Stephen Colbert, I Love You, But It's Enough

Huffington Post   |  Rachel Sklar   |   October 22, 2007 06:52 PM


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2007-10-22-Colbertforpres.bmpThe 2006 White House Correspondent's Dinner was something else, truly. "Truthiness" is now part of the lexicon because it captured something pervasive and insidious and antithetical to the "reality-based community," and just naming it made it easier to call out. The GreenScreen challenge — hilarious and fun, same as that business with the Hungarian bridge and Wikipedia and the elephants. Yes, your ice cream is waffly and delicious, stealing O'Reilly's microwave was hilarious, and we all know how I feel about WristStrong (hi, Jeff Berc!). There is no question that the show is terrific — funny, sure, but reliably sharp as hell, between "The Wørd" and the interviews and the segments. Sometimes it's goofy hilarity like getting a Florida congressman to admit to loving hookers and blow; sometimes it's devastating gotcha television like making Bill Kristol squirm over PNAC; sometimes it's just how he manages to shake great TV moments out of people like Jane Fonda or Barry Manilow or Henry Kissinger. All of it has combined to make Colbert — a funny, smart, and clearly fundamentally decent guy — an incredible force in pop culture and media.

But seriously? It so does not mean he should run for president.

It's a terrible idea on many different grounds. Comedically, it's an extreme gag and an unoriginal one at that — getting a bridge named after you in Hungary or branding a minor-league Ontario baseball team or whooshing a museum for yourself into existence or getting a red piece of plastic around Matt Lauer's wrist — those are all inherently way funnier than ye olde joke candidate. Really, if it's already been a Robin Williams movie — which tanked — then seriously, don't go there. Also, it threatens to get old soon — how much jokesterism on shows like "Meet The Press" before audiences (sorry, voters) grow weary? Sure, we see him every night in character, but it's a character reacting to different people and their different projects and different stories to boot; when the interviewer becomes the interviewee and he's got nothing new to offer, it's a different story. As much as I enjoy Stephen Colbert on his show — and readers of this column have probably figured out that I do — I found myself a bit exasperated by his bit on MTP (though I did appreciate Tim Russert's straight-man send-up of himself doing to book-quote "gotcha" - though he couldn't help giggling in the process, which broke the fourth wall in a way that undercut the exercise). Colbert's character is great in an interview for forcing people to defend their positions; in this case, it just added up to meaningless bluster. He doesn't want gay marriage because he only got married so he could taunt gay men? Weak the first time, unimaginable as a talking point over and over again. What has been so great about Colbert is how he uses the character to make the larger point, one which often translates into trenchant (and, let's face it, earnest) political commentary. This way, he's using the character to obfuscate instead of illuminate.

It's also a terrible idea politically — that is, for the political process. Now is the time for the fringe players to slip away. Bye-bye, Brownback, so long Kucinich (we predict) and Gravel (we hope). The race is tightening, stakes are getting higher, and the general feeling is that this is where things start to count. The distraction of a spoof candidate — even the ultimate spoof candidate — will just get in the way.

It's a good idea for his book, I'll give him that. But wow, that would sort of be a sell-out.

I don't think, as Jeff Bercovici does, that Colber should just stick to making jokes and stay in his little box — I thought the White House Correspondents Dinner material was as hilarious as it was cutting — he's already in the arena and was from his first show, when he loosed the word "truthiness" on the world. Probably he didn't know that he'd end up being such a truth-to-power speaker, or at least perceived so much as one. But, he is — that's the role he's carved out for himself and it's a good one, a smart one — ironically, much smarter than this traipse along the campaign trail looks to be. Maybe I want Colbert in a box as much as Bercovici does, I don't know. It's just where I think he'll do the most good. Is it old-fashioned, in the presidential race, to want that?

