http://www.alternet.org/story/36067/

Stephen Colbert: New American Hero

By Don Hazen, AlterNet. Posted May 9, 2006.

When Colbert turned up the heat on Washington's elite, he revealed 
the big split between those basking in power and those fighting for 
change.

Virtually overnight, Stephen Colbert became a hero to countless 
Americans, following his April 30 performance at the White House 
Correspondents' Association dinner.

Since then, millions of people have either watched the video or read 
the transcript of his skewering of both the president and the press 
corps, and have discussed it avidly. Tens of thousands of people have 
gone to the website ThankYouStephenColbert.com and written letters of 
appreciation. Talk about water-cooler chatter; the event crashed 
internet servers across the land. It truly was one of those moments 
of media shock and delight.

And then, an odd but revealing thing happened. Some of the chattering 
class commentators, mainstream media writers and columnists, and 
Democratic officials didn't get it: Not very funny, rude, not 
respectful of the president, and so on. Are they kidding? How could 
they not understand they were witnessing one of the bravest, most 
subversive performances in memory, which thrilled and gave hope to 
untold viewers and readers, and will be a huge marker when people 
look back on the Bush era?

Colbert's speech had a huge impact for two reasons: First, he spoke 
truth to power right to the face of the president, in front of the 
entire news media. No one could miss, sidestep or deny it. It wasn't 
a scene from a movie, book or talk show -- it was live. It reminded 
me of Edward R. Murrow's famous address to the Radio and Television 
News Directors Association (recently depicted in the film "Good Night 
and Good Luck"). It gave me goose bumps. Colbert's performance shamed 
every Democrat or columnist who has been too afraid, too timid, or 
just too worried about losing his or her own power and access to go 
out on a limb and tell the truth that this administration is a 
disaster beyond our wildest nightmares. Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Rove 
have gotten away with murder Š and worse. And many of the people in 
that room that night who squirmed in their seats -- it was in part 
because of the internal indictment they were feeling for not doing 
what they should have done, countless times, long before. Maybe now 
they will do the right thing, but I won't be holding my breath.

The second reason Colbert made such a huge splash is the rapid 
advance of video on the web. Almost overnight, the media world has 
irrevocably changed as video is increasingly becoming as important as 
print and still images on the web. When, in a matter of hours, dozens 
of websites can post or link to a video and get the word out about a 
spectacular event, the role of the gatekeepers and the corporate 
media shrinks big-time. And it doesn't matter if the networks or CNN 
or Fox decides that they don't want you to see it -- they can't stop 
it. The people's network is now in working order. Progressives now 
have a television capacity; still rudimentary, perhaps, but 
powerfully effective.

The press leaks

The press coverage of the Colbert performance was illuminating, as 
reported by the popular blog, democratic underground:

"Expect nothing less from the cowardly American media. This 
demonstrates powerfully the ability of the media to choose the news, 
and to decide when and how to shield Bush from negative publicity. 
Sins of omission can be just as bad as sins of commission.

"The AP's first stab at it, as well as Reuters and the Chicago 
Tribune, tell us everything we need to know: In these reports, 
Colbert's performance is sidestepped and marginalized, while 
President Bush is depicted as lighthearted, humble and witty."

Salon's Joan Walsh points out, "Colbert's deadly performance did more 
than reveal, with devastating clarity, how Bush's well-oiled myth 
machine works. It exposed the mainstream press' pathetic collusion 
with an administration that has treated it -- and the truth -- with 
contempt from the moment it took office. Intimidated, coddled, 
fearful of violating propriety, the press corps that for years 
dutifully repeated Bush talking points was stunned and horrified when 
someone dared to reveal that the media emperor had no clothes. 
Colbert refused to play his dutiful, toothless part in the White 
House correspondents' dinner -- an incestuous, backslapping ritual 
that should be retired. For that, he had to be marginalized. Voilà: 
'He wasn't funny.'"

On the Democratic political front, as John Aravosis wrote on 
AmericaBlog, House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., actually stepped 
up to defend President Bush, saying, according to The Hill:

"I thought some of it was funny, but I think it got a little rough Š 
He is the president of the United States, and he deserves some 
respect."

"I'm certainly not a defender of the administration," Hoyer reassured 
stunned observers, but Colbert "crossed the line" with many jokes 
that were "in bad taste."

Criticizing Colbert for being rude would be pretty funny if it 
weren't so depressing. Rude? Since when has politics in this 
administration used the Marquis of Queensbury rules? Is Dick Cheney 
sweet and accommodating? When, in their march to power, has the right 
wing had good manners -- about abortion or gay marriage, or in the 
push for invading Iraq? Sure, mention decorum and one thinks 
immediately of Karl Rove, of Pat Robertson calling for the 
assassination of Hugo Chavez, of Jerry Falwell blaming America's bad 
morals for 9/11.

The fact is, Stephen Colbert is at the acme of rising independent 
voices -- in the blogosphere, on the internet, in publishing and 
independent filmmaking -- who are being aggressive and playing 
hardball the way the right does. And guess what? The establishment is 
getting nervous. The powers-that-be know that people respond to 
passion, anger and resistance, emotions that convey meaning and 
seriousness, and the will to fight hard for important issues.

In a smaller way, but showing similar guts, Cindy Sheehan spoke truth 
by traveling to Texas and demanding that the president explain, 
please, just what "noble cause" her son died for. Ray McGovern did it 
recently when he publicly challenged Secretary of Defense Donald 
Rumsfeld in Atlanta, and so did Harry Taylor, the man who confronted 
George W. Bush at a town meeting in North Carolina.

Perhaps the most important lesson we have learned from the divisions 
laid bare by Stephen Colbert is that the big split isn't so much 
between Democrats and Republicans or between the media and the people 
and events they cover, but rather between the powerful and the angry, 
between those basking in power and those fighting for change. The 
kiss-ass media, the revolving-door congressmen, the sycophant 
lobbyists and congressional staffers, the greedy media consultants -- 
all are dependent on and addicted to the trappings of power, whether 
it's their next book, TV appearance, consulting contract, ride on Air 
Force One or junket to play golf at St. Andrews. Stephen Colbert 
turned the heat up on them all:

Š let's review the rules. Here's how it works: The president makes 
the decisions; he's the decider. The press secretary announces those 
decisions, and you people, the press, type those decisions down. 
Make, announce, check. Just put 'em through a spell check and go 
home. Get to know your family again. Make love to your wife. Write 
that novel you got kickin' around in your head. You know, the one 
about the intrepid Washington reporter with the courage to stand up 
to the administration? You know: fiction!

It's getting hotter in the kitchen, and some of those who have the 
most to hide are getting closer to a meltdown.

Don Hazen is the executive editor of AlterNet

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