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The most entertaining TV show on the air for the past five months has had it all: power-hungry lawyers, cross-country chases, snipers on airport tarmacs, fire-breathing preachers, and one famous former (White) Housewife looking more desperate by the day. That’s right, we’re talking about the 2008 Democratic primary race, which has been the best thing to happen to TV drama since what’s-her-name shot J.R.
It used to be you had to rely solely on The Daily Show and The Colbert Report for consistent election entertainment. No longer. This year, as hit shows like Grey’s Anatomy and CSI: Miami saw serious declines in viewership, ratings soared for CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News (at least by cable news standards) ever since the contests began in January — with a debut episode called Iowa. Last March, Barack Obama’s ‘’race speech'’ in Philadelphia pulled more than 4 million viewers to the cable nets in the middle of a Tuesday, while Hillary Clinton’s April tête-à-tête with Bill O’Reilly had 3.7 million tuning in just to Fox News. And on broadcast TV, ABC attracted a hefty audience of 11 million to April’s Philadelphia debate. This was the 26th face-off of the season, a point when voters are usually crippled by talking-points fatigue.
True, the 2008 Republican race, after an initial American Gladiators-like parade of posturing, didn’t take long to become as predictable as a StickUp Bulb infomercial. But the Democratic drama has veered toward Shakespearean, a battle royal between a preordained queen-in-waiting (and her Lady Macbeth-like husband, Bill) and a golden-tongued young prince who wants the throne for his own (if only someone would rid him of that meddlesome priest). Other times, it’s been more of an Aaron Spelling production, with surprise plot twists (John Edwards’ endorsement!), cliff-hangers practically every week (how would they count Florida and Michigan?), and dialogue so bitchy it’d make a Gossip Girl gasp ('’ You’re likable enough, Hillary'’ ). This battle — which finally looks to be reaching an end — has the narrative flow of a Melrose Place-grade melodrama, but it’s also as real (and deadly serious) as reality TV ever gets. Still, it’s not merely American Idol with nuclear codes. It’s the best season of The West Wing ever.
–by Benjamin Svetkey
Popularity: 1% [?]
Too bad the press is missing the Bushites sacking Washington on their way home to Texas.
This article is a disgusting validation of the worthless tv coverage of the presidential primaries, which has been almost devoid of any content, and which has focused on the gossipy, personal, non-relevant details. Frankly I don’t give a damn if Obama wears a flag pin, or what his former minister said over a 30 year period. I want to know what Obama will do about Guantanamo and Blackwater.
The so-called debates were almost worthless, full of personal questions that mainly allowed the questioners to posture in front of the camera, while the truly vital topics–like global warming– went unaddressed. I don’t want my political coverage to sound like someone’s favorite soap opera. That’s what soap opera is for!
If most Americans are like me, we watched the coverage because we are truly concerned about the state of our country and because it was the only game in town, not because it was any good.
If anything–ANYTHING–positive comes out of this shabby, sham journalism, I hope that at the very least we will take the debates out of the hands of the ABC’s and Tim Russerts of the industry–give them back to the League of women Voters and let the networks stick to what they can do– the camera work.
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.