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Confusing TV With Reality: NYT TV Writer Thinks Thompson is His TV Character
NewsBusters.org ^ | 6/2/07 | Warner Todd Huston

Posted on 06/02/2007 6:53:24 AM PDT by Mobile Vulgus

Confusing TV With Reality: NYT TV Writer Thinks Thompson is His TV Character

Proving that few people in the entertainment industry can tell the difference between reality and fantasy and in a perfect example of why people who write about entertainment should stay away from the topic of politics, The New York Times today has let lose one of the silliest, most confused political "editorials" yet published about Senator Fred Thompson's possible run for the White House. Fitting the he's-only-an-actor mode of considering his potential candidacy, TV writer Alessandra Stanley compounds a prosaic dismissal of the man with a complete inability to keep straight in her head which Fred Thompson she is talking about; the REAL Senator from Tennessee or the character he plays on a popular TV show.

Let's just say that sagacity and trenchant analysis is not in the offing in Stanley's "In Casting for President, Will Actor Rate a Callback?", where this TV writer jarringly fades from real life Thompson to the character he plays on TV's "Law and Order" repeatedly confusing the "lives" of the two then making assessments based thereupon that seem to come out of thin air... or the rarefied air in Stanley's mind, in any case.

Naturally, it all starts with a shot at Ronald Reagan as Stanley recounts the oft repeated Jack Warner comment when Reagan announced his run for Governor of California in 1966. “Jimmy Stewart for governor,” he said. “Ronald Reagan for best friend.”

After brief bios of the real Senator and his TV character, Stanley begins an attempt at political analysis that lands with a thud.

"Maybe it’s only fair that Mr. Thompson rides on the coattails of a fictional prosecutor...", she says of a possible Thompson candidacy. What she bases this on is anyone's guess for Senator Thompson has made no such effort to equate his candidacy to his TV role and few supporters have clamored to vote for "DA Arthur Branch" to date.

Stanley next shows that she seriously misunderstands what it is that makes the initial, high money contributors to any candidate decide to flock to that candidate's banner.

Mr. Thompson’s fame as an actor -- and the popularity of the character he has played since he left the Senate in 2002 -- could compensate for his late entry into the money-raising race. But he won’t necessarily persuade voters that he should be in the Oval Office.
Now, it might be true that small donations might come from people who just like Thompson because of the TV character he plays, but high money contributors want and expect far more from a candidate than just a part-time TV gig. Ronald Reagan spent 20 years gearing up his run for the presidency, for instance, and spent many, many years garnering a contributor base all of whom gave to his campaign because of his ideas and abilities, not because they liked watching TVs "Wagon Train".

Amazingly, Stanley goes on to doubt that Americans will vote for Thompson because he had the temerity to leave the TV show on which he played a part in preparation to start his campaign for the Oval Office. She scoffs that Americans won't vote for him because Thompson has left the show when it is "struggling to survive." Here Stanley seems to be claiming that Thompson is some sort of traitor to the flailing TV show by leaving it at a time when the producers might need him and that this move might make people doubt his character.

Americans want their presidents to be loyal and steadfast. This week, Mr. Thompson said he asked Mr. Wolf to release him from his “Law & Order” contract — at a time when the 17-year-old series is struggling to survive. (Earlier this month, NBC came close to canceling it.)
Stanley imagines that Thompson is showing this lack of "loyalty" because he has left the show and that this will affect how people view him as a candidate. How Stanley imagines Americans will equate the TV show's troubles with a Thompson departure is anyone's guess. Few people follow the ins and outs of the behind the scenes machinations of the TV industry and those who do would blame the show's producers, writers and directors instead of Fred Thompson.

Her next sentence is telling, showing she cannot tell Thompson from the character Arthur Branch.

Women may harbor doubts about his character’s character. Arthur has a weakness for the young, tall, gorgeous prosecutors in his office and for mentoring them through their cases.
Huh? Are women too stupid to tell the difference between a TV character and a real man, Mz. Stanley?

She must think so.

Stanley next equates Thompson's character to former Reagan man Howard Baker's without much success. Stanley characterizes both Thompson and Baker as low-level bureaucrats and staff members. Perhaps the real reason she does so, though, is because, as Stanley recounts, Baker launched a failed bid for the presidency in 1980 and it seems that she wishes the same for Thompson. Her reasoning for likening the two is quixotic at best.

