I could not have said it better myself.
I could not have said it better myself. | ||
But to underestimate Glenn Beck as just some sort of random extra
from Cuckoo's Nest, as I admittedly have done, is a mistake as it barely
scratches the surface of what his scam is all about. A schizoid raving
street loon tends to command attention purely for the freak show
curiosity of passers by, yet the nonsense is rarely taken seriously.
This isn't the case with Glenn Beck. Several million people every day
take his word for it. They're suckered into buying the ruse. And it's
bad for America.
What his regular viewers haven't grasped yet is that he's putting on a
show. He's playing a role. He's tricking his audience. Unlike a
left-leaning audience, Beck's audience is mostly composed of white
conservative Christians who pride themselves on taking certain things on
faith, and who often act against their own financial interests for the
sake of patriotic cheerleading. It's an audience that embraces gun
ownership and tends to be more reactionary and militaristic.
(Incidentally, there's no equivalent to this on the "other side" simply
because it's not in the nature of liberals to be, you know,
conservative.)
But it's hard to blame Beck's audience for being fished in. There's
no wink and nod, so he's clearly not attempting some sort of obviously
satirical character like Stephen Colbert or even a more bizarre
character like Andy Kaufman's Tony Clifton. He performs this role as
seamlessly as any decent character actor, but he never tips his hand
(we're generally told when an actor is acting). Just an occasional
mention of himself as a "rodeo clown." There's no crawl at the end
listing "Glenn Beck as 'Glenn Beck.'" It's not a fiction program.
Glenn Beck is playing a character with a personality and a style that
is laser focused at the souls of an intended audience. It doesn't take
many minutes of viewing his television show to see that he's mashing up
the most effective and successful aspects of Rush Limbaugh, Alex Jones
and '60s Bircher author Cleon Skousen, and filtering it all through the
performance techniques of a televangelist. Listen to any random
monologue by Glenn Beck and then watch some clips of televangelist Jack
Van Impe. Both are master manipulators and (crazy aside) riveting
speakers. They each nail their audiences with rapid-fire barrages of
nonsense presented as dramatic fact -- so twisted and obscured that it
begins to seem real and anything that might not seem entirely plausible,
just have faith. After all, there are complicated drawings on a
blackboard! Oh, and he cries. So he must be serious. (We learned last
year that the crying is fake.)
This is all stuff that's been proven to resonate with (and utterly
manipulate) certain American audiences who also willingly hand over
their cash to obvious flimflam artists claiming to provide salvation.
Glenn Beck is just pooling these techniques and applying them to
American politics.
Instead of asking for donations, by the way, Beck just markets all
varieties of crap-on-a-stick to his people. Beck has released seven
books since 2007. Seven books in three years! Add to the mix three DVD
releases and 26 compact disc releases. There's his subscription-only
"Insider Extreme" website which charges $75 per year. There's a print
magazine called "Fusion" (20 issues for $66). There are the obligatory
t-shirts, mugs and other forms of cheap swag. All of this is heaped on
top of a multimillion dollar Fox News contract and a syndicated radio
deal worth $50 million over five years. Capitalism is one thing, but
Beck is manipulating his audience to hand over their cash in exchange
for swag that can't possibly be worth the price, considering the volume
of his output (seven books in three years!). As the saying goes: how
hard he prays depends on how much you pay.
To that point, Glenn Beck likes to say that he's the new Howard
Beale, the tragic and suicidal anchor from the movie Network.
He's not. In fact, Paddy Chayefsky's screenplay was a prescient warning
about the rise of charlatans like Glenn Beck infiltrating the news media
-- regardless of whether or not they're presented as "opinion
journalists." Actually, Beck goes far beyond the scope of opinion
journalism as well, and has settled in a danger zone where he incites
easily-manipulated, often militaristic audiences based on theories and
claims that don't hold up to even the most cursory fact-checking, say
nothing of empirical reality.
In terms of his impact, Beck isn't Howard Beale at all. He's closer
to Lee Atwater.
In the riveting, must-see documentary, Boogie Man, about
the rise and fall of the infamous Republican political operative, it's
revealed that Atwater once considered politics to be nothing more than a
game. Professional wrestling. Atwater, we learn, would have been
perfectly happy doing what he did for either political party. Republican
or Democrat. It didn't matter to him. After all, it was just a game. A
show. And he was really good at producing a hell of a show -- no matter
how many lives he left in his wake.
Yet at the end of his life, Atwater realized that treating politics
like a wrestling match was a mistake. In politics, unlike wrestling, the
societal damage is real. The lives are real.
Bloated and crippled from his cancer treatment, Atwater regretted
using the Southern Strategy -- exploiting race as a wedge. He regretted
making so many enemies, one of which being Ed Rollins who he had
double-crossed during the waning years of the Reagan administration. He
regretted the creation of his own reality at the expense of empirical
reality.
While he was very successful in treating national affairs like a
cornball burlesque show and throwing all professional ethics aside in
the name of winning, the lesson of Lee Atwater is that such behavior is
ultimately destructive.
The Glenn Beck Show might seem like the political equivalent of
professional wrestling, but it's not even that sincere. At least with
wrestling, we're all most aware that wrestling follows a script even
though some of the moves require a high caliber of strength and
athleticism (and occasionally resulting in real injuries to the
performers). The difference between Beck and wrestling is that with Beck
the fakery isn't common knowledge and the consequences of what he talks
about on his show are very real.
This week, Beck attacked the president's deceased mother and
grandparents as being Marxists. Which other innocent bystanders will
turn up on your commie hit list, Glenn? Who will you attack next with
McCarthy-style abandon in the name of bilking your audience, Glenn? And
do you honestly expect that your audience will remain passive observers
of all of this?
And so I intend to expose Beck as the dangerous grifter he really is.
He's committing a nationally televised fraud and, given the sorts of
people who are the most susceptible to his trickery, it's only a matter
of time before Beck's deception takes a tragic turn.
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