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Month: January 2008

Saturday Night At The Movies

Writer’s block

By Dennis Hartley

As the rerun hell spawned by the Writer’s Guild strike grinds on, morphing Leno and Stewart back into flop-sweating open-mike comics and glitzy awards shows into sleepy press conferences, I’ve been relying more on “deep catalog” for entertainment lately. As I was perusing my media library the other night, I realized that there have actually been a surprising number of great movies concerning the art of writing over the years.

What better way to show your solidarity with those cold, tired scribes on the wintry picket lines than to hold a media room film festival in their honor? Here’s my pick for the “top 10” films about writers (as per usual, in no particular ranking order). I’m eager to hear yours. BTW I’m including novelists, poets and playwrights, as well as TV and screenwriters (print journalists and newspapermen would require a whole other post!):

American Splendor-From the streets of Cleveland, no less! Paul Giamatti was born to play underground comic writer Harvey Pekar, the misanthropic file clerk/armchair philosopher who became a cult figure after collaborating with legendary comic illustrator R. Crumb on some classic strips. Co-directors Shari Berman and Robert Pulcini keep the film fresh and engaging via some unusual choices, like breaking down the “fourth wall” by having the real Pekar interact with Giamatti in several scenes; it’s quite effective. Hope Davis is excellent (and virtually unrecognizable) as Pekar’s deadpan wife.

An Angel at My Table-Jane Campion directed this incredibly moving story of successful New Zealand novelist Janet Frame (beautifully played at various stages of her life by three actresses, most notably Kerry Fox). When she was a young woman, her social phobia and generalized anxiety was misdiagnosed as a more serious mental illness and she ended up spending nearly a decade in and out of institutions (if she were around today, she’d be handed a Xanax prescription and sent home). Not for the faint of heart.

Barfly-It’s the battle of the quirky method actors as Mickey Rourke and Faye Dunaway guzzle rye and wax wry in this booze-soaked dark comedy, based on the experiences of writer/poet Charles Bukowski. The film is quite richly drawn, right down to the smallest bit parts. Look for Sylvester Stallone’s brother Frank as a bartender who repeatedly beats the crap out of Rourke (betcha Rourke could take him in a real-life alley scrap!). For a perfect co-feature, check out the compelling documentary Bukowski: Born into This.

The Front-Directed by Martin Ritt, this generally downbeat yet politically rousing tale uses the entertainment industry’s spurious McCarthy era blacklist as its backdrop. Woody Allen takes one of his rare “acting only” gigs, and is very effective here as a semi-literate bookie that ends up “fronting” for several blacklisted TV writers. Zero Mostel is brilliant in a tragicomic performance as an archetypal “crying on the inside” funnyman. This was obviously an artistic labor of love (or possibly revenge?) from all parties involved. Anyone who doesn’t get a lump in their throat when it is duly noted in the end credits that Mostel, screenwriter Walter Bernstein and several other participants in the film actually were blacklisted back in the day probably voted Republican in the last election.

Hearts of the West-Jeff Bridges gives a winning performance as a rube from Iowa, a wannabe pulp western writer with the unlikely name of “Lewis Tater” (the scene where he asks the barber to cut his hair to make him look “just like Zane Grey” is priceless.) Tater gets fleeced by a mail-order scam promising enrollment in what turns out to be a bogus university “out west”. Serendipity lands him a job as a stuntman in 1930s Hollywood westerns. Featuring one of Andy Griffith’s best screen performances (next to A Face in the Crowd). Alan Arkin is a complete riot as a perpetually apoplectic director.

Henry & June – Fred Ward delivers his best performance to date as the gruff, libidinous literary icon Henry Miller. The story takes place during the time period that Miller was living in Paris and working on his infamous novel “Tropic of Cancer”. The film concentrates on the complicated love triangle between Miller, his wife June (Uma Thurman) and erotic novelist Anais Nin (Maria de Medeiros). Despite the copious amount of decadent atmosphere, naked flesh and furtive coupling, the film is curiously un-sexy, but still fascinating, and quite well acted. Also with the fabulous Richard E. Grant. Director Philip Kaufman remains one of America’s most underrated filmmakers.

Manhattan-Writer/director Woody Allen casts himself as (wait for it…) a NYC TV writer going through a mid-life crisis. Mariel Hemingway is his teenage girlfriend (don’t say it!). Things get a little complicated when Woody falls for his best friend’s mistress (Diane Keaton). Meryl Streep has a memorable cameo as Allen’s bisexual ex-wife, who is writing a “tell-all” book about their marriage. Also featuring Michael Murphy and Anne Byrne, who both give excellent support. For my money, this is THE quintessential Woody Allen film, his absolute peak- and stands up quite well to myriad viewings.

