The best way to end this
article, I feel, is the way John Oliver would end each episode: “So what can we
do now?” For the last several years his
answers have essentially bene pie-in-the-sky ponderings of the Loony Left he occupies.
Unlike him I have some answers, and they may actually be practical.
For the Democratic Party
the answer is the simplest, though it is no doubt counterproductive to the ones
most of the loudest voices are giving. The Democrats need to start winning back
the working class voter, primarily the white working class voter – which has
been bottoming out on them for the last three elections – but across the board.
And that can only be aided by cutting as many ties as possible with Hollywood. If
you’re arguing the GOP is the party of billionaires, that argument loses its
clout when it is being made by George Clooney and Oprah Winfrey. As I’ve said
before, there’s never been any evidence they can convince the electorate one
iota and now it’s time cut your losses. Don’t worry, they’ll get over it.
For late night, there are
some signs that at least some entertainers have realized that spending your
opening monologue and much of your show calling the Republicans names is not an
audience grabber. John Mulaney’s new late night show for Netflix seems to be going
back to an older format where politics is far less important and it has already
become a critical and ratings success. It’s also encouraging to see Jon Stewart
back at The Daily Show after more than a decade and it is very clear in
his first year back that he has decided to go back to the old format of making
fun of both sides. This has earned him the enmity of the left, but part of the
reason we loved him in the first place was because he never gave a damn about
that. Future hosts might do well to try and remember it going forward.
And as for John Oliver,
well, I can only speak for myself. But to do so I’m going to use a method he
might very well do so and use a different form. I will paraphrase Aaron Sorkin,
a writer who for decades has been considered by the right all that is liberal
about Hollywood and who know is considered by some of the actors on his own
show as too conservative in his approach.
In the climatic speech of The
American President Andrew Shepherd tells the press corps: “We’ve got
serious problems. And I can tell you Bob Rumson has no interest in solving them.
He is interested in two things and two things only: making you afraid of it and
telling you who’s to blame for it. That, my friends, is how you win elections.”
Sorkin was writing this in 1995 but he could have just as easily been describing
any Republican over the last thirty years. It's an ugly game but it works.
John Oliver acknowledges
serious problems but he has no interest in solving them either. He is
interested in two things and two things only: telling you who’s to blame for it,
and telling you there is nothing that you or anything else can be done to fix
it. That is the method of the deconstructionist of which Last Week Tonight essentially is a model of that program.
This is a model that has a
very select audience: usually wealthy, educated and white. They inhabit the
world of academia, liberal magazines and quite a few entertainers. Their
numbers have included Howard Zinn, Gore Vidal, Lewis Lapham, Michael Moore and
George Carlin. John Oliver is just the most recent to join their unhappy band. The
deconstructionist has, it should be mentioned, the same low esteem for the
electorate than many in world of Fox News and MAGA do. The main reason they
have contempt for Trump and his ilk is because he’s convinced those same voters
that the solution to their lot in life is to vote for Republicans. The deconstructions
like Oliver think these people are deluded because they think anything will
solve their problems. Their idiots not because they think voting for Trump will
improve things hut because they think anything can.
And as I’ve written in
previous articles people like the ones I listed above have gotten very rich
arguing that capitalism is destroying everything and famous for saying that public
figures are not to be trusted. John Oliver is no different in that. Last
Week Tonight has made him a millionaire many times over; he’s won seven
consecutive Emmys and a couple of Peabodys and he has become one of the most
signature faces of HBO. Despair, melancholy and pessimism have been very, very
good to John Oliver.
That leads me to my
decision. I’ve decided that, at least for the foreseeable future, I’m not going
to watch John Oliver any more. This is a sacrifice on my part – as I’ve said he
is incredibly funny and very informative. But it does nothing to change the
fact that is a humor steeped in the kind of nastiness and nihilism that I’ve come
to associate with so many people on the far left these days. I’ve spent a lot
of time cutting ties with some of the most left-wing thinkers online and in other
publications; I see no reason why I shouldn’t do the same with John Oliver.
The thing is, I know he’ll
be fine. He is, like all the previous examples I gave above, a rich white man.
And as he’s been more than willing to tell us over and over on Last Week
Tonight, things tend to work out pretty well for rich white men in society.
Maybe that’s why I take a
special contempt when, in a appearance on another late night show, he was asked
if he planned to leave the country, like so many left wing people are. “No,” he
said. “I’m going down with the Titanic.”
Now I’ve made it clear
that I have a very low opinion of the kind of people who’ve said for years that
if the election went a certain way, they would leave America. Not only does that
show the kind of elitism and wealth they have as opposed to the people they’ve
expounded a lot of time and energy will be the victims of Trump, it makes a
strong case that they never really cared that much about their suffering at
all. This is not something that the majority of Americans – particularly the
ones who will be the likely victims of this administration – have the option to
do and that they are considering leaving America as they would move to a new
neighborhood shows just how little the problems they advocate for have really
touched them.
But for Oliver – who is an
immigrant to this country, who has spent the last decade advocated about the
suffering of others in so many ways, about all the inequities about it, all the
real problems and frequently sounds sincere – can look at America and compare
it to one of the most tragic disasters of all time as a joke bothers me still
more. Because it shows his own callousness and nasty humor which honestly, isn’t
that much different from the kind of lines you’d hear at CPAC.
The sad part is that he
may very well go down with a bigger institution – late night. One of the
proudest and oldest institutions of television that has lasted as long nearly
as long as the medium. Perhaps I’m too pessimistic and it will survive the kind
of comedy that Oliver and his colleagues have considered entertainment over the
past decade. But if it does, he will be a vital part in what helped killed it
off. He may not care about that – after all, he’s a rich white man and things
have worked well for them, and he’s also a deconstruction so he’s never cared
much for institutions including Hollywood.
But the fact is, he needs to understand it
wasn’t Trump that killed it off. He and his entire band of entertainers have
spent the last decade waging a war against a man who they had more in common
with then the majority of the people who voted for him. They didn’t have any
real ammo to beat him with but they thought they did. So they used their shows
as soapboxes isolated half the country,
kept at it for more than a decade and now it is on the brink of collapse.
And what did they get? He
still won. He won in 2016 despite their warnings. He won again in 2024. They’re
still fighting against him. They still won’t acknowledge that he got the better
of them. And they long since stopped trying to be entertaining or even funny
doing so. They can’t understand how a guy who can’t take a joke is having the
last laugh on them. What they never understood is that they were no funnier
then he was and they never commanded anywhere near the audience he did.
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