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IssuesKilmeade reported SNL 's Lorne Michaels has "maxed out on" contributions to Obama, but not Michaels' history of contributions to McCain
During the September 22 edition of Fox
News' Fox & Friends,
co-host Brian Kilmeade asserted that NBC Saturday
Night Live alum and Minnesota Democratic senatorial candidate Al
Franken and Saturday Night Live
executive producer Lorne Michaels have "both maxed out on their
contributions to Barack Obama," ignoring Michaels' contributions to
Sen. John McCain's campaign, including $2,300 in 2007. According to Federal Election Commission filings,
Michaels has given at least $5,300 to McCain and his Straight Talk America
Political Action Committee since 2000.
By contrast, Jonathan Martin and Josh
Kraushaar reported in a September 20 Politico
article that
"Michaels has also been a longtime supporter of Sen. John McCain's
various political campaigns, donating $1,000 to him in the 2000 presidential
primaries, $1,000 to his 2004 Senate reelection bid, a similar sum to his
Straight Talk America PAC in 2006 and the maximum $2,300 to his presidential
campaign this year." They added: "When
asked about his support for McCain last week by Politico, Michaels said he has
also donated to Obama, although that donation has not been listed on the most
recent available donor statements."
From the September 22 edition of Fox
News' Fox & Friends:
KILMEADE:
Al Franken was busy: Not only is he running for Senate in Minnesota, he also had to phone in a sketch
to Lorne Michaels. Both have one thing in common. They've been friends
for 30 years -- I guess two things in common -- and they've both maxed
out on their contributions to Barack Obama. And I guess that sketch that they
phoned in kind of played into that.
GRETCHEN
CARLSON (co-host): Well, and apparently, it was the sketch about John McCain,
and it wasn't a positive one for him. Let's listen.
NARRATOR:
(video clip): Barack Obama plays basketball. Charles Barkley plays basketball.
Is Charles Barkley qualified to lead our economy? He gambled millions away in Las Vegas. Don't let
Barack Obama gamble with our economy. No way, no how, no Charack
O'Barkley.
STEVE
DOOCY (co-host): OK, so, it is extraordinary. And you know we've talked
extensively on this program about how NBC does appear to be in the tank for
Barack Obama. So, there they have --
KILMEADE:
It's unbelievable.
DOOCY:
-- they've got this hit job on John McCain, written by Al Franken, who is
running for Senate in the state of Minnesota,
not as a Republican. It is extraordinary. I was reading some of the blog
comments. How could this possibly be legal?
CARLSON:
Well, it doesn't -- this does not --
DOOCY:
One candidate for --
KILMEADE:
It's comedy.
DOOCY:
-- for federal office essentially orchestrating talking points on a grand scale
against another federal office.
CARLSON:
Well the onus falls on NBC for this.
DOOCY:
Yes.
CARLSON:
Because this helps Al Franken with his constituents who are going to vote for
him, because they're attacking McCain as well. But this -- the onus falls
on NBC for doing this. And the proof was in the pudding when they first denied
it.
KILMEADE:
The onus is on me because I get the pundit pit next.
Published: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 19:08:30 GMT - Source: Mediamatters.Org - Read the articleNorth AmericaDean Barkley, Franken Win In Minnesota Party Primaries (AHN)
(AHN) - Former 'Saturday Night Live' writer Al Franken trounced six other Democrats to become the official candidate of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party to challenge Sen. Norm Coleman in November. - Wed, 10 Sep 2008 07:46:54 GMT
Published: Wed, 10 Sep 2008 17:15:52 GMT - Source: Allheadlinenews.Com - Read the articleIssuesBlasting Franken's "vulgarity," Wash. Post 's Gerson touted McCain's "civility," ignoring McCain's "vulgarity" and tolerance of it
In a June 18 Washington
Post column, citing
writings and jokes that are years and even decades old, Michael
Gerson criticized comedian and Minnesota
Democratic senatorial candidate Al Franken for what he called
Franken's "offensive
vulgarity." Gerson wrote: "The objects of Franken's humor --
including political opponents and women -- are not merely mocked but
dehumanized. His trashiness is also nastiness." Gerson later added,
"At its best, politics can offer examples of civility and generosity that
challenge selfishness and prejudice -- the tradition so far embraced by both
John McCain and Barack Obama. At the very least, politics should not actively
push our culture toward vulgarity and viciousness. This is not prudery; it is a
practical concern for the cooperation and mutual respect necessary in a
functioning democracy. And it is hard to believe those causes would be served
by a Sen. Franken." However, in citing McCain as an "example[] of
civility and generosity that challenge selfishness and prejudice," Gerson
ignored McCain's previous personal attacks on Sen. Hillary Clinton, including
an appearance at a 1998 Republican fundraiser where McCain reportedly made what New York Times
columnist Maureen Dowd called a
"disgusting jape": "Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly? Because her
father is Janet Reno." (He
reportedly later apologized to President Bill Clinton.)
