Many a man stared at Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s news conference on Monday and thought, “There but for the grace of God go I.” So did a lot of women, only they were looking at the stricken face of his wife, Silda Wall Spitzer.
And on television, at least, men got the first word.
The news that the Democratic governor of New York was embroiled in a prostitution scandal broke around 2 p.m., and by then opinion shows were dominated by men. Accordingly, there was a lot of talk about a “victimless crime.” On CNN James Carville suggested that Mr. Spitzer’s enemies might have set him up, and argued that Mr. Spitzer need not resign. Tucker Carlson of MSNBC said the whole thing was “nauseating,” but he was referring to the high-handed moralizing at Mr. Spitzer’s expense, not the governor’s ethical lapse.
It wasn’t until Tuesday morning, on shows like “Today” and “The View,” that female commentators could really unload, and they did, mostly on panels with titles like “Why Men Cheat” and filled by psychologists, self-help coaches and anthropologists. The biggest issue was not whether the governor would resign or face criminal charges. It was whether Ms. Wall Spitzer was right to stand by him, and even more urgently, whether all husbands stray, and why. It got testy at times.
“Are you saying the women should feel guilty, like they somehow drove the man to cheat?” a visibly aghast Meredith Vieira of “Today” asked Dr. Laura Schlessinger, a radio host.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/12/arts/television/12watc.html?th&emc=th