She also doubts Thompson's suitability to take the "leading man" role of the Presidency because he has had "supporting roles" on TV and in the movies as if those roles on film fully explain all we need to know about the man to rate his capacity to be president. Obviously Stanley thinks that we should rate our candidates by the roles a Hollywood casting director doles out to them.

Mr. Thompson may see himself as a commander in chief, but Hollywood has preferred to cast him as a senior White House aide or adviser. He played a White House chief of staff in the 1993 film “In the Line of Fire,” and the director of central intelligence in the 1987 thriller “No Way Out.” He wasn’t picked to play a president until 2005, in the HBO film “Last Best Chance,” which was more of a public-service film made with support from the Nuclear Threat Initiative and other foundations.
Wait.... didn't HBO just cast Fred Thompson as President Grant in the TV film "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" as well?

Anyway, if it's possible, Stanley's analysis gets even more confused as she indiscriminately interweaves Thompson's real life with that of the character he plays on "Law and Order." The crowning piece of absurdity in her piece is the last two paragraphs.

Once candidates declare, their pasts are scoured for personal, often embarrassing details. Mr. Thompson has not only his own bachelor days in Washington; voters may also hold him accountable for Arthur’s past.

That stately, Southern gentleman has a few peccadilloes of his own. On one episode, he confided to Jack that he once dressed up in a clown suit to serenade a girl who loved opera with snatches from Pagliacci. “She laughed, then she slammed the door in my face,” Arthur says ruefully. “My point is, guys do goofy things for girls whether they want them to or not.”

So, because a TV character tells a story where he once dressed up as a clown to impress a lady we are to somehow hold that against a real man running for office?

Shouldn't it be remembered that the man who won the Cold War, the man who helped spur the tearing down of the Berlin Wall, and the man responsible for the longest peace time economic boom in American history once played second fiddle to a monkey in a movie? Did THAT little bit of celluloid casting eliminate Ronald Reagan from being one of the most celebrated and able American presidents in our history?

Obviously film roles do not give us a full assessment of a man, not that Alessandra Stanley would know. For that matter, not that she would know much about politics, either.

I encourage Alessandra Stanley to stick to TV and the fantasy land it creates. Reality does not suit her at all. I'd also urge The New York Times to have better sense than to allow someone of Stanley's caliber to write so far out of her depth.

It really was cringeworthy and embarrassing to read.


TOPICS: Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: elections; fredthompson; newyorktimes
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This chick TV writer is a dolt!
1 posted on 06/02/2007 6:53:27 AM PDT by Mobile Vulgus
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To: Mobile Vulgus
Here Stanley seems to be claiming that Thompson is some sort of traitor to the flailing TV show by leaving it at a time when the producers might need him and that this move might make people doubt his character.

Think about it: McLean Stevenson never became President either.

2 posted on 06/02/2007 6:57:32 AM PDT by atomicpossum (Replies must follow approved guidelines or you will be kill-filed without appeal.)
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To: Mobile Vulgus

There are those out there that thought Geena Davis was President during that TV show about a year or so ago.

“All we like sheep have gone astray......”


3 posted on 06/02/2007 6:58:53 AM PDT by TheRobb7 (The welfare state needs a new customer base--ILLEGAL aliens!)
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To: TheRobb7

No suprising to me. MSM leaves in an alternate universe so they think the make believe is real.................


4 posted on 06/02/2007 7:00:45 AM PDT by patriotspride
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To: TheRobb7
There are those out there that thought Geena Davis was President during that TV show about a year or so ago.

That wasn't a TV show. It was a Hillary campaign commercial pretending to be a TV show.

5 posted on 06/02/2007 7:04:21 AM PDT by KarlInOhio (Parker v. DC: the best court decision of the year.)
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To: patriotspride
How many jokes about Bedtime for Bonzo did we have to put up with from 1980 onward?

If a Democrat candidate was an actor, the MSM would only confuse the characters with the real person on positive points, never the negative ones.

6 posted on 06/02/2007 7:07:43 AM PDT by KarlInOhio (Parker v. DC: the best court decision of the year.)
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To: Mobile Vulgus
Arthur has a weakness for the young, tall, gorgeous prosecutors in his office and for mentoring them through their cases.

i've never even noticed this about Arthur Branch... this sounds much more like Jack McCoy... this entire piece of writing is bizarre!