The Owl And The Pussycat-George Segal is a reclusive, egghead NYC writer and Barbra Streisand is cast against type as a profane, boisterous hooker in this classic “oil and water” farce. Serendipity throws the two odd bedfellows together one fateful evening, and the resulting mayhem is crude, lewd, and IMHO, funnier than hell. Buck Henry adapted his screenplay from Bill Manhoff’s original stage version. Robert Klein is wonderfully droll in a small part. My favorite line: “Doris…you’re a sexual Disneyland!”

Prick Up Your Ears-Gary Oldman chews up the scenery with kinetic flamboyance in this biopic about the British playwright Joe Orton, who lived fast and died young. The chameleon-like Alfred Molina nearly steals the film as Orton’s long-time lover, Kenneth Halliwell. Halliwell was a frustrated, middling writer who had a complex, love-hate obsession with his partner’s effortlessly superior artistic gifts (you might say he played Salieri to Orton’s Mozart). This obsession led to a shocking and heartbreaking tragedy. Director Stephen Frears captures the exuberance of “swinging” 1960s London perfectly.

Reuben, Reuben -A largely overlooked and forgotten little gem from 1983 featuring the great Tom Conti as a boozing, womanizing Scottish poet (reminiscent of Sean Connery’s character in the 1966 satire A Fine Madness). Conti’s character (he’s not “Reuben”, incidentally) spends more time getting himself in trouble than writing poetry, and is constantly trolling for rich patrons (usually via their wives). The inspiration for the film’s enigmatic title isn’t revealed until the final moments, and it’s a classic black comedy corker. Also featuring the lovely Kelly McGillis in her film debut. Where’s the DVD?!

In a thousand words or less: Monster in a Box: The Movie, The TV Set, Heart Beat, Barton Fink, Factotum, Naked Lunch, The World According to Garp, Stranger Than Fiction, Adaptation , Permanent Midnight, Deconstructing Harry,The Basketball Diaries , My Left Foot , Wilde , Capote, Gothic, ,Tom & Viv The Hours, Shadowlands , Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, Reds , Quills,My Brilliant Career, Julia, Finding Neverland , Dreamchild, Shakespeare in Love , Author! Author!,Best Seller, Basic Instinct , Swimming Pool , Hammett, Misery , Secret Window (2004), The Shining.

There have also been a handful of TV series that have delved into the mind of the writer:

The Dick Van Dyke Show – Oh, Rob. The first TV series that deemed to turn the camera back on itself, paving the way for the likes of The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Larry Sanders. Van Dyke portrays the droll comedy writer who toils for “Alan Brady” a TV star played by series creator Carl Reiner. Reiner, who began his career as a comedy writer, based the character of Brady on his one-time real life boss, Sid Caesar.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063934/ – Anyone else remember this one? I was only around 13 or 14 years old when I watched this show, so my memory is a tad fuzzy, but I do remember that it was not quite like anything else on the tube at the time (smart, quirky and a bit surreal). William Windom played a character based on writer/cartoonist James Thurber. There were only 14 episodes produced. Another candidate for a DVD release!

Californication -A new Showtime series that might be a little too smug and “hip” for its own good, but displays some occasional flashes of brilliance. David Duchovny plays the aptly named Hank Moody, an angsty New Yawk writer who moves to L.A. after his bestseller is optioned by Hollywood. Bawdy hilarity ensues. I’m sure that Duchovny’s Golden Globe win last Sunday will give the show a higher profile for its second season.

And speaking of Golden Globe winners, I should mention former SNL head writer Tina Fey’s art-imitating-life character in30 Rock , and an honorable mention to the short-lived Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip , which also dealt with backstage TV comedy writer angst.

