|
During a recent panel discussion on media bias at Book Expo America
2003, Al Franken called Bill O'Reilly on his lies - and O'Reilly
didn't take to it so kindly. The heated exchange, which was covered
by C- SPAN's Book TV, became the subject of media coverage around
the nation [ LINK ]. BuzzFlash interviewed Franken about his first
round KO against O'Reilly -- and about the larger issue of the media's
right-wing bias, which Franken covers in his new book, Lies and
the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right.
(It is scheduled for release in the fall. Check back with BuzzFlash
later this summer for more details).
Franken is one of BuzzFlash's heroes. Author of the must-read Rush
Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot, the audio version of which won
a Grammy Award, Franken has also penned Why Not Me? The Inside
Story of the Making and Unmaking of the Franken Presidency and
Oh, The Things I Know!, a satire on self-help books.
A 1973 graduate of Harvard, Franken performed stand-up comedy before
joining Saturday Night Live. Between 1975 and 1980, Franken won
five Emmy Awards, four for writing and one for producing. Franken
returned to SNL for a 10-year run in 1985, during which time he
created one of the SNL Hall of Fame characters, self-help guru Stuart
Smalley.
* * *
BUZZFLASH: On May 31, your appearance at a book exposition
with co-panelists Molly Ivins and Bill O'Reilly was broadcast on
C-SPAN's Book TV. At the event, you confronted O'Reilly about his
lie that that he received the prestigious Peabody Award for his
work as host of Inside Edition. Could you recap the story -- which
is kind of funny when you think about it, lying about an award that
honors outstanding achievement in broadcast journalism.
AL FRANKEN: Well, it isn't just that Bill O'Reilly claims
he won a couple of Peabody Awards. Whenever he was asked about Inside
Edition and it being sort of a tabloid show, O'Reilly would indignantly
say that they had won two Peabody Awards. Who says we're a tabloid
show? And O'Reilly would offer as proof the Peabody Awards that
Inside Edition had supposedly won. And he did this on a number of
occasions. I got through watching him once on C-SPAN and then went
researching on Nexis. I just followed it up because I couldn't believe
that Inside Edition had won a Peabody. And I did the research. And,
of course, they hadn't won any Peabody Award. I thought I would
call O'Reilly, and that way he could stop saying the wrong thing,
which any journalist would be embarrassed about. Instead of being
grateful that I had called him, he just got angry. Well it turns
out that Inside Edition had won a "Polk" Award a year
after he left. And so he got very, very angry and said, "Go
ahead go after me, Al." And so I just thought that it'd
be fun to do.
I gave the story to Lloyd Grove at the Washington Post, who called
O'Reilly. O'Reilly sort of said, "Well, all I did was mix up
a Polk and a Peabody, and Al has this jihad against me," et
cetera. Now that's not necessarily worth writing about, but then
I discovered that about a week later Robert Reno at Newsday decided
to do a column about the fact that O'Reilly had claimed on several
occasions to have won Peabodies and hadn't.
O'Reilly then attacked Rob Reno in the most vitriolic way, saying,
basically "I never said I won a Peabody. This is a total fabrication.
The man's a liar," et cetera, et cetera. And that sort of seems
pathological to me, or Bill O'Reilly just felt that he could get
away with it. It's sort of emblematic of him.
So I thought that was the example of his lying that I could use
at the Book Expo, because my book isn't about him. It's about the
whole right-wing media, and how it affects the mainstream media.
I also focus on Bush and his administration -- who do a lot of lying
-- and how a right-wing media has allowed them to get away with
a lot of stuff that, in a different media environment, they probably
wouldn't be able to get away with.
BUZZFLASH: Well, you bring up an interesting point, because
it seems that one of the tactics of the right wing when they are
confronted with the facts or proof of their lies, they just switch
gears.
FRANKEN: O'Reilly kept saying during the C-SPAN event, and
he kept repeating, "All I did was mix up up a Polk and a Peabody."
But that's not the whole point of the story. When confronted with
a lie, these guys just deny it.
BUZZFLASH: You stated in your speech on C-SPAN that outside
of the mainstream media, there's a well-funded, well-organized,
right- wing media - and you gestured to O'Reilly - and
that it acts as an echo chamber in the news, pushing the right-wing
attacks, scandals and ideology. Could you elaborate on that idea
of an echo chamber?
FRANKEN: Well, what certainly happened during the Clinton
administration was that the American Spectator and the Washington
Times and the Wall Street Journal would get these things
that weren't true and print them. And, after awhile, they became
such a part of the echo chamber that CNN and The New York Times
and the L.A. Times felt they had to address those stories.
BUZZFLASH: Because we live in a mass media culture, it seems
that there's no such thing as any single story really causing that
much of an impact. A news story has to be branded, and people have
to keep talking about it. It's natural that the news cycle is going
to turn very quickly, so even important stories get washed over.
