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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While I disagree with Rachel about the overall merit of Colbert's campaign, I have to agree with her assessment of the MTP interview. Colbert's problems stem from his defense of positions taken in his book. The book isn't as funny as the man, who is at his best when he has an audience and someone to talk to. The book misses both and falls flat. Stephen was less funny when he was defending a bunch of positions written by some exhausted staff member.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 AM on 10/23/2007
- jasonball I'm a Fan of jasonball 5 fans permalink

I take issue with the comment that now is the time for fringe candidates to slip away.

The notion there is "too much at stake" implies there will be an election that's "no big deal" and that "fringe" candidates should wait until such a time. The reality is that no such time, no unimportant election where most major problems are solved, will ever come. If we were to accept electability as the primary measure of a candidate than we should leave the task of choosing up to focus groups and consultants (who we already have a huge part to play) and bypass all of that pesky public discussion and rational debate.

I don't have a problem with the cost-benefit-analysis most people go through when weighing their principles against electability of a candidate. However, silencing fringe candidates "now" (before the first primary battles even take place, mind you) silences single-issue voters who are not satisfied with the populist platforms of the frontrunners. It is in the primaries where democrats whose main issue is restoration of the rule of law can vote Dodd, or whose main issue is foreign policy based on peace or equal rights for gays (Gravel and Kucinich) can show dissent towards the frontrunners. It is precisely when frontrunners are forced to do a cost-benefit-analysis regarding how much these votes are worth to them that the primary takes on its true democratic purpose. Remember most Democrats truly like Obama, Clinton, or Edwards and nothing can stop one of them from getting nominated - but if you are one who truly feels Gravel, Dodd, or Kucinich reflects your views then the only way frontrunners will adopt part of their platforms is if you vote for them in the primary.

The importance of so-called "fringe" candidates staying in the race and using their microphones at debates cannot be understated. So remember, the Democrats can bar Colbert from running but not Republicans. What better for the liberal cause than to have non-stop satire of Republican positions broadcast throughout the nation as Republican candidates vie for attention?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 10/23/2007

I agree with Jason, Kucinich, and Ron Paul for that matter, are not fringe candidates. They actually speak for a lot of Americans, more than Sklar can imagine. However she's right about Colbert. He should drop the shtick, not because he's making a mockery of a deadly serious election, but bacause it's not funny or the least bit original. He's much better acting as a correspondent.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 AM on 10/23/2007

I completely agree with you Jason. I think it's brilliant for Colbert to promote the liberal cause with his satire of a Republican. He really fits right in with the rest of the GOP candidates. It's hilarious!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 AM on 10/23/2007

You can't be serious if you think Colbert would actually be a factor in the election. His candidacy is just as valid as Paul or Kucinich. What percentage did Nader get? More Democrats voted for Bush than Nader, and no one mentions that detail.
In the end, when all the votes are counted (or not), there are many more people who didn't vote! Candidates should concentrate on that segment of the population and people should quit blaming people who voted for the candidate of their choice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 10/23/2007

Colbert earns his bread lampooning talking head bluster. Since so much of that buffoonery is coming from the presidential candidates, Stephen's campaign allows him to mock what they do because he is legitimately a part of it. Sure, this is definitely a big step, but Colbert can pull it off. Just don't vote for him!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 10/23/2007
- WaspMan I'm a Fan of WaspMan 2 fans permalink
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I'm pretty damn sure Colbert's got this thing planned out. He knows where he's going with his pseudo-candidacy. This is not a one punch-line thing. This guy is brilliant.

Remember, last year at the White House Correspondents dinner? He cut Bush deep.

Name one other person who has taken the Current Occupant by the nuts, and said F**k you, right to his face. Bush couldn't walk away, all he could do is squirm. Who else has done that? Ever?

Colbert is the man right now. He is the Mark Twain of this era.

Shut up and watch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 AM on 10/23/2007

damned straight - what stupido invited him, anyway? They ought to have known what they were in for, had anyone taken the trouble to stay up late and watch a couple of minutes of his show. Not that I'm sorry!! SC was nothing short of sensational.

Look who they asked this year. Caspar Milquetoast.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 10/23/2007

Mr. Colbert is only going to run in South Carolina, his home state. This is the state that still flys the confederate flag (a foreign flag) on its Capitol grounds. This is the state where Bush spread lies about McCain's black child and his wife's drug problems. Then both of them refused to say that SC should take down the foreign flag.