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Everybody Wins
by digby
Hey guys, get a grip, relax, have a drink and play some blackjack:

Obama actually won Nevada (or not)*

Barack Obama may have won the most delegates in Saturday’s Nevada Caucus, even though Hillary Clinton bested his statewide turnout by about six points. A source with knowledge of the Nevada Democratic Party’s projections told The Nation that under the arcane weighting system, Obama would win 13 national convention delegates and Clinton would win 12 delegates. The state party has not released an official count yet. Barack Obama released an official statement celebrating a delegate victory. “We came from over twenty-five points behind to win more national convention delegates than Hillary Clinton because we performed well all across the state, including rural areas where Democrats have traditionally struggled,” he said. […]

Barack Obama released an official statement celebrating a delegate victory. “We came from over twenty-five points behind to win more national convention delegates than Hillary Clinton because we performed well all across the state, including rural areas where Democrats have traditionally struggled,” he said.There
UPDATE: The Obama Campaign is now pushing hard to promote this delegate victory. The campaign is convening a post-caucus conference call for reporters — something that only winning campaigns usually do — and circulating numerous Clinton quotes about how delegates are the only thing that matter. From the new press release:

Senator Obama was awarded 13 delegates to Senator Clinton’s 12. As Clinton Communications Director Howard Wolfson said, “This is a race for delegates…It is not a battle for individual states. As David knows, we are well past the time when any state will have a disproportionate influence on the nominating process.” [Washington Post, 1/16/08]

What a way to pick a president, eh?

Caucuses are always ridiculous and should be done away with. We need several rotating regional primaries.

*UPDATE*: please read D-day’s post below with important updates and explanations.* It appears that this story is incorrect and/or incomplete.

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Fear & Loathing On The Campaign Trail In Las Vegas

by dday

I’m still actually trying to process what I saw today. I attended the at-large caucus at the Wynn Hotel and Casino. Suffice to say (for now) that it was the most surreal political event in American history, and I’m trying to be understated. Imagine a costume party with politics mixed in.

For the record, there are a lot of allegations flying around about voter intimidation and voter suppression and all of that, on the Clinton AND on the Obama side (the Edwards folks are saying they just didn’t have the people and didn’t have the money). To be clear, I saw none of that at the Wynn, though of course, there was so much media there nobody would have been able to get away with it.

I’ll give a full report probably tomorrow.

P.S. The Nevada State Democratic Party is reporting that turnout is above 114,000 caucus attendees, with 88% of precincts reporting. That is a ridiculously high number. Something like 9,000 people voted in 2004. Another good day for Democrats.

P.S.S. The Obama campaign is claiming that they’re going to end up with 13 delegates to Clinton’s 12, because he outperformed Clinton in rural areas of the state. Indeed, in everything but Clark and Washoe Counties (Vegas and Reno), Obama won 55-45%. I have no idea if this is true, but considering the delegate count is what actually MATTERS, you’d think that this would be reported.

P.S.S.S. OK, I just spoke with Jill Derby, the head of the Nevada State Democratic Party. Regarding the Obama claim that he’ll actually get more delegates out of this, essentially that’s spin. Derby said that the caucuses are an “expression of the support of Nevadans today.” Around 11,000 delegates were elected today. That will be winnowed down at county conventions and eventually at the state convention in May to the 25 that will go to Denver for the DNC. In 2004, Kerry didn’t win every delegate on Election Day, but most of the delegates that eventually went to the DNC were his. Once there’s a presumptive nominee, the delegate numbers are subject to change. It’s non-binding.

If that makes your head spin, the short version is that this was a beauty contest, and you can’t project delegate numbers at this time.

On the question of charges of voter suppression and intimidation, which the Obama campaign is officially alleging, Derby said this (paraphrase):

“We had strict standards in place for what went on in the caucus room. Outside of the room is not necessarily our purview. We did get a few calls over the course of the day, and we did eject some people from the caucus room for engaging in tactics that were not within the rules.”

I asked her if she was going to initiate an investigation, and she demurred. She basically said that if Nevadans feel they have had their voting rights infringed upon, they should take it up with the “proper avenues,” which specifically she said was the courts. She also basically said that there was a lot of passion on both sides, and these kind of charges get thrown around in those circumstances.

Trying to be hands-off here, just the facts, ma’am. I can tell you one thing – this will not go away, and it could end up being a very big part of the conversation heading into South Carolina.

Update from Digby: d-day nailed it

Statement by Nevada Democratic Party Chair Jill Derby Regarding the Nevada Caucus

(Las Vegas, NV) Today, two out of three Nevadans who caucused chose a Democrat instead of a Republican for president. That is an overwhelming majority vote for a new direction. Just like in Iowa what was awarded today were delegates to the County Convention. No national convention delegates were awarded. The calculations of national convention delegates being circulated are based upon an assumption that delegate preferences will remain the same between now and April 2008. We look forward to our county and state conventions where we will choose the delegates for the nominee that Nevadans support.