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- fmoramar See Profile I'm a Fan of fmoramar permalink

Stephen Colbert is a comic genius and he's doing the presidential campaign parody exactly right by running exclusively in one state on the ballots of both parties. God knows our election process needs someone to underscore its ridiculousness, and SC is the perfect guy to do it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 AM on 10/26/2007
- Brettster See Profile I'm a Fan of Brettster permalink

it's amazing how conservative even normally progressive people get when someone starts really sticking their neck out and shaking things up. And this is totally harmless what he's doing. God I'm sick of these old people who never really got start trying to tell everyone else to start a blacklash, to maintain the status quo. Tell me, what's so goddamn sacred about our election system that he can't put his name on the ballot IN ONLY THE PRIMARIES IN ONLY SOUTH CAROLINA ON BOTH PARTIES. Our election system is a joke as it is, might as well have some harmless laughs. I'm sure he has something up his sleeves that will be hilarious and very bold and truth-telling. Ugh, I absolutely hate seeing people who are supposed to be progressive start acting ugly just like we always speak out against. Yeah, let's tear Stephen Colbert down, great idea! We sure have a surplus of great minds breaking new ground and sending the right message. Let's knock him down a peg!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 AM on 10/26/2007
- Lincoln2wells See Profile I'm a Fan of Lincoln2wells permalink

I couldn't agree more. Colbert is a natural resource, and he is in danger of wearing out his welcome just when it will be needed most Pat Paulson wasn't especially funny, either, but in the 1970's the times were not quite so tragic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 10/23/2007
- mamacat See Profile I'm a Fan of mamacat permalink

Can you imagine if our candidate, Mr. Colbert, were allowed to debate with the other major contenders? Now there's a debate I would like to see.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:17 PM on 10/23/2007
- Manx See Profile I'm a Fan of Manx permalink

Although I like Stephen Colbert and think he's very clever, his appearance on Meet The Press bombed. It was sort of awkward. Besides, comedians (Pat Paulsen, for one) in the past have run for president. It's been done. It's not funny anymore. There are so many lunatics and clowns in politics today, they are satires of themselves. It's hard to tell the difference between comedians and the politicians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 10/23/2007
- plooger See Profile I'm a Fan of plooger permalink

> It's hard to tell the difference between comedians and the politicians.

Maybe that's the ultimate point to be made by Colbert's "candid-acy." If what he's saying is indecipherable from the "real" politicians, then those politicians are highlighted for the play actors they are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 PM on 10/25/2007
- TNFarmer See Profile I'm a Fan of TNFarmer permalink

"It's hard to tell the difference between comedians and the politicians." Well, for me, the ones who make the most sense, work for a living, and aren't bought by the lobbyists are the comedians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 10/23/2007
- Houndentenor See Profile I'm a Fan of Houndentenor permalink

IT'S FUNNY!

When it stops being funny you'll notice the awkward silence of people not laughing.

I'm gay and the gay marriage bit was HILARIOUS. I woke the neighbors I laughed so hard.

So pull that stick out of your ass and laugh at what is the funniest political satire going at the moment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 10/23/2007
- nevadagirl See Profile I'm a Fan of nevadagirl permalink

ooooh-I hadn't seen that hot photo of Stephen. I am like totally hot for him...I wish I lived in South Carolina so i could vote for him!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 10/23/2007
- MENTAL See Profile I'm a Fan of MENTAL permalink

.
Cobert (a half-wit) is simply a low-brow, cheap version of Jon Stewart (a true wit). He appeals to those with the same third-grade mentality that like the buffoon Conan O'Brien, who NBC wants to replace Leno in 2009. Colbert and O'Brien reflect the continual, and now accelerating, dumbing-down of television, in particular, and US society, in general. Many are not amused.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 10/23/2007
- plooger See Profile I'm a Fan of plooger permalink

Your comparison of Stewart and Colbert is arguable. Colbert's satire is so much more incisive than what's presented on TDS, it's difficult to compare the two. And Colbert's interviews are often much more critical and revealing than TDS', except for those occasions when Stewart considers the interviewee to be a "safe" target.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 PM on 10/25/2007
- gallstones See Profile I'm a Fan of gallstones permalink

Well, MENTAL, your name says it all.
Ad hominem your only contribution?

