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RIGHT READ Michael Medved engages and explains.
National Review Online ^ | February 9, 2005 | Tevi Troy

Posted on 02/09/2005 1:20:20 PM PST by beaversmom

Every week, more than two million Americans tune in to The Michael Medved Show to hear Medved's thoughts on politics and entertainment. On the show, Medved taps his varied experiences as a liberal political operative, advertising executive, screenwriter, movie critic, synagogue president, and nine-time author to entertain and educate his radio listeners. Right Turns: Unconventional Lessons from a Controversial Life tells Medved's story of his political and religious journeys from left to right, as well as his quest for authenticity and his growing appreciation for America's core traditional values of family, prayer, and self-reliance.

Right Turns is divided into simple lessons, with each chapter mirroring a lesson from a specific moment in Medved's life that went on to shape his current philosophical outlook. Each chapter's lesson is summarized in the chapter title, and then repeated in the chapter's closing paragraph for good measure.

The story begins with "America Isn't Normal," in which Medved describes how his family came to understand that poverty and disease were not the endemic problems in America that they were in early 20th-century Europe. For the Medved family, America was a beacon of promise and opportunity in a bitter world. Medved's grandparents, Jewish immigrants from the Ukraine, had struggled for ten years to unite in America. During that time of separation, the couple lost five of their six children.

Medved went to Yale in 1965, and after graduation continued on at the law school, although he never finished his degree. While at Yale, he met future political stars like Hillary and Bill Clinton, and John Kerry. Medved's tale of his one meeting with the young John Kerry paints a devastating portrait of the perils of ambition: "[Kerry] droned on in portentous tones and at appalling length about the way the Liberal Party and the [Yale Political Union] would enrich our lives and the possibility — nay, the virtual certainty — that if we worked with single-minded intensity we might one day rise to the unspeakably glorious heights of party chairmanship and union-wide office that he, the Great Kerry, had achieved." Afterwards, Medved and a classmate would recite a mantra of authenticity that echoed in the background of future life decisions: "We can't turn out like John Kerry."

Medved's staunch opposition to the Vietnam War led him to pour heart and soul into Robert Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign. After Kennedy's assassination, Medved continued to sweat and toil for liberal candidates, but his quest for authenticity exposed a growing gap between rhetoric and reality, ideology and integrity.

The Kennedy campaign may have been a labor of love for Medved, but he was a reluctant warrior for the McGovern campaign. Medved was uncomfortable with McGovern's neo-isolationism and lukewarm support for Israel, but he joined because of his personal associations with the McGovernites, as well as McGovern's opposition to the Vietnam War. Like millions of Americans, Vietnam was the issue that linked Medved to the left. Once that issue receded, Medved becamereceptive to conservative ideas as he became increasingly uncomfortable with what he saw as the excesses of radical liberalism.

For Medved, the first conscious breaking point was the realization that "Liberal Heroes Aren't All Heroes." In 1972, he signed on as campaign manager for Ron Dellums, the fiery African-American congressman from Berkeley California. Medved quickly soured on Dellums and his associates, who acted as though the rule of law, personal ethics, and high standards did not apply to them. Dellums's people, in turn, viewed Medved as a token Jew — a gambit to attract suburban Jewish voters. The Dellums staff, Medved claims, also used drugs excessively and flamboyantly, and suspiciously ran the campaign as an all-cash operation. Medved felt that the Dellums operation abused white sympathy for African Americans both to obtain power and to avoid responsibility.

As he lost interest in liberal politics, Medved went into book writing, and found he had a knack not just for writing books, but for selling them as well. Medved's Whatever Happened to the Class of '65, a review of his high-school classmates ten years later, became a bestseller, as did his The Fifty Worst Films of All Time. The film book turned out to be the key development in Medved's career, ultimately leading to his becoming a film critic.