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Martian Observer

by digby

Somebody give David Shuster a bib, because with the way he’s fluffing Matthews right now he’s going to need it.

Shuster: I love listening to you analyze politics, Chris…

Here’s a little sample of their fascinating conversation. (I couldn’t transrcibe the first part because I had to go find my gibberish decoder.)

Shuster: I thought it was just brilliant the way that the Clintons took advantage of a trap that maybe Barack Obama set for himself when he mentioned Ronald Reagan and talked about the Democrats not having relatively new ideas the last 15 years, which of course covers the Clinton administration. How do you rate the way the Clintons jumped down his throat on that.

Matthews (smirking, laughing) Well again. You don’t have to like it, but you have to observe it. We’re not talking about what is good and what is bad here, but of course we all have our observations about this kind of politics.

Inevitably the Clintons find themselves running against a kind of an outsider politician, someone trying something new. In 92 it was Paul Tsongas who talked about modifying the entitlement programs, doing some things with social security that may be sacrificing some benefits but basically saving the system

They just wait for the other side to do that and then they jump on them. They play the safety, they play in the pocket they let the other guy scramble. Or in the middle east they talk about an even handed policy and they jump on them.

They’re very effective at letting the other guy do something that exposes him and then jumping on him.

Now we saw that in that debate out in Las Vegas where the moderators asked them to list areas where they’re weak. In other words something to do with themselves. And Barack went out there and said, yeah I’m sort of disorganized and I need to have my staff give me the paper I need, the speech I need right before the event or I’ll misplace it…well that was, let’s face it, a sort of a minimal admission of weakness. But Then when it came time for John Edwards and Senator Clinton, to offer their weaknesses they didn’t do so they basically used it as an admission that it was a powerful emotion to do good on their part. Last week Barack tried to be witty and came back almost like Adlai Stevenson in the old days and said, I should have said that my weakness was that I like to help old ladies crossing streets. Because they were all using it that way. There again the Clintons go obvious, the opponent tries to be novel.

It reminds me of the great exchange between F Scott Fitzgerald and Hemingway where F. Scottsaid “the rich are different from us” and Hemingway said “yeah they have more money.” Well the Clintons are Hemingway.They would say the obvious as a topper, a trumper, not particularly original, but it would work. Especially in American culture the Clintons are very good at hitting that middle, the people who are not living on irony and surprise and novelty but those basic bread and butter Democratic values.

David, I obviously give a lot of thought to this stuff.

Shuster: Chris you are brilliant, and thanks for coming on

How much do they pay these guys?

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Nevada

by digby

Congratulations to Senator Clinton. CNN and MSNBC are calling Nevada for her. 51% Hillary, 45% for Obama and 5% for Edwards. (Very disappointing for Edwards. It shows what a news blackout will do to you.)

Right now the headline on Yahoo says “Hillary Survives, Mitt cruises.”

On CNN, Donna Brazile says she pulled it out because she talked about economics and criticized Obama for saying nice things about Ronald Reagan, because there’s no nostalgia for Reagan in the Democratic party

Bill Bennett replied, “a serious black candidate is saying to people, including his own party members ’embrace part of the Reagan memory and the Reagan legacy.’ I think this is actually Martin Luther King’s dream about color blindness. That he’s being punished for it tells you that there are still a lot of people in the Democrat Party who have to grow up.”

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Rapturous Speculation

by digby

I heard somebody say on TV that snow in South Carolina could “terrify Huckabee’s voters” and they wouldn’t come out.

Is snowfall in South Carolina a sign of the apocalypse?

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They Know Better

by digby

Ezra Klein documents another example of your puerile political press corps deciding who you are allowed to vote for:

I find the purity of my dislike for Mitt Romney is basically being overwhelmed by my discomfort with the press corps’ white-hot hatred for the guy.

It had been a long time coming. In Michigan, the frustration over Romney’s complete disingeniousness about “bringing your jobs back” conjured a rare degree of camaraderie, and we caucused together and came up with a list of questions that we agreed to ask no matter who got called on at the next press conference. For instance: “If Bain Capital was going to invest in the auto industry, what segment would it invest in, and how would that help Michigan?”

Gee if only they’d shown this kind of “camaraderie” when George W. bush was lying to their faces about weapons of mass destruction and a thousand other things, maybe they’d have some credibility (and might have saved us a lot of dead bodies.) But no, these people only get exercised enough to try to pin down a politician when they don’t “like” somebody and it’s about something totally stupid and trivial. (As Jon Stewart would say, “who the fuck are you?”)

