and a different agenda, an agenda that requires a backbone," Vermont Governor Howard Dean, a potential Democratic contender, told The Observer.
Asked about Mr. Gores efforts to make a fresh start as a straight-talking, independent-minded Democrat, Mr. Dean said, "I think it will be kind of a tough job for someone who was a sitting Vice President to call himself an outsider."
Mr. Gore acknowledged his image problem among powerful Democrats, and that the onus will be upon him to recapture the loyalties of those who supported him in 2000. "Maybe I bear the blame for some of it," he said. "I havent been very good about calling all of the insiders over the last two years, and maybe some of them have a beef with me because of that. I know they have been courted assiduously by some of the others who are considering a run for the White House, and it may be that some of them have already signed up with other people. If I do decide to run again, I think theres a lot of support, but Id also have to work really hard to get a bunch of them committed back to me."
Mr. Gore also reckoned that he would have to prove himself all over again to key political and media players. "Im well aware that the political insiders and political-journalism community have a considerable amount of influence, and even though Im stronger at the grassroots level, I think that if I did run again, I would have to convince those two groups that Ive learned enough in the last couple of years to run a better campaign than I did last time. I dont think that theres a thing that I could say and no words I could choose that could accomplish thatthe way to convince them would be in actually doing it."
For now, Mr. Gore can only attempt to explain what motivates the ceaseless lampooning he continues to face from Americas columnists and commentators. "Thats postmodernism," he offered. "Its the combination of narcissism and nihilism that really defines postmodernism, and thats another interview for another time, if youre interested in it.
You may reach Josh Benson via email at: jbenson@observer.com.
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Maybe it is just wishful thinking on my part, but I don't think that will happen. I think Weird Al will win the nomination, and THEN get his keister handed to him. That's the true fun of his little meltdown, he's taking the whole friggin party with him.
That is exactly the kind of elitist language that turns people off.
Because only 98% of media outlets take their marching orders from the DNC instead of the 100% it always has been? Boo frickin' hoo, owl boy.
And oh yes, if you get a chance there, Dodo, mush your dogsled over to the nextdoor igloo in political Siberia and give my FReegards to Tommy Boy Daschole.
Maybe you guys can square off in a primary for Milwaukee dogcatcher. I hear they have plenty of cheese to go with your whine!
Yeah, people that have the ability to reason are turned off by it. I have a feeling there are those young bohemians (whose votes, gore and his kind lust after) who just eat that stuff up.
You know, like, "Oh wow, man...that al gore is so cool."
He really just needs to take that act to poetry night at the corner coffee house.
If this goofball was elected President I wonder if the country would still exist.
Don't forget Terry McAuliffe.
Ain't that the truth!
Common sense solutions seem to be in short supply lately. Though I have no recollection of politicians expressing many of that kind. Gives a lot of credence to the old expression, "there ain't nothing common about common sense."
Yeah, I made a bit of a hash of it.
I'll just spell it out and you can rewind it and play at a humor volume that suits you. I get instant mental imagery- you know? Sometimes it's funny and sometimes it's just weird. But when I read:
said Mr. Gore in an interview with The Observer
I pictured that the Observer never actually contacted Gore. Mr Insignificant was probably sitting up late reading a comic book and the idea popped into his head "Hey, I haven't tried to get the Observer to listen to me yet".
So he calls 'em up straight away- but nobody wants to hear him in the middle of the night, so the telephone operator keeps handing him off until he makes it to this reporter's voice mail service. He cheerily tells the machine "Hi, you might have heard of me- I'm Al Gore- and I'm offering you an exclusive." He launches into this long diatribe- mainly because nobody is there to make him shut up.
And during a lengthy discourse on the history of political journalism in America,
I can picture it. Tipper's laying there with one of those sleeping masks and ear plugs while Gore talks and talks and talks until the tape on the machine runs out. I can picture him feeling very warm and fuzzy talking to a fellow machine and even giving it a fond fairwell after the little beep at the end.
The reporter comes back off holiday and finds this weird message on his machine. Figures it's a prank and is about to delete it when one of his colleagues says "But nobody would impersonate Al Gore... Maybe it's real?"
I found it funny for some reason.
Al just locked up the vote in Cambridge and Berkeley, he is securing his base.
You would think that Gore would know better than to release an interview like this at this stage of this career because of the potential blowback. This sort of mistake highlights a key difference between Gore and the Clintons. The Clintons have much more finely tuned political antennae and they understand how this sort of language would be perceived. Which is not to say that they are perfect either, they have their own share of gaffes. But not whopper after whopper , like Al " I created the internet" Gore.The Clintons probably believe much, if not all, of what Gore had to say about the media, think VRWC. The Clintons probably use the same language too, but in private, because they know it would have the potential to alienate people.
I now want Gore to run more than ever because of the sheer entertaiment value his campaign will have.
ARISTOCRATIC
Well...on the Kyoto treaty business I am pleased. Bush isn't wrong 100% of the time.
But on the matter of SC appointments or federal judiciary nominees, it wouldn't make sense for Bush to appoint strict constitutionalists to the courts.
I wish it did make sense but much of the stuff Bush has signed into law, would be struck down in a heartbeat by a constitutionalist.
So, he'll appoint lawyers who will support encroachments on the 4th amendment. So called "law and order" Judges who don't see anything wrong with random checkpoints and other such nonsense. He might find a judge who is less friendly regarding the abortion issue but in general he's looking for lawyers who share his opinions. The only way we'll ever get strict constitutionalists in the courts is to get rid of the democrats AND republicans in office.
By the way, thank you for having such an open mind and friendly demeanor. This was a nice conversation in spite of my own crankiness :)
I've only predicted that Bush won't make a second term. I'll still complain if a Democrat wins. In some ways, it will be worse. But maybe not. The push to paint anyone who believes that the constitution is important as an extremist has already begun. The patriot act will be used to take these people out of the picture. And they can be held indefinately without trial too. That ought to be fun.....
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