When The Tonight Show invited the Sabbath-observant Medved to discuss his awful movies, he had to beg off because it was scheduled for the night of the second Passover Seder. The producer suggested an alternate date, but that date was on the last days of Passover, which also precluded participation. At this point, the disbelieving producer said that there would be no more alternative dates.

Desperate, Medved read the producer the biblical passage forbidding work at the end of Passover, and the producer relented. Medved's eventual appearance was viewed by another producer, of Sneak Previews, who offered Medved a spot on the show. Of course, the episode on which Medved appeared was the only time that year the Sneak Previews producer had watched The Tonight Show, making this the 20th-century equivalent of a Hasidic tale, where strict observance begets material success.

Medved's work on "The Tonight Show," among other places, led to his becoming a television film critic. In that capacity, he both gained exposure and also became known as a conservative analyst of films, both of which led to his current incarnation as a conservative radio host.

Medved's description of his travels from the Left to the Right is one that many people can identify with — and which may describe his radio and book-selling popularity. As Medved describes it, his transformation was based on "a belated awakening to economic realities, the embrace of the traditional family, and America's ongoing and underreported religious revival." Or, more concisely and alliteratively, "our experiences with paychecks, parenthood, and prayer." On its own, Right Turns is an engaging memoir and a moving tribute to America. But it is also a very accessible road map for explaining the practical reasons old radicals often become older conservatives.

— Tevi Troy is a former special assistant to President George W. Bush and the author of Intellectuals and the American Presidency.


TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: besttalkshowhost; medved; michaelmedved; rightturns

1 posted on 02/09/2005 1:20:21 PM PST by beaversmom
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To: KevinDavis; EveningStar; miss marmelstein; latina4dubya; BradyLS
Michael Medved Ping.

Anyone who would like to be on the Michael Medved Ping list, please send me an e-mail.

2 posted on 02/09/2005 1:21:10 PM PST by beaversmom (The greatness of a man is measured by the fatness of his wife)
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To: beaversmom

Nice post!

Michael Medved and I travelled a very similar path, although his was and is far more distinguished than mine. We both came to see the blatant hypocrisy and cynicism of the Left from the inside. It took me a few more years (and Ronald Reagan) to put it all together.

I always enjoy watching, reading, and/or listening to conservative commentators, but those who have shifted from the Left give me the greatest pleasure. I guess that it is sort of self-affirming, since in my profession (psychologist), the Left (hard and soft) clearly rules.


3 posted on 02/09/2005 1:28:28 PM PST by neocon1984 (end the idiocy of post-modernism)
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To: neocon1984

agree completely. Speaking of liberal psychologists, quick story. I got an e-mail (over the tax-payer supported email system) from a fellow psychologist supervisior which was sent to all psychologists decrying the new Bush budget "slashing medical care for the needy" and linked to an article from the "World Socialist Center" which nobody else seemed to think may be biased. This follows a day long pile on email back and forth about the injustice of the death penalty. Of course when I contributed that since life was so important maybe we should work to end partial birth abortion also I was not greeted fondly. I've given up trying.


4 posted on 02/09/2005 1:40:53 PM PST by Dr Snide (vis pacem, para bellum - Prepare for war if you want peace)
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To: beaversmom

Thank you. I'm listening to Michael right now and I heard him read this review earlier. :)


5 posted on 02/09/2005 1:50:46 PM PST by EveningStar
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To: EveningStar

Your welcome--I missed his first hour today.


6 posted on 02/09/2005 2:43:35 PM PST by beaversmom (The greatness of a man is measured by the fatness of his wife)
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To: EveningStar; All

The thing I like about Michael Medved is that he lets the guest that comes on the air make total fools out of themselves. He just calmly asks a question and just try to make sure the guest stays on the topic and don't go on a rant.


7 posted on 02/09/2005 6:54:11 PM PST by KevinDavis (Let the meek inherit the Earth, the rest of us will explore the stars!)
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To: KevinDavis

I know. He's great.


8 posted on 02/09/2005 8:26:53 PM PST by EveningStar
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