Ezra points out that John McCain could say that he was going “to drive his Straight Talk Express directly into GM’s corporate lobby, force the American auto CEOs into a room, and tell them to cut the bullshit and give everyone their jobs back,’ the press would swoon over his plan.” You bet they would.

I’m no fan of Romney, but I’m really not a fan of these unelected scribblers putting their ham fists into politics for their own amusement and affecting the race with their own petty prejudices and knee jerk assumptions while presenting themselves to the mass of Americans as unbiased and objective.

If they hate Romney so much that they can’t be objective then they should admit it publicly or stop covering him. Manipulating and slanting the coverage, especially for their own amusement, is journalistic malpractice. This has been going on for a couple of decades as least and it’s not getting any better.


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MSNBC Brain Damage

by digby

So Joe Scarborough and the boys were all up in arms yesterday morning that Chris Matthews had to apologize for one teeny tiny little gaffe about Hillary Clinton:

SCARBOROUGH: Pat, I suppose I should guard my words here. I am not going to do it. This is offensive to me, that Chris Matthews said something that op-ed writers wrote about in ’98, in ’99, in 2000. That Bill Clinton scandal with Monica Lewinsky clearly helped Hillary Clinton politically because she showed enormous grace under fire, she showed just how strong she was, she continued doing her job. It was a very good moment for her. It was a bit like — let’s just say New Hampshire was a microcosm of that time, when she was getting abused last week. And we saw her the night before, when she thought she was going to lose by 15 points, she still showed an enormous strength — and I’ve said this on the air before — an enormous strength that I hope may be an example to my daughter, who — or any woman who goes through so much — so many problems but stays that strong.

Now, I’ve said all of that just to say, I think it’s outrageous that Chris Matthews has to apologize for saying something, inartfully perhaps, so many years later that op-ed writers were talking about in ’99 and 2000 because Gloria Steinem, who wrote an op-ed supporting Hillary Clinton before New Hampshire, Media Matters, who many people have called a front group for Hillary Clinton, just because they’re attacking Chris Matthews, who has obviously been critical of Hillary Clinton. What’s your take?

[…]

SHUSTER: Just one comment about Chris Matthews. I’ve worked with him for five and a half years. I’ve been alongside him, on camera, off, good times and bad. Nobody is more gracious and has a bigger heart, and has contributed more in a positive way to our political discourse than Chris Matthews.

SCARBOROUGH: Now, let me say, let me say —

SHUSTER: And to see him have to go through this is absolutely infuriating, to see the way these groups used him for pure political gain is absolutely infuriating.

(Who’s the “castrato in the boys chorus” now?)

Look, I was willing to give Tweety a pass for the 126,989 other sexist slurs he’s made — and which were documented in the letter these “groups” sent to NBC — and accept his apology for that one nasty insult as a sort of symbolic gesture.

I see that was a mistake.

If you haven’t read the full dossier on Matthews’ disgusting commentary, you can get it here. He’s a sick, misogynist head case who sees politics almost exclusively as an expression of “male/female” dynamics. (Often its manly men vs girly men, but it’s the same thing.)

On last night’s Hardball he said to Shuster, “thanks for what you said on that show this morning. You’re my pal.” Shuster smiled and said, “sure.” I guess that’s what he meant when he said he “get’s it.”

Clearly, Matthews still has no clue why his behavior is so revolting. And the fact that Shuster has interpreted this event as something that “groups” did as for political gain (i.e. to help Clinton) shows that he is a biased and unreliable reporter, which is very disappointing. That both Shuster and Scarborough felt perfectly comfortable lying on television about this episode in solidarity with their sick “pal” says everything you need to know about the village press corps.

This is one case that I can say was absolutely not a Clinton campaign operation or done for political gain and I resent the hell out of those alleged “analysts” and “journalists” for making that charge. I was involved in this as were dozens of other bloggers and writers, all of whom were tracking Matthews’ disgusting behavior and complained, wrote letters and signed petitions, not because we have affiliation with Clinton but because we were genuinely outraged on behalf of the human race. Media Matters has been documenting Matthews’ outrageous behavior for years, as has been the Daily Howler and the entire blogosphere, going all the way back to the late MediawhoresOnline, (which originally dubbed him Tweety.) He is legendarily biased, crude, sexist and wrong, over and over again. After Iowa, his disrespectful, leering schadenfreude (and that of many others in the press corps) may have actually affected the outcome of the election in New Hampshire by creating a backlash.

