So ...
What did Dirty Harry give us?
Politically Incorrect Truth in a most humorous way that only he could deliver.
• Obama’s presidency
is like an empty chair.
• Obama’s not helping. It’s time for someone with better solutions.
• He made so many
promises. How does he answer people for them?
What did Dirty Harry give us?
Politically Incorrect Truth in a most humorous way that only he could deliver.
• Obama’s presidency
is like an empty chair.
• His ascension was
a sort of celebrity-whipped party,
presided over by a crying Oprah.
presided over by a crying Oprah.
• Our tears really
should instead be shed for the 23 million
unemployed Americans who the president refuses to acknowledge.
unemployed Americans who the president refuses to acknowledge.
• Obama’s not helping. It’s time for someone with better solutions.
Clint Still Has the Guts that Punks Lack
Bizarre deviations from the script are cool! Just ask Clint Eastwood.
Old, new, and social media are abuzz deconstructing
Eastwood’s performance at the Republican Convention.
Brilliant? Senile? Disastrous?
The right answer is it was a triumph, a gutsy one. In
immediate impact, substance, lingering effect, and the personal risk of the
messenger, it was a unique accomplishment that has already added a new meme to
the campaign:
The Empty Chair.
The Empty Chair.
Let’s dispense with the spin that it was a painful moment
where an aging icon lost his way and drooled on television. Yeah, no.
The president of the United States does not roust himself at
11:30 pm to tweet snappy rebuttals to pathetic, little embarrassments. Nor does
the national media go bonkers, with thousands of articles and blog
posts--dozens just between the Washington Post and the New York Times.
Eastwood’s skewering so vexed the president and his media
guard that they couldn’t decide whether to squeal like pigs or pretend to mourn
a fading star.
Watch the master actor and director again carefully ...
the bumbling old guy with the wrinkled suit and his wind blown hair
was the perfect guy to FINALLY be talking straight to the Empty Chair ...
and we can be certain that Obama heard every word.
Watch the master actor and director again carefully ...
the bumbling old guy with the wrinkled suit and his wind blown hair
was the perfect guy to FINALLY be talking straight to the Empty Chair ...
and we can be certain that Obama heard every word.
In 11 captivating and unpredictable minutes, in addition to the points above, Eastwood’s skit injected these themes into popular consciousness:
• Obama’s
unseriousness on security is evident in things like proposing to try terrorists
in civilian court in New York City; announcing in advance the withdraw safe
date for the Afghan jihadis who are waiting us out; and pandering to Russia in
charting our plans.
• Democrat
“intellect” Joe Biden is a grinning buffoon.
• The contrast is
stark between Obama’s lofty pronouncements, and his high-carbon, jet-setting,
campus-pandering, campaigning style of “governing.”
• The empty chair’s
protests telling Clint to shut up, and telling him and Romney respectively to
do physically impossible things to themselves were funny rebukes to the
“likeable” picture of Obama the media protects like the Mona Lisa. He’s not
nice. He’s a Chicago pol with Nixon’s list and Madame DeFarge’s scarf.
Clint painted that humorously and with more candor than any
reporter has in four years. With the reminder that Obama’s attack ads show he’s
not such a nice guy, this was a naked-emperor moment that might break through.
Eastwood’s simple conclusion spoke plainly: This is a great
country. The people are in charge. Politicians are our employees. He’s not
doing the job. We gotta let him go, not hang onto him for sentimental reasons.
Ask any politico or speech writer to stuff that into 11
minutes and you’ll get a stiff political speech. Eastwood delivered it as if
over the dinner table. Instant reaction
suggested it must have been ad-libbed. No way. There were too many funny punch
lines that drew political blood. They were carefully developed.
Pundits suggest Clint was halting and lost his way. Maybe.
But every time it seemed like that, he’d sharpen up and put a knife in Obama’s
soft spots. If he was doddering, he chose his lucid moments shrewdly.
It was a non-speech for an unpolitical audience. It was
aimed past the delegates, into living rooms, and probably beyond, at social
media and YouTube where it’s getting millions of views. For a generation that
boasts of ignoring politics and getting news from the Daily Show, that’s a good
thing.
Some say the skit distracted from Romney. But those tuned in
still got Romney’s speech and message. It’s more likely that Eastwood brought
many additional eyes to the campaign, that night, and still as the online hits
tally up.
Besides, Romney was likely to get a modicum of coverage, and
a planned counter punch, in the same vein as the media’s instant, dishonest
Ryan-lied meme. If the attacks that would have rained down on Romney were
diverted to an icon’s endorsement of Romney, that’s a plus.
About that stammering, strolling delivery. Was it an act to draw us in and provoke the
buzz that resulted, or was it the unvarnished Eastwood at 82? If the former,
Clint is laughing. If the latter, he’s probably still laughing. But others
ought to slump in shame.
How dare someone like Roger Ebert, whose own struggles and
appearance remind us life deals hard chapters to anyone, tell Clint Eastwood he
should stay quiet? That’s not how he’d react to Kirk Douglas’s thick-tongued
Academy valedictory.
I’m sure Eastwood doesn’t care. He either played exactly the
role he wanted, or he just laid it out as he is. Either way, he was there to
tell America we need more and better. Romney is the choice to change our
direction.
He succeeded famously.
Judge for yourself.
Shawn Mitchell Townhall.com 9/3/2003
Shawn Mitchell Townhall.com 9/3/2003
I didn't see it live, but it must have been good for there to have been such a lashing out by the Progressives. What I did see in clips was just fine. Please notice that his truths were not refuted, just his delivery was derided.
ReplyDeleteExactly ... truths were not refuted. I am convinced that this most accomplished actor and director mad no mistakes in his delivery but rather planned his words and delivery carefully ... very carefully.
ReplyDeleteHe was speaking directly to the president after all.
The truth could not have been delivered any more cleverly.