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

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Huffington Post   |  Rachel Sklar
First Posted: 10-22-07 06:52 PM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:45 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It

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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Please:

"It's also a terrible idea politically — that is, for the political process. Now is the time for the fringe players to slip away."

Granted he is probably not serious, but isn't this what the democratic process allows? Why should someone not be able to run and be heckled because he is not one of the "big" candidates?

This seems very hypocritical.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 10/23/2007

Obviously some of you are to young or uninformed to remember Pat Paulson, a fair comedian who ran for president 6 times from 1968 to 1996. Although his efforts had primerily comedic rather than political objectives, he did get a few (very few) protest votes. He also had a few good "one liners" which gave us all a good laugh.
I don't recall anyone getting in a huff, or protesting his right to run, or to make a fool of himself.
Get over it folks, even the fringe players have a right to the ball sometimes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 10/23/2007

First, Rachel, that was awful writing.

I read the whole thing and could not tell what you were saying.

Second, is Colbert a citizen? Then he has the right to run. All he needs now are the votes.

America and the world would be a lot better off with him than some the following real jokers:

Guiliani
Clinton
Thompson
Biden
McCain
Romney

Ironic. These jokers are looking to make real what should be a joke and Colbert seeks to suspend the sick joke that is the present state of the US republic; he would replace it with the common sense reality that was impeachable prior to the imposition of those that should so clearly be impeached.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 AM on 10/23/2007
- RnR I'm a Fan of RnR 27 fans permalink

"so long Kucinich (we predict) and Gravel (we hope)."

"We" ... might that be the royal "we"? Pretentious and overused.

Speak for yourself and if you're going to try to criticize at least have the figurative balls to say "I" hope, because you're not speaking for me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 10/23/2007
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I watched Colbert on Monday, October 22nd's "Daily Show" and I really liked what I saw. Colbert pulled out a bale of hay, and from that bale, pulled out a hidden bottle of beer. I think his message really waters down the idea that any of these candidates (R or D) are down-home guys/gals, that will grab a beer with you, and lounge around on a Friday night. Would anyone want a president that would change your tire, or grab a brew with you? I don't think so. I'd want a president that knows he's got hire priorities, to call a tow truck. Or is at the U.N. on a Friday night, instead of trying see his reflection in the bottom of a rocks glass.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 10/23/2007
- OtayPanky I'm a Fan of OtayPanky 81 fans permalink
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Assuming Billary 2.0 gets the nomination, many many folks will be looking for someone to write it, in order to hasten the demise of a totally corrupted dem party, so that something new and better might perhaps arise from the DLC ashes.

Personally, I was gonna go with AL GORE, but now I have options.

My guess is that's what's really bugging Rachel Sklar - not comedic aesthetics.

And - for the record - I feel her pain. It's bugging me, too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 AM on 10/23/2007

Didn't you learn anything from the Ralph Nader fiasco? If you want another neo-con in the white house, go ahead and throw your vote out the window. The dems aren't in any way as near a bad as the neo-cons.
Stop living in a fairy tale.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 10/23/2007

The arguement is that the corruption of America has become institutionalized. The power of governance has been wreted from the people; this is the capstone defining issue from which all others spring. It's not about who is doing it; it is about that it is happening at all.

The only way he would have thrown his vote away is if he didn't vote. Period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 10/23/2007
- Dave24 I'm a Fan of Dave24 14 fans permalink
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He's Brilliant. Let him do what he wants.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 AM on 10/23/2007

Sure he's brilliant and of course he can do what he wants....Question: since when has "Meet the Press" become a forum for comedians?....is Pat Paulsen next?.....has one of the last tiny islands of serious policy discussion on television gone by the boards?? Talk about "dumbed-down and tarted-up"!!.......tm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 10/23/2007
- Artboyz I'm a Fan of Artboyz 3 fans permalink