The idea that this was about one little comment on the day after the primary is ridiculous and what’s more, both Scarborough and Shuster know it, or they are a couple of idiots. At this point I’m leaning toward the latter.

I’ve always thought that Shuster, at least, was a good reporter. It doesn’t even bother me all that much that he defended Matthews as being a great guy. He works for him and he may very well truly like him personally. But to say this was some sort of Clinton conspiracy or done for political advantage is a perfect illustration of the way the press just makes stuff up out of their own animus and preconceptions. It just isn’t true.

If Shuster knows for a fact, (as he asserted with no qualifiers in that comment) that this outrage was manufactured for political reasons then he should put up or shut up.

Update: Jamison Foser at Media Matters takes them downtown.

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The Trap

by dday

Having now covered the campaigns for a full day, I completely see why our political media is as dysfunctional as it is. You’re shuffled from one event to another. You watch speeches and town hall meetings. You’re in big rooms with these candidates and watching them react to thousands of people. And you have to write a column and your editor is probably demanding that you determine who has the momentum. Furthermore, you start to think that you’re equipped to make that determination. If I were to do so, I would say that Hillary Clinton will win today’s caucuses, because she had the bigger and more enthusiastic supporters last night, and she gave the better speech. But in reality, I don’t have a fucking clue, and really I don’t think anyone does.

Watching a speech is not data that can be used in a “horse-race” story. You’re not seeing volunteer action, you’re not seeing how many are at the phone banks, you’re not seeing the number of precinct captains, and in a race like this, that’s what’s going to win, because there’s very little to suggest that there’s even an election tomorrow outside of the occasional channel 3 News billboard advertising “live caucus coverage,” and really the Wayne Brady billboard is bigger. There have been very few polls, and while the most recent ones have shown a Clinton lead, the turnout is fairly impossible to predict. Iowa and New Hampshire’s turnout was enormous on the side of the Democrats because the campaigns put resources and face time in there for months. This has been more of a ten-day sprint, and so I’m hearing anywhere from 50,000 to 100,000 caucus-goers, which makes the prediction process completely untenable. And the traditional media is gun shy of that type of environment, so they’re not going there (although they’re polling the heck out of South Carolina, having learned such a great lesson from New Hampshire).

Furthermore, I’m only seeing a piece of the state, albeit the piece with the largest population by far; Las Vegas may be the only city where you can credibly judge things that way. But my colleagues at Calitics are in the northern part of Nevada volunteering , and they were transferred by the campaign from Reno to Carson City because there were too MANY volunteers. That’s at least a data point. So is Obama’s campaign buying banner ads on Yahoo! and other search engines that say “caucus this morning at 11am,” meaning they know that I’m connecting from Nevada. That’s an under-the-radar data point.

As a pundit simply following the campaign from event to event, your data is verbal tics and reactions and other things that are actually indicative of nothing. It could be that David Axelrod flipping out is not the behavior of someone who’s winning; it could also be that he’s legitimately pissed off about the opponent’s campaign making these claims and giving themselves an excuse to downplay the significance of any win by saying that it’s Vegas and “the fix is in.” Obama’s speech was definitely lackluster, for his standards; the crowd appeared to be listening more than buying in to what he was saying, and he fumbled around in the middle. Clinton was really fired up and gave a speech that had emotional highs and lows to a packed high school gym with an overflow crowd in a separate room (which was where we were, as we arrived late; even the OVERFLOW room had a real sense of excitement and an investment in the speech). You actually can’t do some sort of psychological analysis and arrive at a conclusion that Clinton knows she’s winning and Obama knows he’s losing. But that’s the only data a lot of these people following the campaign have. And the pundits only typically have a televised feed of that. I’m not absolving them of blame at all, but they’re doing the equivalent of gauging the score of a football game by watching the fans in the parking lot.

What you can glean from these events, in fact the only data, is what the two candidates are actually saying, and I wish that reporters would stick to that. So, that long wind-up complete, let me do so:

(oh, and by the way, let me say AGAIN that Edwards was long gone before we got to town, otherwise I’d include him in this story.)

