Thanks for this.  I happened to hear this program one day while driving.  I
was amazed at the tone of the program.

Reading this it seems that Savage has tapped into the underlying anger that
makes up America today.  Angry at the world (lost big time in stocks, lost
your pension, lost your job)?  Can't afford to buy a bigger SUV?  Still
angry?  Listen to Savage. It is called scapegoating.  Worked in the past.
Works today.  Will work tomorrow.  Nothing like having an "other" to throw
darts at to explain today's woes.

arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: Ray Evans Harrell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, March 09, 2003 8:04 PM
To: futurework
Subject: [Futurework] What is going on here?


On MSNBC  Phil Donahue was fired to hire this fellow.    What do you think?
Is this the true future of  Journalistic work?    This is from Salon
Magazine.

REH



Michael Savage's long, strange trip
How a Jewish kid from the Bronx went from swimming naked with Allen Ginsberg
to spewing the ugliest bile on talk radio.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By David Gilson

March 5, 2003  |  At first glance, Michael Alan Weiner seems like an
improbable candidate to be America's angriest, most vicious conservative
radio host. Born 60 years ago in the Bronx, Weiner has lived in Northern
California for most of his adult life, making a living as an herbalist and
nutritionist. He communed with Fijian traditional healers, got married in a
rain forest and studied ethno-medicine at the University of California at
Berkeley. He swam naked with Allen Ginsberg, dreamed of being the next Lenny
Bruce and wrote a rambling novel about a half-mad alter ego. His son's
middle name is Goldencloud. For years, he made a name cranking out a pile of
books on alternative medicine, recommending bizarre remedies such as using
vitamin C to stop AIDS and kicking cocaine with coffee enemas.
These days, Weiner's more interested in purging the body politic. Using the
pseudonym Michael Savage, he's launched a one-man mission to save America
from its enemies at home and abroad, which on any given day includes
liberals, gays, academics, the homeless, the Clintons, immigrants,
feminists, CNN, the American Civil Liberties Union, Muslims and other
minorities. Broadcasting three hours a day, five afternoons a week, from a
rented studio in downtown San Francisco, he gives voice to the right wing's
darkest fantasies. He muses about launching preemptive nuclear strikes on
the Middle East ("I wish to God the hatches were open and the missiles were
flying!"), suggests gunning down illegal immigrants ("If we had a
government, we'd blow them out of the desert with airplanes!"), dreams of
dispatching with "commies, pinkos and perverts" and other undesirables ("I
say round them up and hang 'em high!") and even paraphrases a remark
attributed to Nazi leader Hermann Goering ("When I hear someone's in the
civil rights business, I oil up my AR-15!")

Woe be unto those who label him racist, sexist or homophobic -- or even
worse, threaten his livelihood. When an Oregon group started a boycott of
his advertisers last summer, he became downright apoplectic. "I'm more
powerful than you are, you little hateful nothings!" he screeched, before
intoning darkly in his trademark New-Yawk accent: "I'm gonna warn you again:
If you harm me -- and I pray that no harm comes to you -- but I can't
guarantee that it won't." Just last week, Savage fumed about the "brownshirt
groups" who dare to criticize him: "You stinking rats who hide in the
sewers! ... You think I'm going to roll over like a pussy? You're wrong!"

Such vitriolic ranting is over the top, even by the ever-declining standards
of talk-radio decorum. Yet, in this time of war fever and hyperpatriotism,
inflammatory rhetoric draws conservative ditto-heads and liberal
rubberneckers alike, and that translates into big ratings. Since launching
"The Savage Nation" on San Francisco's KSFO 560 AM more than eight years
ago, Savage has gone from being just another right-winger with a big mouth,
a hyperinflated ego and a sizable chip on his shoulder to becoming the
nation's fifth most-popular talk-radio personality, a host with enough
leverage to land Vice President Dick Cheney as a guest. His book, "The
Savage Nation: Saving America From the Liberal Assault on Our Borders,
Language and Culture," has been perched at the top of the New York Times
bestseller list for over a month, and now he's slated to get his own program
on MSNBC.

Michael Weiner's long and circuitous road has taken him from being a
scientist and entrepreneur, through stints as a hipster, novelist and
aspiring comedian, to becoming the personification of straight white male
rage. Today he likes to play up his unconventional career path, to an
extent. He's the kind of guy who never lets anyone forget he has a Ph.D. His
Web site reminds visitors that he is a "World Famous Herbal Expert" and the
author of 18 books. But just as his gap-toothed grin has been replaced by a
row of airbrushed pearly whites on the front cover of his new book, he gives
his audience a whitewashed version of his past. The real story is far more
interesting, not just for its ironies and contradictions, but for the often
disturbing clues it provides about the man now so well known as Michael
Savage. He's gone through at least one political makeover. He's turned on
old friends, or they've turned on him. If his semi-autobiographical novel is
any guide to his own life, he's keeping a few skeletons in his closet.

