http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040307/D81579IG0.html

The serious news of the day - from Saddam Hussein's spider hole to
Medicare to gay marriage - served as fodder for song, dance and silly
dress-up Saturday night in the Gridiron dinner, a 119-year tradition
of Washington journalism.
In the most unusual turn of this year's satirical script, syndicated
columnist Robert Novak - who sparked a federal investigation by
printing the name of an undercover CIA officer - was taking the stage
as that CIA officer's disgruntled husband, former ambassador Joseph
Wilson.

Dressed as Wilson in top hat and cutaway coat, Novak sings of himself:
"Novak had a secret source ... so he outed a girl spy the way princes
of darkness do. ... Now John Ashcroft asks Bob who and how, could be
headed to the old hoosegow."

A federal grand jury is probing whether someone in the Bush
administration leaked the CIA officer's identity, possibly a felony.
Novak hasn't commented on the investigation - until the Gridiron, in
song.

Founded in 1885, the invitation-only Gridiron Club exists solely for
its annual white-tie dinner, attended by Cabinet secretaries,
congressional leaders and the like. The show has been visited by every
president since Benjamin Harrison, except one - Grover Cleveland.

Bush spoke at the first three Gridirons of his term, but skipped this
year's show in favor of a summit at his Texas ranch with Mexican
President Vicente Fox.

Gridiron President Al Hunt, a columnist for The Wall Street Journal,
spun that into a pun about conservatives' fondness for Fox News
Channel: "That pretty much sums up the White House philosophy: Why
waste time with newspaper reporters when you can spend quality time
with Fox?"

Vice President Dick Cheney agreed to take Bush's place, appearing
along with two New Yorkers considered possible contenders for the 2008
presidential race - Democratic Sen. Hillary Clinton and Republican
former Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Political guests seem reassured by the show's motto: "Singe, but never
burn."

Accordingly, the humor relies heavily on outlandish costumes - Ralph
Nader as a skunk at the Democrats' garden party; vegetarian
presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich as a giant carrot; Bush adviser
Karl Rove as Oz's Scarecrow, singing about his boss, "If he only had
MY brain."

The voices of the club's 60 veteran reporters, editors and columnists
are augmented by more polished singers brought in as "limited
members."

A lesbian couple sings "Get us to the church on time." To the tune of
"YMCA," a Sen. Edward Kennedy impersonator laments the passage of the
GOP's Medicare bill: "We were done in by the A-A-R-P."

In one of many references to Iraq, Saddam Hussein pops out of his
hiding place to sing not "Under the Boardwalk" but "Under the
floormat, with all the fleas, yeah. But now a cot in a prison is where
I'll be."

The "Hallelujah Chorus" becomes "Halliburton, Halliburton,
Halli-i-burton."

The show's ending, however, is a more somber tribute to U.S. troops
abroad.




xponent

Taste Varies Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to