“It is a truth universally acknowledged,”
Jane Austen should have said, “that the easiest thing in the world is to start
a blog. The most difficult thing is to keep writing it.”
When I think about it, probably half the
sites on the web are blogs that have been started and abandoned, detailing thrilling
events from 2002. I myself rediscovered this yesterday. I was reminded of something
I had written on Facebook explaining why the film version of Dennis Potter’s “Pennies
from Heaven” is so awful, especially as compared to its brilliant television
version. (You can read it below, and yes, it’s more than “Steve Martin stars in
it.”) I didn’t want the post to molder in Facebook’s attic (I mean, I labored
to write more than 1400 words on the topic), so I went into the bowels of the
archive and rescued it.
I decided to put the post into the blog
I’d started just a while back (and abandoned, of course) and was astounded to
find I hadn’t done a damn thing with it since April. So here’s my resolution. I’m
going to write at least 100 words a day on topics of the day. It may be arts,
it may be sports, it may be politics, but dammit, I’m going to write.
To kick things off, I’m going to note
(as I did on Facebook) that, in spite of the “revelations” that Chris Christie
knew about the closing of the George Washington Bridge in real time, those “revelations”
(because did anyone think he didn’t know all along?) won’t do a damn thing to
derail his career. There is literally nothing a Republican or a right-wing
politician can do in this country that will harm his or her career. There used
to be a saying that the only thing that could harm a Southern politician would
be “waking up with a dead girl or a live boy,” but I don’t think even that
would apply nowadays. Just like I don’t think that Elia (“The Rat”) Kazan’s
film “A Face in the Crowd” would have any relevance if it were remade today. If
you haven’t seen it, you should. Andy Griffith gives a breathtaking performance
as a hick singer who, through the machinations of a number of people, ends up
on television and becomes a demagogue, pimping for his own reprehensible personal
causes. He meets his downfall when his producer (spurned in a love affair)
leaves his mic open, causing his real opinions about his public (that they’re a
bunch of easily-manipulated tools) to go out over the air. In a matter of
minutes, he’s ruined. If something like that were to happen now, though, the
media personality would claim he’d been misquoted, taken out of context, and
victimized by the liberal media, and business would continue as usual.
Regardless, despite the initial uproar
from the usual suspects, the other usual suspects will go on the Sunday morning
talk shows (and isn’t it luckily coincidental that this news breaks on Super
Bowl weekend, when no one is paying attention?), defend Christie, claim the
Democrats – especially Obama – do far worse (“Benghazi!”), go unchallenged by
the hosts (because that would be distastefully unseemly), and Christie will go
on, ruffled but unbroken. That he knew about the closings and lied about it won’t
matter. It never matters if you’re a Republican. I don’t think he’s going to be
the Party’s nominee in 2016 (like your humble correspondent, I think he’s too
much of a hothead), but he’ll never be out of the public spotlight.
Is this a big deal? Not really, other
than showing Christie to be a bully, but it’s not like we didn’t know that,
either. It points to his management style, but we knew that Cheney was a bully
and no one seemed to care about that. (To paraphrase Cheney’s own comment on
Reagan and deficits, Cheney proved that being a dick doesn’t matter.) I see it
yet another example of the media’s intense concentration on trivia at the
expense of greater matters. Who’s got time to worry about human rights
violations or Keystone XL or the TPP or the Koch brothers or the NSA monitoring
all our communications or Wall Street or anything else when there’s Chris
Christie and the bridge or Justin Bieber doing anything or “What Obama Thinks
About Richard Sherman.”
*Sigh*