Oh, yeah, I forgot your name.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 10/23/2007
- ebbasta See Profile I'm a Fan of ebbasta permalink

you just dont get it. you probably never will. how much dumber can television get? US society? what the hell does that mean? you take it for what it is not for what you want it to be. it is possible to appreciate both "wits"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 10/23/2007
- shsofahs See Profile I'm a Fan of shsofahs permalink

Lumping together Brownbackmountain with Gravel and Kucinich was pretty screwed-up. I really don't care if Stephen Colbert runs or not. Do you really believe that he could do more of a disservice to the sold-out electoral process than we've already witnessed?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 PM on 10/23/2007
- shaggles See Profile I'm a Fan of shaggles permalink

Sorry Rachel. It doesn't matter if you think it's funny. In fact you didn't even really say it wasn't funny. You said it wouldn't continue to be funny but how do you know? How do you know he's going to keep telling the same jokes over and over again? There's no way it's going to damage the political process either. People know it's a joke and if they don't they're pretty hopeless anyway. And what's your beef with Mike Gravel?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 10/23/2007
- TNFarmer See Profile I'm a Fan of TNFarmer permalink

Colbert was the first person to really take on the Bush boys at the White House Press ass-kissing gathering. Give the guy credit where credit is due. He woke up a lot of others with his performance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 10/23/2007
- imadf See Profile I'm a Fan of imadf permalink

Shaggles reaction is the same as my reaction.

Rachel, if someone is doing brilliant work, and is *good* at what they do, who are we (we who are not as skilled at it as Colbert is), who are we to tell what he'll flunk? Actually, every time Colbert utters the presidency bit, he cracks me up and I totally wanna go on that journey w/ the doofuses he's gonna bang heads with. Perfect! This is where our aching in this country comes from, putting dicks in the corridors of power and then crying from having done it!

What a most appropriate topic for Colbert (probably he's the only one that can do it justice and actually *have fun* doing it!)

How do we know & *trust* Stephen will pull it off? Just watch the white house press dinner again, and watch this man's gut hold up through comic mastery addressing the who's who, in *their face*.

Can't wait.

Matt

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 10/23/2007
- FirstShirt See Profile I'm a Fan of FirstShirt permalink

Get a life and dial back on the coffee. Politics makes you laugh or cry. Better to laugh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 10/23/2007
- WilliePilgrim See Profile I'm a Fan of WilliePilgrim permalink

Thanks, Debbie Downer...I'm actually enjoying Colbert..or was, but now that I see how it disturbs the ether of those who are just so perceptive, cuz they work in the dream-makin' machine, in stark contrast with the rest of the world...Now there's no reason to stay up late anymore. OK...just kiddin'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 10/23/2007
- JackLewis See Profile I'm a Fan of JackLewis permalink

The moment somebody labels Kucinich and Gravel fringe players when they are the only candidates representative of the majority opinon, you know what that person really thinks of democracy. Colbert is not the one telling jokes here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 10/23/2007
- Klingon See Profile I'm a Fan of Klingon permalink

What's lost in this chatter is Colbert's pronouncement that he is in this race "to lose." Twice! So Rachel Sklar, I love you, but it's enough.

This isn't about the clown. Today, a candidate who gets majority of popular votes can still lose. Until that flaw is fixed, presidential elections will remain a sham. Then there are the shills in government and business who, along with the conniving MSM, manipulate the campaign dialogue through self-serving polls and bloated statistics to prop up those they deem as "electable" for nothing else other than their subservience to puppet masters once in office. Your sacrilegious reference to candidates who actually espouse the views of the people as "fringe players" exposes such insidious hand. But it's "good for business," therefore, any attempt at reform is, and will always be, met with major resistance. And that"s a shame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 10/23/2007
- ThatsEnough See Profile I'm a Fan of ThatsEnough permalink

Please run Steven!!!! So many young people would vote for you! You could really make a statement!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 10/23/2007
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