And still SC welcomes the republican southern strategy. What will wake those people up to the fact that they are a stain on our country's honor. Perhaps Colbert's unorthodox humor will get through. That alone would be worth the effort. It probably pains him to think that the people of his state are so racist. I still can't get over the fact that the people of TN lost the election for Al Gore. Paraphrasing Lewis Black, "If you're a Tennessean who voted Republican, the level of stupidity is beyond belief."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 AM on 10/23/2007
- RumiSouth I'm a Fan of RumiSouth 34 fans permalink
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Colbert's presidential bid amounts to one state. It will all be over in a matter of months, if not weeks, and along the way he has an incredible opportunity to reveal the absurdities of the electoral process -- beginning with the candidates, who must necessarily have the kind of monumental ego Colbert portrays on his show.

I say let him run.

http://www.osborneink.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 10/23/2007

EXACTLY. Even if by some crazy miracle he won in SC, my bet is that he wouldn't go any further anyway.

Out of morbid fascination, I'm really, reallly curious to know if/how many true neo-cons actually buy the schtick. Has Fox effectively outed him as a liberal champion? Or are there people who don't hear the parody because they're spewing the same right-wing crap to each other ever beers at the gun-club? If you don't know he's a comedian and you're one of the people he's mocking, would the absurdity of his views hit home?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:44 AM on 10/23/2007
- NewsNag I'm a Fan of NewsNag 3 fans permalink

I found the Tim Russert appearance hackneyed and therefore boring, but I have confidence that Colbert will light up the campaign and illuminate some important overlooked aspects of the election cycle. However, it won't be easy, and it may not change the world or even rock it. I would settle for funny.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 AM on 10/23/2007
- OTOH I'm a Fan of OTOH permalink

Agree with Rachel Sklar on this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 AM on 10/23/2007

I have a hunch not only he'll know exactly how to handle this, but he'll have a much stronger impact (comedically and otherwise) than those who tried this before him. He has a knack for the absurd, and he's picking on the most absurd of the absurdities around us now - the US presidential campaigns.

Let him run with it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 AM on 10/23/2007
- NoContest I'm a Fan of NoContest 3 fans permalink
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Yep, getting old. Colbert - that is.... like a fart in church.

Pappa needs a brand new bag.

~!@#

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 AM on 10/23/2007
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You sound a little afraid of Stephen Colbert. Beneath it all, he is a much-needed one-of-a-kind, no matter how many familiar elements are incorporated into his act, and what he brings, we need to take seriously (sometimes). He is warning us about what some of us are buying, and what that can do to us.

I find it claustrophobic the way, with all of the people we have out there helping to put things in perspective for us in oh so serious a way, the medium of expression known as comedy is presumed to be out of place the instant we're not in a mood to giggle. I'm concerned about people who see comedy as nothing more than random fun and silliness.

The real problem is that often there is no real contrast between the way Colbert acts and the way many of the straight-faced candidates act. That's when Colbert gets scary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 10/23/2007
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You are absolutely correct in every way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 AM on 10/23/2007

Does anyone remember Pat Paulsen?

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

Rachel, lighten up!!

He'd be a great president, too. Seriously.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 10/22/2007
- Mrrar I'm a Fan of Mrrar 3 fans permalink

Actually he's illustrating quite deftly how utterly messed up election laws are.

It's regretful that instead of exploring all the inconsistencies, ironies, and problems inherent in the current manifestation of the electoral process, you are criticizing a satirist for pointing them out.

He also us using the effort to donate a very large sum of money to charities, by leveraging his Colbert fans.

http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/viewChallenge.html?id=17036&zone=0

Please note that 26 thousand dollars more have been donated in his name, than in the name of Barack Obama.

This is the *true* meaning of Colbert's 'presidential bid.' He has learned to harness the power of a Networked society for Good... Help him with that goal. Blog about his donation efforts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 PM on 10/22/2007
- milo9 I'm a Fan of milo9 11 fans permalink
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I'm sorry again but Rachel's criticism just seems so goddamn petty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 PM on 10/22/2007
- PrinceHal I'm a Fan of PrinceHal 6 fans permalink

Amen.

Milo, that's it in a nutshell! Your post leaves the rest of us with nothing to say

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 10/23/2007
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Seriously, he'd be a better president than the current occupant of the Oval Office. Why not? He's gotta be better than Giuliani or Thompson.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 AM on 10/23/2007
- JimR I'm a Fan of JimR 38 fans permalink

I have to say, with all due respect to Rachel, that I agree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 AM on 10/23/2007
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