Clearly, serious policy discussion in the US is history. Colbert reminds us that even MTP has decended into irrelevance. Rachel and co. just don't get it. His candicacy shines a light on the ridiculousness of the campaign and its coverage. Like the Press Club, who didn't really understand what Colbert was about, the reaction to his candidacy offers a view of the press squirming to ride his wave even if it kills them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 AM on 10/23/2007
- gallstones I'm a Fan of gallstones 3 fans permalink

Well, let's see; the presidency has become a "forum" for incompetents and greed, the congress has become a "forum" for the willingly impotent, the news has become a "forum" for entertainment, the voting system has become a "forum" for fraud,...

In light of this, you whine about the content of a commentary program!?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 10/23/2007
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Considering we don't know what's coming next with Stephen Colbert, I'd like for him to take it as far as he can...

We have the element of surprise and while we're waiting, we'll laugh our butt's off in the process...

Relax Rachel, you worry too much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 AM on 10/23/2007

Colbert's candidacy is gallows humor for an electorate that has been condemned to voting for its own demise. Like the musicians on the Titanic, it reflects a noble spirit, but the neocons aren't bothered by it. If you carefully analyze the words of the neocons, they've been treating the war on the lower classes as an inside joke for some time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 AM on 10/23/2007
- MsLiz I'm a Fan of MsLiz 112 fans permalink
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"Like the musicians on the Titanic."

Excellent use of the metaphor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 AM on 10/23/2007

who wrote that comment "bask in conservative wisdom"? it sounds homoerotic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 AM on 10/23/2007
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Yeah. Like Stephen Colbert has to adhere to some imaginary party line. The man is a professed comedian, looking to make a buck. So if his act is to mock MSM types and adherent wackos, so be it. If you don't like it, don't watch. If you're fed up with it all stop eating. We have the freedom to turn on or turn off the TV. It ain't 1984 yet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 AM on 10/23/2007
- jubal8 I'm a Fan of jubal8 6 fans permalink

I found the Colbert interview on Press the Meat more disturbing than funny, mostly because of Russert's part in the farce; but frankly, disturbed is my reaction to the program pretty much every time I watch it. In this case it was disturbance as performance art rather than as... well... performance of prompted talking points.

When was the last time Russert tried for comedy? He had that Bush impersonator on a year or two ago, but didn't do the whole interview as a comedy bit. So maybe this time it didn't work as well as intended; still I applaud the effort. That Tim... what a cut-up!

Colbert/Kucinich '08

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 AM on 10/23/2007
- BARRISTER I'm a Fan of BARRISTER 19 fans permalink

Rachel, Thou doth protest too much.
Jealousy?? Of course not. ( smile, wink, nudge...)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 AM on 10/23/2007
- protagonia I'm a Fan of protagonia 80 fans permalink

That is a ticket I could proudly vote for!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 10/23/2007
- VicPerry I'm a Fan of VicPerry 6 fans permalink

Please, let's have more "getting in the way," from all and sundry. There is nothing more depressing than these bogus media anointed candidates. (Kucinich should go away? Why, because he actually stands for something worth standing for?)

I'd scream "bogus media conspiracy" except that so many Democrats are so very, very desperate to just "get behind a winner" --- which is, you know, such a very literal metaphor with you guys. Lips to ass.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 AM on 10/23/2007
- protagonia I'm a Fan of protagonia 80 fans permalink

A certain somebody sure doesn't want us giving Colbert OR Kucinich much in the way of consideration.

We just got to see that person's poker hand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 10/23/2007
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 152 fans permalink

It is irrelevant that other serious politicians have run for office before Mr. Colbert.

The point is, and the reason that his candidacy is so important, is that our democracy, and the planet itself, are at risk from the failings of the left-wing President we have now.

Until we can elect a true conservative American, such as Mr. Stephen Colbert, we can at least bask in the light of his wisdom as the one true Conservative candidate.