Both Obama and Clinton gave somewhat partisan speeches. Both decried the influence of special interests, both discussed changing our foreign policy of unilateralism, both highlighted “predatory lending” in the mortgage and student loan industries, and both ended up with many of the same ideas (student loan forgiveness in exchange for national service, green energy and green jobs, and an end to the war with fairly vague definitions of what that end would be). Obama, who had international media covering him from Brazil, Korea and Japan just in our little section, talked about the tragedy of homeless veterans (sounds awfully like a certain Mr. Edwards), indexing the minimum wage to inflation (ditto), “healing our racial wounds,” a fair criminal justice system, and admonished the crowd “not to demonize immigrants – this is a country built by immigrants.” (I appreciated that). He peppered his speech with the usual jokes and stories, like the “fired up, ready to go” story of the lady in the small town in South Carolina, which seems to get more and more like a Paul Bunyan tall tale every time he tells it (I mean, Obama’s day up until seeing the fired up lady sounds so progressively horrible, you’d think next time it’ll include bad medical news or something). There’s a section about that point in the debate where he gave his greatest weakness, and the other candidates gave theirs, and how their weaknesses were things like “I care too much about people” and “I’m frustrated we haven’t changed the country”, ending with “That’s what happens when you’re in Washington, you don’t speak English. You speak Washington-speak.” He talked about how change “comes from the bottom up, not the top-down,” and how we have to organize to challenge those special interests that resist progress. But in the end, the message is pretty much this (from notes):

We need a politics based not on ideology, but common sense; not on spin, but straight talk… we’re having a friendly battle in the Democratic Party about who we are… are we willing to find unity, to put aside point-scoring and summon the country to a higher purpose? That is why I want to be the President of the United States of America.

OK, I don’t think the battle of the Party is to find unity. It’s to find the best ways to push the Republicans and successfully set the agenda. We actually do need a politics based on ideology, unless the “common sense” that Obama suggests is actually ideological.

Before you think that this unity stuff is particular to Obama, let me talk to you about Clinton’s rally. Her speech was definitely stronger, and more partisan, actually. She said things like “it is not rich people who made America great” and “health care is a right, not a privilege” and “Republicans are the party of ideas – of bad ideas,” and she highlighted things like the balloon payment to the failed CEO of Countrywide ($115 million dollars to blow up a company, nice work if you can get it). There was talk about massive deficits under Bush, and stories of health insurers cancelling policies after the patients get sick, and talk of ending the unfunded mandate of No Child Left Behind, and a 21st century GI Bill, and more. But at the very end… well, let me give you over to Matt Stoller, who was there as well:

After a laundry list of items she’s going to get done, she posed a rhetorical question of how all of that would be possible. Her answer? By reaching across the aisle, like she has done in the Senate. I hope she’s checked with the Republicans on that one.

She says that all the time, actually, and so did Bill Clinton at his earlier event, highlighting her work with Lindsay Graham and JOHN MCCAIN. Um, don’t you two know that you might actually have to RUN against John McCain, and the time for puffing him up to increase your own credibility should kind of be over?

Is there some super-secret polling showing that Americans what to “end the partisan bickering” in Washington and come together for the common purpose? I really don’t see that. I see a country who has turned on George Bush and wants to go in a new direction. Yet two of our main candidates BOTH keep stressing this theme of unity, and the third candidate, who actually does reject this, doesn’t get any love from the media and has been practically shunted aside. What is behind this?

Actually, I don’t think it’s so difficult. In a time tailor-made for progressive ideas, when the conservative brand is almost entirely trashed, we have two centrist candidates running to lead the party. They say this every day, and no matter what kind of onion-peeling and “no, what they actually mean is THIS” you try to do, that’s pretty much the answer.

UPDATE: Let me revise and extend. The strategy Clinton and Obama appear to be employing is a perfectly normal general election strategy. “Bringing the country together” isn’t all that radical a political theme, and after 8 years of “my way or the highway” conservatism, I can see how it would have some limited appeal. But we’re in the middle of a Democratic primary. I think it was Stoller in a post about a month ago who wondered if we could be pandered to just a little bit before we were ditched for independents and swing voters. It could be that the first few primaries are open to independents. But yesterday I felt like I was watching the candidates for the nomination of the Independent Party of America, and it rankled me.

And I do believe that this stress tells you how a President Clinton or a President Obama will govern, as well as telling you how much influence progressives will actually have in their subsequent Administrations. Ultimately, as I have said, we the people are going to have to be the “agent of change” through political pressure, movement-building, and successfully using the primary process to take back the party piece by piece (the most important elections on Feb. 5 are for Mark Pera and John Laesch in Illinois, and the most important one a week later is for Donna Edwards in Maryland). Obama at least talks about how he can’t do it alone, and how change happens from the bottom up. And I’m not averse to talking about “working together” with Republicans. But Republicans ARE, and the conservative movement is not likely to give up so easily and watch as an agenda to which they are diametrically opposed gets installed.

