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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- eesmm I'm a Fan of eesmm 4 fans permalink
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I suggest you take a look at

http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/leadershipboard.html?category=16&zone=0

In just a few days, Colbert has outranked all the other candidates in raising real money for real students, outclassing his nearest contender (Barak Obama) by almost 20X.

He's doing good work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 10/22/2007

I think Colbert's primary mission was to make people laugh. Any political points he makes are secondary. You seem to have it reversed.

BTW, assuming Democrats take the White House and hold Congress, I predict that Colbert (and Jon Stewart) will create just as much satire about them as they have about Bush and the GOP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 10/22/2007
- lakecat I'm a Fan of lakecat 2 fans permalink
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The truth is that this is a very serious election and our country is in a lot of trouble. We're deeply in debt, our civil liberties are dissapearing and worst of all, there is torture, wrongful imprisonment and murder all going on in our name, with our money and against our will. None of that is funny. Colbert's joke candidacy trivializes an election where there could not possibly be more at stake. What kind of country we want to be is at stake. If Giuliani wins you can say hello to war with Iran and watch him try to take us ever nearer to a police state. This election is just too crucial for Colbert's usual schtick to be remotely funny.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 10/22/2007

Lakecat - it's our own media that is trivializing this very important election (e.g., obsessing about Edward's haircut, Hilary's cleavage, repeating right wing talking points about suspect Clinton donors while barely mentioning indicted members of Giuliani's and Romney's campaigns, talking endlessly about the horse race rather than issues, etc.).

Stephen Colbert is a brilliant guy and has surprised me again and again. This move might be a mistake, but let's wait to see what he does. Perhaps he'll help embarrass our media into giving this election the seriousness it deserves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 10/23/2007
- PatA I'm a Fan of PatA 49 fans permalink
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I applaud LizM....sh­e said everything that I was going to!!!! Bravo, LizM...

I do have to say this, Rachel, you need to get a life and laugh a bit more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 PM on 10/22/2007
- LizM I'm a Fan of LizM 50 fans permalink

You and Tim Russert probably don't even realize it, but Stephen Colbert can see very clearly how the election campaign 2008 is being covered - and I use that term extremely loosely - by the media, mainstream and otherwise, and by the blogosphere, this site most definitely included.

The 'Stephen Colbert for President in South Carolina campaign', including his appearance on MTP, is an attempt to highlight, as only Stephen Colbert can, the sheer vacuousness with which the media and blogosphere are treating this very critical election.

I guess anyone who happens to be a part of the media or blogosphere could be excused from understanding that they are the butt of a very serious joke, all things considered.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 10/22/2007
- milo9 I'm a Fan of milo9 11 fans permalink
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I'm sorry but it just seems goddamn petty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 10/22/2007
- LizM I'm a Fan of LizM 50 fans permalink

What do you find petty...wh­at Stephen Colbert is doing or what the media/blogosphere are failing to do?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 PM on 10/22/2007
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