Tag Archives: michelle-obama

Letterman: Obama Will Have Plenty of Time for Vacations When His One Term Is Up

David Letterman on Tuesday took quite a swipe at Barack Obama. During the opening monologue of CBS’s “Late Show,” the host asked the audience, “You know who else is on vacation?” Letterman answered, “President Barack Obama. And this is his, since he’s been in office, this is his sixth vacation.” Then came the marvelous and surprising punch line (video follows with transcript and commentary, file photo):  DAVID LETTERMAN: You know who else is on vacation? President Barack Obama. And this is his, since he’s been in office, this is his sixth vacation. Yep, he’ll have plenty of time for vacations when his one term is up. (LAUGHTER) He’ll have plenty of time. But they’re, they’re vacationing at the beach. He’s down there with Snookie, JWoww, and the Situations. (LAUGHTER) I’m 63, I never thought I’d have to say Snookie, JWoww, and the Situations.  Wow. If Obama is losing Letterman, the end must be near. 

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Letterman: Obama Will Have Plenty of Time for Vacations When His One Term Is Up

Open Thread: America Is Becoming The Soviet Union

For general discussion and debate. Possible talking point: America is becoming the Soviet Union! Is he right? 

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Open Thread: America Is Becoming The Soviet Union

WaPo Writer: Twisting Facts in Political Movies Okay in Order to Tell Larger ‘Truths’

Imagine a movie about Abraham Lincoln’s assassination that neglects to include the character of John Wilkes Booth. Ridiculous, right? Well, that is pretty much what has happened in the movie Fair Game in which the person who leaked the name of Valerie Plame to Robert Novak, Richard Armitage, never appears in the film. So how to excuse such an absurd situation? Simple. Just write off complaints about this as political insider nitpicking. That is what Washington Post writer Ann Hornaday has done in her article that sets up laughable excuses in advance to what is sure to be a firestorm of criticism about the absence of the very leaker responsible for why we even know the name of Valerie Plame. The photo caption accompanying her story encapsulates her excuse: In Washington, watching fact-based political movies has become a sport all its own, with viewers hyper-alert to mistakes, composite characters or real stories hijacked by political agendas. But what audiences often fail to take into account is that a too-literal allegiance to the facts can sometimes obscure a larger truth. We know that it is ‘Fair Game’ that Hornaday is concerned about because she uses that film as the lead in her story: Director Doug Liman has felt the moral presence of his late father more keenly than usual this year.  Liman, whose credits include “The Bourne Identity” and “Mr. and Mrs. Smith,” makes his first foray into fact-based drama this fall with a new film, “Fair Game” — the story of former U.S. ambassador Joseph Wilson; his wife, Valerie Plame Wilson; and the events of 2003, when her identity as a CIA operative was leaked after her husband wrote an op-ed criticizing the U.S. invasion of Iraq. While making “Fair Game,” Liman said, he was acutely aware of how his father, Arthur — who served as chief counsel for the Senate committee formed to investigate the Iran-contra scandal — felt about politically inspired stories, especially Oliver Stone’s “JFK.” No doubt that pressure will intensify when “Fair Game” arrives in theaters in November, as Washington audiences charge up their BlackBerrys and prepare to truth-squad the movie’s tiniest details. (The film stars Naomi Watts and Sean Penn as Valerie and Joe Wilson.) They’ll certainly apply the same scrutiny to “Casino Jack,” George Hickenlooper’s upcoming film starring Kevin Spacey as disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and, further down the road, Aaron Sorkin’s proposed movie about John Edwards. Got that? If you complain about the lack of leaker Richard Armitage who was the main reason for the film “Fair Game” to be made in the first place then you are a nitpicking truth-squader griping via your Blackberry. Hornaday continues to justify the factual black hole in “Fair Game” by citing other movies which took liberties with the facts such as “All the President’s Men.” It barely matters that the film’s most iconic piece of dialogue — “Follow the money” — was never spoken in real life. According to Bob Woodward, whose source Deep Throat utters the deathless line in the film, the quote aptly captures everything his source, FBI associate director W. Mark Felt, was telling him at the time. Hornaday even favorably cites the notorious fact-twisting director Oliver Stone to support her notion of distorting facts in the interest of  presenting a “larger truth.” You don’t have to support Stone’s signature brand of revisionism to agree that overweening literalism can sometimes obscure a larger truth. If we can stipulate Nixon probably never stood in front of a portrait of John F. Kennedy and said, “When they look at you, they see what they want to be. When they look at me, they see what they are” — as he does in “Nixon” — that tableau still encapsulates volumes about what motivated, tortured and finally undermined a brilliant and complex man.  Hornaday concludes her justification of political film fact twisting with some stunning reasoning straight out of “1984” that is painful to read: As long as dramatists seek to make protagonists out of mere humans — to reduce their tangled webs of contradictions, complexities and banalities to a set of single-minded motivations and fatal flaws — audiences will need to approach these narratives with a blend of sophistication and skepticism. But maybe the best way to understand these films isn’t as narrative at all, but an experience more akin to ritual. When religious pilgrims travel to the sacred sites of the Holy Land, for example, the locations they visit often aren’t the literal places where a biblical figure was born or baptized. Instead, they’re the sites that, through centuries of use and shared meaning, have become infused with a spiritual reality all their own. Thus, the movies about Washington that get the right stuff right — or get some stuff wrong but in the right way — become their own form of consensus history. “Follow the money,” then, assumes its own totemic truth. Ratified through repeated viewings in theaters, on Netflix and beyond, these films become a mutual exercise in creating a usable past. We watch them to be entertained, surely, and maybe educated. But we keep watching them in order to remember. Wow! So the “truth” of a “usable past” can be “ratified” through repeated viewings in theaters? That is the Orwellian reasoning that makes Valerie Plame name leaker Richard Armitage a non-person. Armitage never existed because he doesn’t appear in “Fair Game.” 

