Mother Talkers

Has Presidential Politics Gone Bubblegum Pop?

Thu Feb 21, 2008 at 03:41:16 PM PDT

Prior to the end of the Writers Guild strike, author Stephen King raised an interesting question in Entertainment Weekly: Has presidential politics gone pop? Citing the record-breaking number of people tuning into the news since there were no shows to watch and the celebrities on the campaign trail, King said the race for president was starting to look like a reality show like The Great Presidency Race, or American Political Idol or even White House Survivor.

Knowing our penchant for capitalism and infotainment, I would not be surprised if one day there is a reality show to select the next president!

Are TV viewers’ habits changing because of the writers’ strike? Many reporters who cover entertainment—some at this very periodical—think they are, and that if the strike doesn’t end soon, the changes will accelerate. One change they’ve noted is the ever larger number of TV watchers who are tuning in to coverage of the campaign (which already feels four centuries old). The switch is partly because scripted TV episodes are in increasingly short supply, but it’s also because...damn, people are just interested. If anything has come clear in the last few months, it’s that citizens are tired of the Bush & Cheney Show. They want someone new. Almost anybody, it seems.

Programmers at cable nets like CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News may have been born at night, but it wasn’t last night, and they’re not stupid. They’ve jumped on the bandwagon and produced a constant din of political palaver. Most is generated by the motormouths my friend the Long-hair calls "the White Guys in Ties Brigade." But it’s not all Pat Buchanan and Chris Matthews; there are also real stars! OMG!!

2008 has become the political equivalent of Celebrity Match Game. Huckabee fans include Ted "I Never Saw a Gun I Didn’t Like" Nugent and Chuck Norris, he of the scary teeth. Hillary Clinton’s got Barbra Streisand. John Edwards is running on empty with Jackson Browne. Rudy Giuliani has got...er, Bo Derek? Romney is trailing the field, celeb-wise, but still trying with Donny Osmond. And even Fred Thompson had a pet celeb: Pat Sajak! (I was hoping my guy Obama would get Sajak, but disappointment is a part of politcs.)

King bemoaned how the election process has turned into a game show. But that is the same argument that has been made about all aspects of American life – not just politics – since self-proclaimed "old fogy" King was a zygote. The fact so many people are tuned into politics and actually participating in our democracy is a good result of the elections gone pop IMHO.

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Tags: presidential politics, pop, Entertainment Weekly, Stephen King, Pat Sajak, Chuck Norris, reality show, Writers Guild strike, television programming (all tags)

Permalink | 4 comments

  • I think the candidates are more interesting (0 / 0)

    I feel like most candidates we've had in the past few elections are not people to get excited about, whereas this year we have a woman, a black man, and a few interesting characters on the Republican side.  People just seem more passionate in general, and I think that does have to do with impressions of the current administration.

  • If this is true, how great for our democracy (0 / 0)

    I almost never watch TV, so the strike hasn't affected me at all. And the reason I don't watch it is because so much of it seems like such an insipid waste of time compared to all the real issues facing our world. Maybe if people quit numbing their brains with bad TV, they'd start to get more engaged with real life and their communities. This column suggests that maybe this is already happening. I say great!

  • Election Survivor (0 / 0)

    I love it. People are really getting into politics, and that is an awesome thing. On Super Tuesday, I was waiting in line at Caribou and two women behind me were having a political conversation as we all stared at CNN on the flat-screen. One woman asked the other what the elections were about, and her friend explained to her that these were votes to decide who would run for president, and some were caucuses and some were primaries, etc., etc. It was very nice to see an obvious political neophyte taking an interest. My own political newbie friend has been taking an interest and asking questions as never before, which is also awesome to see.

    Some people (like my DH) are be horrified to think that people who didn’t even know what a primary was until a month ago will be choosing a president, but as more people take an interest, news outlets will be forced to step up their game and provide more and better analysis—think football: hours of pregame X’s and O’s, halftime shows, and postgame interviews and analysis. Office pools? Fantasy Politics? The mind reels.

  • I think one thing we owe to this administration (0 / 0)

    is the interest in this election.  A woman told me she had thought it didn't make much difference who was president and this president had been a wake up call for her.  It's great to see all the young people participating.  There have been record turn outs.  Yea for democracy.

    I detest that cynical whining. Go to a corner and bemoan to yourself.

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