FRANKEN: Right.
BUZZFLASH: But if you have that mechanism and infrastructure,
like the right-wing media, you're able to keep a story alive and
keep it circulating. You almost brand or market that news story,
if you will, for the course of a week or longer.
FRANKEN: The first part of my new book is about the media,
and then it gets more into the Bush administration. But, of course,
they're married - this right-wing media and the Bush administration.
To make the argument that the media has a left- or right-wing, or
a liberal or a conservative bias, is like asking if the problem
with Al-Qaeda is do they use too much oil in their hummus. And sometimes
they do use too much oil, and sometimes they don't use enough. But
the real problem with Al-Qaeda is they want to kill us. And the
real problem with the press is all the other biases that they have.
Those include: get the story fast; scandal; negativity; sexiness
-- you know, ratings will be up if we go to war. It's an establishment
bias -- a bias for the "new," which sounds contradictory
to the establishment bias, but I think it helped Bush and hurt Gore
in 2000. And so they're all these biases in all the media.
But in the right-wing media, they do have a right-wing bias. And
they also have an agenda. So their agenda is: we're an adjunct of
the Republican Party, and we're going push that agenda every day,
and, as you say, brand these stories that help further the right-wing
cause.
If you watched Hannity and Colmes during the war, it was hilarious.
Hannity would, every day, be saying that Democrats were undermining
the President by criticizing the Commander in Chief with criticisms
that were so either nonexistent or mild. Whereas, Hannity, if you
went back and looked at what he was saying during Kosovo, was attacking
Clinton in the harshest terms every day. Hannity deliberately meant
to undermine Clinton by saying he's not following his advisors,
we're running out of ammunition, he doesn't know what he's doing.
He was allowing guests to come on and say this is the worst planned
military operation in history, and he'd nod, and say, "Um-hmm."
Here's another example: I do a sort of a case study with the Wellstone
Memorial and about the complete distortion of that event in the
right- wing media. And that did get into the mainstream media, and
it did affect how people around the country thought of the Democratic
Party. And I think it had an effect obviously in Minnesota, and
in Missouri in the Senate races, and gave the Senate to the Republicans.
There was a piece where Connie Lewis gave the eulogy for Sheila
Wellstone, and she started off by saying there was this day where
she picked up Paul for one of these 14-hour days on the campaign
trail, and Sheila had already left for her campaign day. Paul pulls
out this note from a pile of stuff from Sheila, and Sheila tells
him in the note where dinner is, and how to put it in the microwave
-- you know, he's an absent-minded guy in all these things. And
then, at the bottom of the note, it says, "We will win."
And Paul looks at Connie, and just gives her this look like, isn't
she the greatest? Isn't she the greatest? The whole thing was about
their love story. They got married at 19. I barely ever saw Paul
without Sheila there. They were a truly incredible couple. And that's
what the whole part of that piece was, in the middle of the campaign.
Well, Hannity's show cuts it together and just keeps the "We
will win" part to show how partisan the event was, and then
puts it together with Rick Kahn's speech and with something from
Mark Wellstone. And my image of that was Alan Colmes walking past
the Fox edit room that day saying "What are you up to, guys?"
"Oh, we're just editing a piece on the Wellstone memorial."
"OK." You know what I mean? The right wing machine cranked
out lies. There was Christopher Caldwell who wrote the editorial
for the Weekly Standard. The only thing he saw, I think,
might have been the piece I just described from Hannity and Colmes.
BUZZFLASH: You made an appearance on Donahue's show back
in January and confronted Bernard Goldberg about his book that claimed
liberals run the media. And you made the comment on Donahue's show
that so much of the right-wing media is just flat-out lazy in not
tracking down sources or context for what is reported.
FRANKEN: Well, in that one, Goldberg had a chapter called
"Left Wing Hate Speech." He uses as an example something
that John Chancellor said in the commentary on Nightly News with
Tom Brokaw on August 21, 1991 -- that was the day that the coup
was put down in the Soviet Union, the one at the Parliament where
Yeltsin was on the tank and stuff. And Brokaw gives this impassioned
opening to the show, something like, "This is the day where
the gray men of the Kremlin were finally put down. And history will
speak. And that the people of Russia didn't let themselves go back
into the darkness, the state oppression, blah-blah-blah."
Total anti-communist, anti-Soviet introduction. And then, later
in the show, Brokaw asks Chancellor, "What does Gorbachev do
next?" Because, at this point, what brought about the coup
were these horrible shortages that the Soviet Union was having,
which were the worst shortages since World War II. And Perestroika,
at this point, was six years old. Gorbachev had dismantled the state
economy, and there was really no system - there was no communism
any more. And so John Chancellor says, basically, Gorbachev is in
the position where he can't blame communism -- the problems are
the shortages.
And Goldberg quotes this in his book about "liberal bias"
and says it refers to the absurd notion that John Chancellor believes
that the shortages in the Soviet Union were not caused by communism.
