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Editorial Note:  YIPPPPEEEEE!!!!!
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From: "Grist" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 26 Feb 2007 10:13:38 PST

Martin Who?
An Inconvenient Truth wins Oscars,
Al Gore wins affection

Rock star. Superhero. Visionary. That pre-Oscar hype paled next to last
night's event, which saw Al Gore -- looking blissfully bloated in a Ralph
Lauren tux -- take home an award for Best Documentary Feature and Best
Original Song. OK, technically the Goracle himself didn't win either of the
statuettes for An Inconvenient Truth, but you wouldn't know it from the
on-stage spectacle. "All of us who made this film ... did so because we were
moved to act by this man," said Truth director Davis Guggenheim, before
handing his Oscar to Gore, who called on the people of the world to solve
the climate crisis. Later, singer Melissa Etheridge licked Dreamgirls, then
praised Gore "for showing that caring about the earth is not ... red or
blue. We are all green." Gore had also spent an earlier moment in the sun
when he and Leonardo DiCaprio waltzed onstage to announce that the Oscars
had officially gone green, then spoofed the will-he-or-won't-he political
swirl. He won't. But maybe he should.

straight to the source: Reuters
<http://lists.grist.org/t?r=2&ctl=296C:665ED9E2FFB0BA9FCC575D52BA11E5A8> ,
Steve Gorman, 26 Feb 2007

straight to the source: Yahoo!News
<http://lists.grist.org/t?r=2&ctl=296E:665ED9E2FFB0BA9FCC575D52BA11E5A8> ,
Reuters, Mary Milliken, 26 Feb 2007

see also, in Gristmill: Gore's acceptance speech
<http://lists.grist.org/t?r=2&ctl=2945:665ED9E2FFB0BA9FCC575D52BA11E5A8>

see also, in Gristmill: Carbon offsets replace Oscar gift bags
<http://lists.grist.org/t?r=2&ctl=2943:665ED9E2FFB0BA9FCC575D52BA11E5A8>


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>
Source/Letters:  Washington Post <letters @ washingtonpost.com>  (close
spaces)
Link:  
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/24/AR200702240
1586.html>
 
Al Gore, Rock Star
Oscar Hopeful May Be America's
Coolest Ex-Vice President Ever

By William Booth
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, February 25, 2007; Page A01

Al Gore and Queen Latifah presented at the Grammys on Feb. 11. (By Kevin
Winter -- Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES -- In the annals of vice presidential history, tonight will be
something different. In his black tux, the man known to his most fervent
fans as "The Goracle" will arrive by hybrid eco-limo and, surrounded by
fellow Hollywood greenies Cameron Diaz and Leonardo DiCaprio, will stroll
down the red carpet at the Academy Awards to answer the immortal question:
"Al, who are you wearing?"

What a year it has been for Al Gore and his little indie film.

"An Inconvenient Truth," the 100-minute movie that is essentially Gore
giving a slide show about global warming, is the third-highest-grossing
documentary ever, with a worldwide box office of $45 million, right behind
blockbusters "Fahrenheit 9/11" and "March of the Penguins."

"AIT," as Team Gore calls it, is also the hot pick tonight for Best
Documentary, and if its director, Davis Guggenheim, wins an Oscar, he plans
to bring Gore along with him to the stage to accept the golden statuette and
perhaps say a few words about . . . interstitial glacial melting? (More
likely, Gore will deliver a favorite line about "political will being a
renewable resource.")

In the year since his film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, to a
standing ovation, Gore has gone from failed presidential contender -- and a
politician who at times gave new meaning to the word cardboard -- to the
most unlikely of global celebrities.

Incredible as it may seem, Al Gore is not only totally carbon neutral, but
geek-chic cool. No velvet rope can stop him. He rolls with Diddy. He is on
first-name basis, for real, with Ludacris. But what does this mean? And how
did it happen? Did Gore change? Or did the climate -- political, cultural,
natural -- change around him?