Media Matters for America has documented that McCain tolerated
an attack
on Hillary Clinton as well as took a "swipe" at her during the
presidential campaign. During a November 2007 campaign event in South Carolina, when a
questioner asked McCain, "How do we beat the bitch?" -- presumably
referring to Hillary Clinton -- McCain responded that it was an "excellent
question" and then pointed to a Rasmussen poll that he said showed him
beating Clinton in a head-to-head matchup before saying, "I respect
Senator Clinton." Additionally, an October 18, 2007, Associated Press article reported
that while campaigning in South
Carolina, McCain "couldn't resist a swipe at
Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton." The article noted that
during an appearance at the University
of South Carolina Upstate
nursing school, "McCain took one look at a ... training mannequin and asked if the
dummy's name was Hillary." The article quoted McCain as saying, "I
was very glad to meet the dummy, named 'Hillary.' "
McCain's campaign has also been linked to personal
attacks against Clinton,
as Media Matters has noted. Before joining the campaign in early June, McCain's deputy
communications director,
Michael Goldfarb,
regularly engaged in the kind of personal smears that McCain has denounced. In his prior capacity as
online editor of The
Weekly Standard, from which he is on leave, Goldfarb
described Clinton as a "shameless panderer" who "lie[s]"
"more than most" politicians and mustered "faux outrage"
that came off as "pathetic whining" about her treatment from the
media. Goldfarb said of Clinton's "3
a.m." ad about the economy: "[D]oes anyone think Clinton wouldn't bite off the heads of at
least three staffers if her much needed beauty sleep was disturbed by a middle
of the night phone call about the economy?"
From Gerson's
June 18 Washington Post column:
In the razor-close and nationally
important Senate race in Minnesota,
Republican incumbent Norm Coleman is presented with a unique political problem.
Should he raise in his ads the issue of comedian Al Franken's offensive
vulgarity? Or would this risk a backlash against Coleman for coarsening the
public conversation? Remember that when Ken Starr detailed Bill Clinton's most
repulsive antics -- stained dresses and such -- it was Starr who was accused of
sexual obsessiveness.
[...]
"Porn-O-Rama!" is a modern
campaign document every voter should read -- the Federalist Papers of lifestyle
liberalism. It has the literary sensibilities and moral seriousness of an
awkward adolescent nerd publishing an underground newspaper to shock his way
into campus popularity. But, in this case, the article was written in 2000 by a
48-year-old man.
Franken's "brand name"
includes other highlights. In 2006, after a long monologue about a dog and its
vomit, Franken impersonated the deceased Sen. Strom Thurmond as saying: "Yeah,
I screwed a woman who was vomiting once." He once proposed a television
sketch about a female CBS reporter being drugged and raped. He has suggested
that his next book title might be "I F -- -- -- Hate Those Right-Wing
Motherf -- -- -- !" At an event hosted by the Feminist Majority Foundation
in 1999, Franken offered this thigh-slapper: "Why don't we focus on what
Afghan women can do? They can cook, bear children and pray. As I recall, that
was fine for our grandmothers."
Our popular culture, of course,
violates even these expansive boundaries of tastelessness with regularity. We
laugh at comedies featuring the C-word and at cartoons of foul-mouthed
third-graders. In the cause of relevance and realism, our common life is
already decorated with excrement. Why should political discourse be any
different?
For at least one reason: Because
vulgarity is often the opposite of civility. This is not, of course, always
true. I know a brilliant and large-hearted academic with roots in south Philly who
uses the F-word with the frequency of "like" or "and." But
the vulgarity of "The Jerry Springer Show" or misogynous rap music --
the cultural equivalents of Franken's political "satire" -- generally
expresses contempt and cruelty. Franken is not content to disagree with Karl
Rove; he calls him "human filth." He is not satisfied to criticize
Ari Fleischer; Franken terms him a "chimp." The objects of Franken's
humor -- including political opponents and women -- are not merely mocked but
dehumanized. His trashiness is also nastiness. Rather than lampooning the
emptiness and viciousness of our political discourse -- a proper role for
satire -- Franken has powerfully reinforced those failures.
Some institutions must be more than
a mirror to our culture, including families, religious communities and
government. At its best, politics can offer examples of civility and generosity
that challenge selfishness and prejudice -- the tradition so far embraced by
both John McCain and Barack Obama. At the very least, politics should not
actively push our culture toward vulgarity and viciousness. This is not
prudery; it is a practical concern for the cooperation and mutual respect
necessary in a functioning democracy. And it is hard to believe those causes
would be served by a Sen. Franken.
Published: Fri, 20 Jun 2008 01:01:36 GMT - Source: Mediamatters.Org - Read the article
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