Sometimes, it is not only about winning and losing, but whether or not you care about the game, and the consequences of not caring.

Until the left-wing Republicans are put back in their places, and forced to admit the error of choosing roll-over appeasement as a global international policy, Mr. Colbert will continue to be a beacon for old-fashioned American values, like the importance of blind allegiance to a pre-eminent military-industrial complex.

Three cheers for Stephen Stephen!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 10/23/2007

You media types need to remove that gigantic pole from your collective asses and get a grip. Colbert is a comedian, for pity's sake, and a brilliant one. He is using his "campaign" to highlight just the sort of tedious, ridiculously self-absorbed and self-referential nonsense that media figures like Russert, Tweety and, yes, Sklar spew about the presidential campaign. The fact that so many in the media-industrial complex are incapable of treating what is basically an extended skit by a leading comic as, well, a skit, rather than some earth-shattering affront to their supposed dignity is in itself hilarious. Colbert doesn't have to parody you people since you're doing such a great job of parodying yourselves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 10/23/2007
- bonmot I'm a Fan of bonmot 2 fans permalink

Exactly. To Rachel Sklar and all the other "media-nistas" who keep telling Stephen to stop his act, you STILL DON'T GET IT!

Each time an idiot like Fred Thompson makes a speech of meaningless platitudes and cliches, if Colbert parodies him by saying something similar but MORE wacky, then people who just heard Thompson will laugh at the stupidity of Thompson's words compared to Colbert's.

Colbert will immediately immunize Americans to any other idiot who tries the same code phrases and arguments. Listeners will become more discerning about the bullshit. They will also see what the Republicans' ideas mean, when carried to their logical conclusions.

Does that make sense? If a candidate says "I oppose gay marriage because it threatens my own love for my dear wife," but then Colbert follows this with:

COLBERT: Marriage is the basic building block of society. And if gay men get married, that threatens my marriage immediately because I only got married as a taunt toward gay men because they couldn’t.

RUSSERT: So it makes you feel insecure.

COLBERT: Well, I just don’t know else—--why I got married other than to rub it in gay people’s faces.

Then it highlights how ridiculous is the whole argument about gay marriage threatening heterosexual marriage! See?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 AM on 10/23/2007
- bonmot I'm a Fan of bonmot 2 fans permalink

Another example. Republicans and Libertarians constantly complain about social programs and any kind of welfare.

Colbert takes this to the logical, nth degree:

RUSSERT (Quoting Colbert's book): “Sorry, but retirement offends me. You don’t just stop fighting in the middle of a war because your legs hurt. So why do you get to stop working in the middle of your life just because your prostate hurts?”

COLBERT: Well, Tim, I, I just don’t understand pensions or Social Security. Why do you get paid after you stop working? That doesn’t make any sense to me.

RUSSERT: Abolish Social Security?

COLBERT: Yes.

RUSSERT: Abolish Medicare?

MR. COLBERT: Yes.

RUSSERT: Abolish all pensions?

COLBERT: Abolish tipping waiters and waitresses because I’ve gotten my food. They get paid by the hour. Why am I giving them extra money? That’s all pensions and Social Security are. It’s a tip at the end of your life.

Again, Colbert points out what these conservative arguments end up meaning, if carried to their dangerous conclusions. It's a healthy slap in the face to those who are mesmerized by the candidates' cliches.

Rachel, Rachel, please tell me you get it now! Colbert is extremely useful in highlighting hypocrisies and exposing political cliches AS IT HAPPENS, for voters.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 AM on 10/23/2007
- knosiswar I'm a Fan of knosiswar 31 fans permalink

Well, to the author, and the general public. It should occur to everybody the risk in prejudging and presuming to understand the nature of the farce, we will all play our part in the ruse, and this blog's author is certainly playing her part and will enjoy the spectacle of being the likely butt of the joke along with other whiners. Just think what his endorsement might be worth towards mid January.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 AM on 10/23/2007
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