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WaPo Writer: Twisting Facts in Political Movies Okay in Order to Tell Larger ‘Truths’

Michelle Obama’s Portrait Displayed At The Smithsonian

Michelle Obama’s portrait was displayed at the Smithsonian on Friday:   She’s only been on the national stage for roughly two years, but the folks at the National Portrait Gallery figured it was time for her picture to be part of the newly-opened “Americans Now” exhibit. Not surprisingly, the folks at the Associated Press couldn’t hold back their enthusiasm: Move over Martha Washington. Martha Stewart and Michelle Obama are getting space in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington for the first time. A new exhibit, “Americans Now,” opened Friday, featuring famous names from science, business, government and the arts…It’s the first time Michelle Obama’s individual portrait has been shown at the gallery. Frankly, I’m surprised it took this long. 

Sunday Funnies: Obama Brings His Teleprompter On Vacation

As President Obama headed to the Florida Panhandle for a vacation with the family, he felt the need to drag his teleprompter along (h/t Freedom’s Lighthouse ):   Swimsuit? Check.  Sunscreen? Got it. Insect repellent? Yep . Teleprompter? Teleprompter?   The Teleprompter of the United States: Don’t leave home without it!  

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Sunday Funnies: Obama Brings His Teleprompter On Vacation

Is This the Beginning of the End for Folk Hero Steven Slater? [Heroes]

With a slide down an inflatable chute , a new star flickered to life on Monday. Five days later, disgruntled steward Steven Slater ‘s star is waning: Video of his walk-off was disappointing, and his dissenters grow . Is this our hero’s end? More

Michelle Obama Falls Back to Earth [Polls]

Well, this is what you get for visiting commie Europe: Michelle Obama ‘s approval rating has tumbled — from 64 to 50 percent — following her horribly misreported Spanish vacation. No more fancy hotels for you, you… hotel snob! More

