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gollygee

(22,336 posts)
Mon Oct 1, 2012, 08:57 AM Oct 2012

The Right's Pop-Culture Problem

http://www.salon.com/2012/09/30/the_rights_pop_culture_problem/?source=newsletter

As the anti-union inspirational drama “Won’t Back Down,” Dinesh D’Souza’s deeply crazy Obama conspiracy-theory documentary “2016” and the Clint Eastwood fiasco at the Republican National Convention suggest, conservatives have a problem with pop culture. They don’t much like it or trust it, and the feeling is mutual; every time the two try to dance, the results are embarrassing to all. This becomes painfully clear every time a Republican candidate holds a fundraiser in Hollywood, which has of course been a bottomless source of money for Barack Obama and every other significant Democrat on the national stage, going back at least as far as Adlai Stevenson.

Last weekend Mitt Romney’s campaign held just such an event in Beverly Hills, and most of the names on the guest list were downright depressing: A few aging producers like action-movie impresario Jerry Bruckheimer and 1970s game-show pioneer Burt Sugarman; a few showbiz relics like Pat Boone and Connie Stevens. Almost the only contemporary and recognizable figures were Patricia Heaton (you know! Debra from “Everybody Loves Raymond”!) and “CSI: NY” star Gary Sinise, quite likely the only Republican who has ever directed a Sam Shepard play. Indeed, Sinise is so beloved by the lonely cadre of culturally savvy right-wingers – they do exist! – that former George W. Bush and John McCain aide Nicolle Wallace floated a rumor in 2009 that he might run for president. (Given the way things look for Romney right now, I bet a lot of Republicans would love to go back in time and work a little harder on that.)
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The Right's Pop-Culture Problem (Original Post) gollygee Oct 2012 OP
That's because they approach the arts BumRushDaShow Oct 2012 #1
In addition, they lack imagination and (maybe more critically) empathy hatrack Oct 2012 #5
I'm imagining the Lawrence Welk orchestra providing the entertainment. DCKit Oct 2012 #2
Or anybody else they can "dig up" longship Oct 2012 #3
Even Lawrence's show had its moments.. Fumesucker Oct 2012 #4

BumRushDaShow

(129,054 posts)
1. That's because they approach the arts
Mon Oct 1, 2012, 09:11 AM
Oct 2012

from an angry frame of mind. And they do so from some extremist expectations and frustration that they are entitled and have somehow been denied and ppressed. In reality, they are actually internalizing their own fantasy of what oppression would feel like as they inflect it on others, and it often bubbles out into their performances.

In their universe, there is no hope but anyone who has travelled among those truly oppressed and in abject poverty, they will find that there is a survival mechanism that exists that offers hope.

hatrack

(59,587 posts)
5. In addition, they lack imagination and (maybe more critically) empathy
Mon Oct 1, 2012, 10:02 AM
Oct 2012

The ability to empathize, in particular, is at the very core of what actors do.

But if every breath is all about Angry You, and Your Anger at what Things Of Yours have been taken away (in reality or otherwise) by Those Who Are Not Worthy, you're going to have a really hard time tapping into that kind of intelligence.

 

DCKit

(18,541 posts)
2. I'm imagining the Lawrence Welk orchestra providing the entertainment.
Mon Oct 1, 2012, 09:20 AM
Oct 2012

Benny Goodman would be too racy for that crowd.

longship

(40,416 posts)
3. Or anybody else they can "dig up"
Mon Oct 1, 2012, 09:47 AM
Oct 2012


Don't forget Larry Hooper and Myron Floren.

BTW, darn you DCKit, you beat me to the Welk post here.

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