In an e-mail exchange with The Goracle himself, "AG" typed to The Washington
Post that the Oscar craziness and pageantry of the film premieres has been
fun (his word) "but I'm old enough to know that a red carpet is just a rug,
so I've been able to enjoy that part of it without losing perspective."

Just a rug, people. Because, Gore continued (this was on Friday during a
break from his tux fitting): "Actually, for me, the most moving moments have
been in conversations with people who have told me that the movie had a big
impact on the way they think and feel about our moral responsibility to
protect the Earth."

"He is more popular now than he ever was in office, and he knows it," says
Laurie David, one of the producers of "Inconvenient Truth" and a Hollywood
environmental activist (and wife of "Seinfeld" co-creator Larry David) who
has traveled around the world promoting the film with Gore. "He's a
superhero now."

Before the film? He was more Willy Loman than Green Avenger. After his loss
in 2000, a battered Gore began to schlep around the country, often solo,
flying coach, giving his ever-evolving slide show about climate change, a
threat that Gore, now 58, says he has felt strongly about since his Harvard
days.

After the film? Says director Guggenheim, "Everywhere I go with him, they
treat him like a rock star."

Guggenheim is not being hyperbolic. Take the Cannes Film Festival: Al Gore
was mobbed. By French people. He was a presenter at the Grammy Awards,
alongside Queen Latifah, where he got one of the biggest welcomes of the
night. "Wow. . . . I think they love you, man. You hear that?" the current
Queen asked the former veep. Earlier this month, the ticket Web site at the
University of Toronto crashed when 23,000 people signed on in three minutes
to get a seat to hear Gore do his thing on the oceanic carbon cycle. At
Boise State, Gore and his slide show sold out 10,000 seats at the Taco Bell
Arena, reportedly "faster than Elton John."
CONTINUED     1    2    Next >

Remember that this is the same Al Gore who even today interrupts himself to
explain that while he supports the use of ethanol to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, please, he is not talking about regular ethanol; he is talking
about "cellulosic ethanol" (made from wood chips rather than cornstarch).

Also remember that "An Inconvenient Truth" was not on anybody's short list
for theatrical release, let alone an Oscar. "I think I was the only person
crazy enough to want it," says John Lesher, president of Paramount Vantage,
which purchased the film at Sundance. "Everybody else had already passed on
it, to be honest, but I thought if we do our job right, this could be a
zeitgeist moment."

The film distributor's greatest challenge? "To convince people that it
wasn't going to be boring," he says. "We didn't want to sell spinach." His
greatest asset? "Al Gore. There was no hiding him."

Lesher explains that, from a marketing and branding perspective, Gore was
lugging some very heavy baggage. "Democrats felt disappointed in him, and
Republicans didn't like him," he says. "But it worked." How come? What comes
through in the film, Lesher says, "is here is this person who has gone
through this incredible adversity" -- Florida recount, Supreme Court
decision, bye-bye White House -- "and this is what he decides to do," the
one-man slide show, "and so you see this massive integrity."

And nobody worked for the film harder than Al Gore, Lesher says: "He was an
amazing collaborator, and unlike everyone else in Hollywood, he did
everything he said he would do, which is unique in my experience."

Gore worked the premieres in Edinburgh, Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm, Sydney,
Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Zurich, Brussels, Berlin and Tokyo. In France, he not
only attended the film opening, but presented his 90-minute Apple Keynote
lecture to the National Assembly. He did the slide show at the United
Nations, the American Geophysical Union, and before conservative activist
Grover Norquist's regular Wednesday meeting.

"I am trying to reach out to people in every effective way that I can find,"
Gore wrote in his e-mail. "In the process, I have had the chance to work
with really interesting people from all walks of life." Meaning: eggheads
and rappers, movie moguls and prime ministers, and, recently, Bon Jovi. "So,
pop culture is an important part of the message delivery system, but far
from the only part."

Gore's book, based on the film, has sold 850,000 copies worldwide and
translation rights for 24 languages. In Spain, Prime Minister Jose Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero told Gore that the DVDs of the film would be shown in the
public schools, following similar proclamations in Scotland and Norway. And
speaking of Norway, earlier this month Gore was nominated for a Nobel Peace
Prize for his work to alert the world to the dangers of climate change.