‘Civil War’ Apparently Only a Problem for GOP Squabbling

There’s a phrase that has been conspicuously absent the media’s coverage of the recent flap between White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs and those he dubbed the “professional left”: civil war. In contrast, media coverage of Republican infighting consistently pushes the term. Gibbs is under fire from the left for sharply criticizing liberal critics of President Obama saying that “they need to be drug-tested” and “will be satisfied when we have Canadian healthcare and we’ve eliminated the Pentagon. That’s not reality.” His comments have drawn heated criticism from the left. Democratic firebrand Rep. Alan Grayson, Fla., wants “Bozo the Spokesman” fired . Prominent activist and blogger Jane Hamsher claimed Obama is “having trouble across the board” with liberals. Lefties at the Daily Kos and Democratic Underground were frantic. Yet almost no “civil war” labels from the media, in contrast to coverage of other instances of intra-party squabbling. The ouster of Dede Scozzafava in the special election in New York’s 23rd District earned the “civil war” label 23 times from major media players, according to a Nexis search. The GOP “civil war” was invariably painted as a “Stalinist” (to use Frank Rich’s term) purge of moderates from the party in favor of more conservative, Tea Party-backed candidates. Of course all it was was run-of-the-mill intra-party politics. There was no purge – it was just Republican voters choosing the more conservative candidate in a year when conservatives’ electoral prospects seem bright. Or, as liberal Newsweek columnist Howard Fineman put it, “I`ve been a little skeptical of this Republican ‘civil war’ story. I mean, all major parties have conflicts and fissures within them.” Don’t tell that to Rich. Or George Stephanopoulos, Wolf Blitzer Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews, E.J. Dionne, Eugene Robinson, Donna Brazile, Roland Martin, David Gergen, or John King. They all labeled Scozzafava’s ouster a sign of a Republican “civil war”. Of course none of these A-list media personalities have used the term in reference to the battle currently ongoing between the White House and the Democratic base. And this is a fight that is not part of the squabbling that takes place whenever two candidates of the same party vie for a nomination. Gibbs’s comments represent an ideological chasm between the governing left and the liberal commentariat. The latter believe that the White House has elevated pragmatism above principle, while the White HOuse believes its far-left critics are too divorced from political reality. That is a more meaningful split than political differences among two candidates for office. Consider what Congressman Grayson had to say about Gibbs: No, I don’t think he should resign. I think he should be fired. He’s done a miserable job. People I know, refer to him as Bozo the Spokesman. He’s not conveying the value of the President’s strategies, or his plans or his programs. He’s doing a miserable job, it’s that simple. He’s so far in over his head he’d have to reach up to touch his shoes…. If I wanted Fox talking points I’d change the channel to Fox, not listen to the White House. He needs to get his head on straight and do his job… He’s doing a miserable job because his heart isn’t in it. He belongs on Fox. Not as the White House spokesman. The folks at major liberal blogs were more than a bit upset as well. Consider this excerpt from far-left blogger Glenn Greenwald: You may think that the reason you’re dissatisfied with the Obama administration is because of substantive objections to their policies: that they’ve done so little about crisis-level unemployment, foreclosures and widespread economic misery. Or because of the White House’s apparently endless devotion to Wall Street. Or because the President has escalated a miserable, pointless and unwinnable war that is entering its ninth year. Or because he has claimed the power to imprison people for life with no charges and to assassinate American citizens without due process, intensified the secrecy weapons and immunity instruments abused by his predecessor, and found all new ways of denying habeas corpus. Or because he granted full-scale legal immunity to those who committed serious crimes in the last administration. Or because he’s failed to fulfill — or affirmatively broken — promises ranging from transparency to gay rights. But Robert Gibbs — in one of the most petulant, self-pitying outbursts seen from a top political official in recent memory, half derived from a paranoid Richard Nixon rant and the other half from a Sean Hannity/Sarah Palin caricature of The Far Left — is here to tell you that the real reason you’re dissatisfied with the President is because you’re a fringe, ideological, Leftist extremist ingrate who needs drug counseling. Or this entry from Daily Kos’s Jesse LaGreca AKA MinistryofTruth: Turns out calling me “F$#^ing retarded” or “On Drugs” doesn’t make me FIRED UP, it makes me think you think I’m an asshole, and that doesn’t exactly win my vote, now does it?… The fact is, Mr. Gibbs, If you’re trying to convince us NOT TO VOTE FOR YOU in 2010 or 2012, Mission Accomplished! And if not, and you are this inept at messaging, maybe it’s time you stepped down from your post, Mr. Gibbs. Or these comments from deranged users at the Democratic Underground: they absolutely never learn and this should tell you the temperature of the white house, the ease with which they say things like this. Obama is no liberal, no leftie, he has contempt for us to allow this culture of thought to exist. and what a masterstroke of timing, to say something like this to an already apparently tepid base before elections. bravo, you b*st*rds. *you* should be drug tested. the folks that helped get them elected, they want to insult. Two words come to mind one starts with an “F” and the next one starts with a “Y”. Dump Gibbs and bring back Van Jones There is clearly a battle going in inside the Democratic Party between pragmatists and ideologues. But despite the relatively high level of media coverage if Gibbs’s events, the apocalyptic “civil war” rhetoric the media touted so often with regard to Republican infighting is noticeably absent. Yet again, the media are avoiding proclaiming dire straits for Democrats, despite deep divisions within that party.

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‘Civil War’ Apparently Only a Problem for GOP Squabbling

Daily Kos Holocaust Denial: 9/11 Attacks ‘Were More About Optics Than Actual Harm’

While the Ground Zero Mosque controversy strikes the media as an opportunity for “healing” that’s being denied by stubborn conservatives, the leftists at the Daily Kos see it as an opportunity for Holocaust Denial. The blogger known as “Something the Dog Said” dropped this jaw-dropping paragraph Thursday morning about fear of Muslims: Given that they are such a small minority in this nation, it is odd that so many of our fellow citizens see them as such a threat. Yes, the 9/11 attacks were horrific, but they were more about optics than actual harm. The economy was already taking a hit before the Twin Towers fell.  The reaction of the nation to seeing two major buildings in New York fall on T.V. has boosted the attack out of proportion. While the loss of even a single life is to be condemned and the devastation these deaths caused the families of those killed, more than this number of teens are killed every year in car crashes . These are also tragic losses but we do not make the kind of high profile issue of it that the 9/11 attacks are. This blogger obviously can’t tell the difference in political meaning between a collection of teen car accidents and an intentional, ideological mass murder. This is the same blogger who just wrote on July 30 that Republicans are much scarier than jihadists: Find an issue and whip up hysteria, without consideration of the long term affects or what might be lost by the tactic.  It is just another of the legion of reasons why the modern Republican Party can not be trusted with the government of the United States or any single state for that matter. The radicalization they claim will come from mosques is just a pale reflection of the radicalization that has occurred in the ranks of their Party . If there is a group to fear, it is Radical Republicans, which is basically to say the most of the Republican Party at this point. “Optics” is a word better used for how it looks for Michelle Obama to go on a ritzy Spanish vacation, not to suggest 9/11 was really an insignificant crime. [Hat tip: Mal Adjusted]