Partisanship is a good thing. It gives people choices. There are legitimate differences about how to meet our challenges. The point in between those two differences is not necessarily the best; in fact it’s often the worst. When one side of the political aisle has leaders who believe in the value of that middle point, and the other side believes in the extreme, guess where we’re going to end up. “Screwed” would be the word I would use.

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Game Changing Strategy

by digby

So, I see that Edwards and Clinton are jumping hard on Senator Obama’s Reagan comments and Obama supporters seem to think it’s below the belt. (I think it’s entirely to be expected: they’re dogwhistling appealing to the traditional, liberal base, who hate Reagan with a passion.)

I’ve tried to explain why it’s bad for progressives to validate the conservative myth that the country was tired of liberalism and big government and so voted en masse for Ronald Reagan. There are so many straw men fighting among themselves on that now that I’m going to leave it where it is.

But I’ll try once again, in a different way, to explain why his comments were ill advised.

Here again are the comments in question:

“What I’m saying is I think the average baby-boomers have moved beyond the arguments of the 60’s but our politicians haven’t. We’re still having the same argument… It’s all around culture wars and it’s all … even when you discuss war the frame of reference is all Vietnam. Well that’s not my frame of reference. My frame of reference is “what works.” Even when I first opposed the war in Iraq, my first line was I don’t oppose all wars, specifically to make clear that this is not an anti-military, you know, 70’s love-in kind of approach.”

“I think Ronald Reagan changed the trajectory of America in a way that Richard Nixon did not and in a way that Bill Clinton did not. He put us on a fundamentally different path because the country was ready for it. I think they felt like with all the excesses of the 1960s and 1970s and government had grown and grown but there wasn’t much sense of accountability in terms of how it was operating. I think people, he just tapped into what people were already feeling, which was we want clarity we want optimism, we want a return to that sense of dynamism and entrepreneurship that had been missing.”

Let’s assume for the sake of argument that he right. And then ask yourself if Ronald Reagan would have “changed the trajectory” back in ’80 with a similar kind of rhetoric:

“We’re still having the same arguments. It’s all around regulations and smaller government and it’s all … even when you discuss traditional values the frame of reference is all around abortion. Well, that’s not my frame of reference. My frame of reference is “what works.” When I first came out against abortion, my first line was I don’t oppose all abortions, specifically, to make clear that this is not a theocratic, you know, snake-handling prayer vigil kind of approach.”

“I think Lyndon Johnson changed the trajectory of the country in a way that JFK did not and Nixon did not. He put us on a fundamentally different path because the country was ready for it. I think they felt like with all the excesses of racism and anti-communism and government refusing to raise taxes to care for the poor and the elderly, I think people, he just tapped into what people were already feeling, which was, we want a return to that sense of community and compassion that had been missing.”

I’m sure that many Democrats would have ben reassured by those comments but does anyone think his Republican rivals in 1980 wouldn’t have jumped all over him for that? And wouldn’t that argument have made a lot of Republicans wonder if he was actually as conservative as he said he was?

Reagan, ofcourse, would have never said any of that. He knew it was a huge political moment and changed the trajectory of the country by forcefully asserting the merits and superiority of conservatism and (falsely)making people believe it was the failures of liberalism that had brought them low. He used the language developed by the conservative movement over the previous two decades and never gave the liberals a rhetorical inch. He did it all with panache and good humor, but he was merciless with Democrats and used every opportunity to sell conservatism, not distance himself from it.

I agree with Obama that this is a potentially game changing election like 1980. And I am open to the idea that he’s the guy to do it. He’s young, he’s brilliant, he’s a fresh face with immense political skills. What I don’t get is why he keeps using conservative phrases and adopting hot button conservative issues like social security when it’s so unnecessary. If the people are there, then why keep using this tired old crap to appeal to the middle? I understand that he doesn’t want to run as a traditional liberal and that’s fine. I don’t think he should. But people also don’t need that stale stuff about love-ins and “entrepreneurship” or “fixing social security” or dissing “trial lawyers” or they’d vote for Rudy McRomney. They want something new. Give it to them.

If he wants to change the trajectory as Reagan did then he should take a page from his political strategy instead of his rhetoric, stop praising him and bury conservatism instead.

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