7 posted on 06/02/2007 7:08:07 AM PDT by latina4dubya
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To: KarlInOhio

You are absolutely correct.


8 posted on 06/02/2007 7:10:19 AM PDT by rep-always
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To: atomicpossum
Think about it: McLean Stevenson never became President either.

Of course not. Truman beat him.

I know, Adlai, not McLean. It just seemed to go with this thread.

9 posted on 06/02/2007 7:13:26 AM PDT by magslinger (Be wary of strong drink. It can make you shoot at tax collectors. And miss. R.A.Heinlein)
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To: magslinger
I know, Adlai, not McLean.

Did you know they were cousins?

10 posted on 06/02/2007 7:15:13 AM PDT by atomicpossum (Replies must follow approved guidelines or you will be kill-filed without appeal.)
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To: Mobile Vulgus

A former boss of mine worked for “Governor” Reagan. He loved “Ronnie” and always said “with Reagan, what you saw was what you got.” President Reagan was a genuinely nice man and a patriot. Reagan dearly loved this country. No matter what picture Liberals tried to paint of Reagan, which included ridiculing him as having been an actor, Reagan loved our country and our military. I don’t doubt that Thompson is also legitimate. The MSM is always in attack mode when it comes to conservatives. Liberal hatred for conservatives is only matched by our scorn for them.


11 posted on 06/02/2007 7:18:50 AM PDT by ExTexasRedhead
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To: atomicpossum
No, I didn't.

Not surprising, though.

12 posted on 06/02/2007 7:20:32 AM PDT by magslinger (Be wary of strong drink. It can make you shoot at tax collectors. And miss. R.A.Heinlein)
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To: Mobile Vulgus

Excellent analysis. This is what we want the MSM to print. They will try everything to get Hillary into the WH. These types of attacks will further distance them from the rest of the country and allow FT to win.


13 posted on 06/02/2007 7:22:57 AM PDT by Mere
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To: Mobile Vulgus
Bill O’Reilly has a long history with Mz. Stanley. Here are examples:

http://gawker.com/news/alessandra-stanley/the-alessandra-stanley-watch-tomorrows-corrections-today-part-2-133119.php

http://www.newshounds.us/2007/03/08/bill_oreilly_gets_no_respect_from_his_media_analysts.php

14 posted on 06/02/2007 7:26:26 AM PDT by ishabibble (ALL AMERICAN INFIDEL)
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To: Mobile Vulgus

Well, Frank Church was a lousy theater critic, so the NY Times made him a political columnist instead. Maybe they can do the same with Alessandra Stanley, likewise a lousy, biased critic.

Even the Times seems to realize that Church is, as someone once called him, an “attack poodle.” They only roll him out of the closet rarely now. So, now they want two attack poodles? Another step down into the sewer for Pinch.


15 posted on 06/02/2007 7:30:37 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Cicero

I think you mean Frank Rich.


16 posted on 06/02/2007 8:12:22 AM PDT by JennysCool ("The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." -Mencken)
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To: jellybean; carlo3b; girlangler; KoRn; Shortstop7; Lunatic Fringe; Darnright; babygene; pitbully; ...
PING!!

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(Please do not appropriate my graphics for use on FR. I would like them to remain unique. Thank you.)

17 posted on 06/02/2007 8:16:34 AM PDT by Politicalmom ("I can't remember exactly the point that I said, 'I'm going to run,' " Thompson said.)
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To: Mobile Vulgus

I just read another one analyzing “Arthur Branch’s” chances. And they really used the record of Arthur Branch!! I decided it was just too stupid to post on FR.


18 posted on 06/02/2007 8:17:48 AM PDT by Politicalmom ("I can't remember exactly the point that I said, 'I'm going to run,' " Thompson said.)
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To: Politicalmom

BTW - I do not think they or anyone actually thinks any actor is who they play, but the left wants to create this for Thompson.


19 posted on 06/02/2007 8:27:21 AM PDT by stockpirate (IF BUSH SIGNS THIS POS IMMIGRATION BILL, I WILL NOT VOTE REPUBLICAN AGAIN!)
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To: JennysCool

I do indeed. The poodle’s name didn’t sound right, I should have checked.


20 posted on 06/02/2007 8:29:19 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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