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Daily Kos Holocaust Denial: 9/11 Attacks ‘Were More About Optics Than Actual Harm’

On CNN, Tavis Smiley Sees Racism in Rangel, Waters Probes; Actress Trashes Limbaugh

PBS talk show host Tavis Smiley guest-hosted on CNN’s Larry King Live on Tuesday night, and perhaps unsurprisingly, encouraged the view that there’s racism in the congressional ethics investigations of Charlie Rangel and Maxine Waters. “Facts are facts. The names that keep coming out happen to be members of the Congressional Black Caucus.” Smiley never seemed to consider whether the charges had merit — on the content of these politicians’ character — only on the color of their skin. He asked actress Aisha Tyler about this alleged outbreak of racism in the Democrat-dominated Congress, and Tyler unleashed an attack on Rush Limbaugh for suggesting the media thinks Michelle Obama’s entitled to a lavish vacation in Spain because of America’s sordid racial past: SMILEY: I wanted to raise this with Aisha. Maxine Waters on this radio show, on “The Tom Joyner Show” today — and I’m paraphrasing here — makes the point that this committee is established under Democrats, but the names that keep leaking out on the folks under investigation happen to be African- American members of Congress. Eight names of members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including, of course, Charlie Rangel, including Maxine Waters, have leaked out. What do you make of that? TYLER: Look, if I was a conspiracy theorist, or if I was a little bit more dead inside that I already am, if I had been deadened more by the political process over the last two years than I already have been, you would see a pattern of trying to besmirched the president’s name by association. I think what we have generally — I mean, when you look at something like the FLOTUS trip to Spain and everyone criticizing her for not taking American trips — she’s already taken four American vacations here. There’s this ongoing effort to call regular kind of common behavior into question and associate it somehow with race. Taking a lavish trip to Spain with 60 Secret Service agents isn’t “common behavior,” even if Mrs. Obama can’t travel without an entourage. Limbaugh’s brief commentary was addressed to the point that the liberal media have long defended the Obamas in everything they do, with the added psychoanalysis that the Obama deserve a different, more charitable standard of analysis because they are the historic first black family in the White House. What was seriously phony in this conversation was Tyler and Smiley expressing oh-so-great reluctance to see racism in every criticism of a black politician: TYLER: I hate to be in that want place. I don’t ever want to be in that place mentally. It’s not a fun place for me to be, to be always thinking about things being motivated racially. SMILEY: But — I think the R-word is over-used in this country. But facts are facts. The names that keep coming out happen to be members of the Congressional Black Caucus. STEPHANIE MILLER: As you know, it’s a complete mistake when Fox News is talking about Shirley Sherrod and runs footage of Maxine Waters by accident, and talking about John Conyers and runs footage of William Jefferson by mistake. You know that’s just a mistake. TYLER: You don’t even want to say what the subtext is in there. It’s such a clam. You know what I mean? You don’t even want to bring it up. I do think the word racism is over-used in this country. At the same time, what I do think is happening right now is there’s more of a subtext of racialism, where when you have somebody like Rush Limbaugh saying that the reason that Michelle Obama went to Spain is that black people are trying to get some of what white people have enjoyed. I mean, come on. Smiley was so enjoying Tyler’s attacks on Limbaugh that he returned to encouraging them after a commercial break: SMILEY: Welcome back to Larry King Live, joined now by our panel. Before the break, Aisha, you were starting to lay out for us your formulation at least about the Michelle Obama trip to Spain. I want to go around the horn, but go ahead and finish your point. TYLER: The thing that I’m really struggling with here — and I’m not going to call Rush Limbaugh, but that is a racialist attitude to say that somehow black people have never traveled abroad until the First Lady got her shot at Spain. I mean, look, I speak three languages. I lived in Europe. I lived overseas. The idea that somehow she’s getting back at white people for slavery by paying her own way to take her daughter to Spain is just extraordinary hyperbole of the highest order. And it’s ridiculous. Tyler was the one picking up the “extraordinary hyperbole” in alleging Limbaugh had said “black people have never traveled abroad” or that Michelle is “getting back at white people for slavery” with the Spain trip — neither of which he said.

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On CNN, Tavis Smiley Sees Racism in Rangel, Waters Probes; Actress Trashes Limbaugh