Of course John Chancellor isn't around anymore to defend himself.
So I'm on the show with Donahue, and I'm in San Francisco on a
satellite, which is always hard to do, and he's in the studio. And
I asked him what happened on that day. I read him the quote. And
I said, "What happened that day in the Soviet Union?"
thinking that he knew. And then I would just say, "Then how
could you leave out that context?" And in fact, he didn't know.
Goldberg just didn't know. And Goldberg says, "You tell me,
Al," very indignant that I would ask him. And I said, "No,
you tell me. It's your book. You tell me." And basically he
said, "OK, I don't know." Milton Friedman would have agreed
with what John Chancellor was saying that day.
But when you confront the right-wing media about their reporting,
all they do is they get mad. Instead of saying, "You know what?
I really screwed up." Well, what happened was Goldberg just
regurgitated something he got from a right-wing media research center,
and just put it in the book and thought that, oh, this proves that
John Chancellor thought that communism wasn't a problem or something.
It's the amazing laziness of putting something in your book without
thinking, "Huh, let's see, 1991 -- what's going on around that
time? Didn't communism fall? Didn't the Soviet Union fall around
then? We must check out what this is." And here I am just reading
Goldberg's book, and I think this is not what it seems. Well, what
happened? What happened around then? That was even before I was
writing this book about liars and the right-wing.
BUZZFLASH: Celebrities who have spoken out against the Bush
administration, like the Dixie Chicks, have been attacked by the
right- wing media. Tim Robinson and Susan Sarandon, for example,
were scrubbed from the Baseball Hall of Fame events surrounding
the celebration of Bull Durham because of their liberal views. Did
you face a backlash after you wrote Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat
Idiot or after your recent appearance with O'Reilly on C-SPAN?
FRANKEN: No, no. I just tend to get really nasty e-mails.
And I just send them back a little e-mail saying, "Thank you
for your kind e-mail regarding my" and I skip a space,
and I put a forward arrow "three- inch penis."
Then I skip a space. "As you can imagine, I receive so many
positive responses to my" skip a space, arrow
"three-inch penis, that I'm unable to respond to them all."
Then they get mad, yeah.
BUZZFLASH: You stated at the C-SPAN event that the Democrats
have taken it for too long and we're not going to take it anymore.
And some of our readers have written that they want you to lead
the DNC. What would you do if you were the head of the DNC? Or,
what would you advise Democrats about the current political situation
and how to fight back?
FRANKEN: This is something I'm trying to get together with
some other people who asked me to put a show together - a
radio show. I think we have got to start matching their infrastructure.
We have got to be able, when the right wing and Bush administration
lie, to respond and say, "That's just not true." And we
have got to start getting heard. We need leaders who can inspire
people, and we need a message that resonates. And I think that we
actually have both of those things.
BUZZFLASH: How does your background in comedy give you a
better understanding of politics, to see a situation differently
or maybe unconventionally? How has it helped you in your political
work, or at least your writing and speaking about politics?
FRANKEN: Well, I think that there's a value to comedy in
and of itself. I'm a comedian first and foremost, which some people
think that doesn't give me the right to do what I'm doing. And I
don't quite understand that. What's Hannity? What's O'Reilly? What's
their background, you know?
BUZZFLASH: We call them Infotainment.
FRANKEN: Yeah. And I think that being able to make people
laugh and write a book that's funny makes the information go down
a lot easier and it makes it a lot more fun to read, easier to understand,
and often stronger. So there's all kinds of advantages to it.
Now, one of the things that the right wing doesn't seem to get
-- they have an unbelievable obdurate resistance to understanding
irony. So when you write, "Rush Limbaugh is a big fat idiot,"
they don't understand. They say, "How dare you call him a big
fat idiot?" And at the time, he was very fat, as you know,
just a huge fat, fat, fat, fat, obese, morbidly obese, fat man.
He's huge. Just his enormous gut and a big fat ass. But he had been
engaging in ad hominem attacks, so there was a bit of irony
within the title.
I have no doubt the right wing won't get the title of my new book,
Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look
at the Right, as it is meant it's kidding on the square,
as I like to say.
BUZZFLASH: Al, thank you so much for your time.
FRANKEN: Thank you.
A BUZZFLASH INTERVIEW
http://www.alternet.org/print.html?StoryID=16157
* * *
Resources:
This Fall (2003), get your copy of Al Franken's "Lies, and
the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right."
from BuzzFlash.com.
Video of Al Franken Calling Bill O'Reilly On His Lies
[ LINK
]
Photo Causes O'Reilly Franken-Fray
[ LINK
]
Robert Reno's column "Some Factors About O'Reilly Aren't Factual."
(Newsday, New York, March 8th, 2001)
url not available.
Franken Confronts Bernard Goldberg on Donahue
[ LINK
]
Al Franken Fan Site
[ LINK
]
|