"People ask him all the time what does he attribute his recent success to
and Gore tells them 'reality,' " says Larry Schweiger, a friend and
president of the National Wildlife Federation, who is a leader of Gore's
Alliance for Climate Protection, a foundation that seeks to bring
evangelicals, hunters, farmers and entrepreneurs to the cause. "They used to
ridicule him. They called him a tree-hugger. They don't do that anymore."

Guggenheim explains: "People say to me that Al Gore is so different now. Why
wasn't he like this when he ran for president?" Meaning that Gore now
appears relaxed, confident, happy, and not stiff, robotic, pinched. "They
say Al has changed. But I don't think so. We've changed. The setting has
changed. He's the same. When you're running for office, you're a target
every moment you are in front of the camera. Now, he's in a different place
and we see him in a different way."

There might be something to this. Earlier this month in Los Angeles,
accompanied by booming house techno bass beat, Gore announced his plan for a
global "Live Earth" day of mega-concerts this summer, to be held
simultaneously on all seven continents, with 100 of the world's most popular
musical acts -- Snoop Dogg, Kelly Clarkson, Bon Jovi, Korn -- to promote
awareness about climate change. Gore was surrounded by a grinning Cameron
Diaz (she hugged him) and a nodding Pharrell Williams, the rap-producing
impresario, and though Gore perhaps went on for a few paragraphs too long
about how many tons of carbon a day are entering the oceans, the riser of
international press and paparazzi were clearly gorging on the glamorama.
Gore was his usual earnest self. A nerd? Maybe, but he was the nerd with
Cameron and Pharrell, talking about the carbon cycle and the Red Hot Chili
Peppers. It was the mixology -- high-wattage celebrity and energy-efficient
light bulbs -- that helps the medicine go down.

"Is being president better than this?" muses Simon Rosenberg, head of the
New Democratic Network. "I think what Gore's figured out how to do is
something that a lot of people want to do. He's living a life of great
freedom and pursuing his interests, and he's having an impact on public
policy. He's been able to start a bunch of companies and do the movie and
he's got this great life right now."

"I agree" Gore typed, "that the Zeitgeist has begun to change. I think it
reflects the increased popular will to confront and solve this crisis. It's
an extraordinary experience to see this issue -- which the conventional
wisdom used to say was politically marginal -- become central for so many
people. As it should. I also think that people see candidates through a
different lens, and that is a factor. But I also think there is at least a
grain of truth to the old cliche that 'what doesn't kill you makes you
stronger.' So maybe I've gotten a little stronger in the last six or seven
years."

Gore is escaping the fate of most former politicians, says Matt Bennett, a
consultant for Democrats who worked closely with Gore during his vice
presidency. "Usually defeated -- or allegedly defeated -- party nominees
become pariahs. Look at Mike Dukakis or John Kerry. Or they just go out to
pasture like Bob Dole. Gore has pulled off a feat unknown in modern times,
which is to completely rehabilitate his image in the public mind very
quickly."

Bennett credits savvy handling by people around Gore, including the
documentary-makers. And he says the world is catching up with Gore. "Look,
this guy was a visionary. He was right about everything, even the stuff he
was ridiculed for," Bennett says. "He was right about the Internet, he was
right about the first Gulf War, he was sure as hell right about the Iraq
war. And he was right about global warming."

At the "Live Earth" press conference, Gore once again affirmed that he is
not planning to enter the 2008 presidential fray, though this has not
stopped the lefty blogosphere from imagining the jaw-dropping holy cow if
The Goracle announces his run on Oscar night. That, say Gore's most intimate
insiders, is most definitely not going to happen.

As for whom Gore will be wearing, his people reveal: It'll be Ralph Lauren.

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Al Gore and Queen Latifah presented at the Grammys on Feb. 11. (By Kevin
Winter -- Getty Images) 

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