In the end, the picture that emerges from his books, from interviews with
past and current associates, and from his radio show is that "The Savage
Nation" is just the latest undertaking of a man who's spent his life trying
to get the world to notice him.

Savage's office said he was too busy preparing for his TV show to be
interviewed for this article. Earlier interview requests by phone and e-mail
prompted an irritated phone call from a woman named Janet, who announced
that Savage would not speak with me. Asked if she was his wife -- who
happens to be named Janet -- she said she was not. "I am not affiliated with
him," she insisted. "I'm just a fan." After a few minutes of testy back and
forth, she suggested that it would be unfortunate if my e-mail address and
phone number were somehow posted across the Internet.

Savage has come a long way since he emceed school assemblies at P.S. 42 in
the Bronx. His father, a Russian Jewish immigrant, made a living selling
antique bronzes on Orchard Street. An imposing figure who died of a heart
attack in the early 1970s, he is the frequent subject of his son's on-air
stories. Speaking at a convention sponsored by the trade magazine Radio &
Records in March 2001, Savage recalled getting his first lesson in
politics -- and cynicism -- from his dad. "[H]e explained politics to me
very clearly. He said, 'You see, this is how the world works ... In this
beautiful country of ours there are two bands of thieves: the Republicans
and the Democrats.'"

Though Savage waxes nostalgic about such father-and-son moments, it appears
that his parents were no Ozzie and Harriet. "I was raised on neglect, anger,
and hate," he writes in "The Savage Nation." But growing up with little
parental approval or praise was a good thing, he says. "Frankly, that's why
I'm driven the way I am."

Savage, who now decries "propaganda about America being the Land of
Immigrants," isn't ashamed of his own immigrant parents. However, his Jewish
upbringing is strictly taboo. And he often makes Joseph Lieberman, Barbra
Streisand and Larry King the butt of stale ethnic jokes. Brad Kava, radio
columnist for the San Jose Mercury News and a longtime Savage critic, thinks
Savage's ambivalence toward Jews is a misguided attempt to pander to
conservative Christians. "He's Jewish, but he always acts like he's
Christian," he says. In his book "The Savage Nation," for example, he
complains of an anti-Christian bias in America. When Kava, who is Jewish,
"outed" Savage several years ago, Savage reported him to the Anti-Defamation
League. Dr. Robert F. Cathcart, a longtime friend of the talk-show star,
speculated in a telephone interview that Savage says little about his
background so that he appears more "neutral" when he discusses Israel or
religious topics.

Everyone who has ever known Michael Weiner seems to agree that he has always
been a big talker. One of his classmates from Jamaica High School in Queens,
which Weiner graduated from in 1959, recalls him as a garrulous character:
"He was on the short side, and he was intense -- a fast talker, and always
hatching some scheme or other." "The fellow I knew was a natural comic and
as reliable as a clock," remembers another classmate, who says the teenage
Weiner was "non-political." His yearbook page notes his participation in the
Chemistry Lab Squad, school government, and the Rifle Squad, presaging his
interest in science, politics and firearms.

Weiner was also something of a dreamer, and he hoped to follow in the
footsteps of his hero, the naturalist Charles Darwin. After getting a
biology degree from Queens College, he went as far west -- and as far from
home -- as possible, winding up in Oahu, Hawaii, where he earned master's
degrees in anthropology and botany from the University of Hawaii. Throughout
the late 1960s and early 1970s, he traveled to Tonga, Fiji and other South
Pacific island nations to study traditional herbal medicine. His new wife,
Janet, and their young son, Russell Goldencloud, often accompanied him on
his travels. Local healers warmly welcomed him, and he became passionately
convinced that their expertise could be used to cure modern ailments. Thus
began a quest to salvage-- not savage-- this "ethnic wisdom" before Western
influences destroyed it. His research on the sedative kava kava and other
Fijian medicinal plants served as the basis for his doctoral work at U.C.
Berkeley. His 1978 dissertation, on file in the U.C. Berkeley library, shows
his degree was in nutritional ethnomedicine. However, the bio in the back of
Savage's book and on his Web site says it was in epidemiology and nutrition
science.

In 1974, Weiner moved to the San Francisco Bay Area. His family first
settled in Fairfax, a sleepy town in Marin County that Michael Savage would
lambaste three decades later as "un-Fairfax," hometown of "Taliban Rat Boy"
John Walker Lindh. From there, he started making trips into San Francisco to
hang around the North Beach literary scene. According to Stephen Schwartz,
who was then a left-wing activist and writer, Weiner carried an unusual
letter of introduction. "He had met Allen Ginsberg in Fiji," he recalls. "He
had this photograph of himself swimming naked with Ginsberg." Poet and
biographer Neeli Cherkovski says Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti, the
owner of City Lights Bookstore, introduced him to Savage in 1976. "All I
knew was that he was this hip guy who'd been traveling in the South Seas,
finding ways to use tropical plants to help end diseases," he recalls. The
two became friends. "We had a lot of fun times. He's very smart, intelligent
and very lively," says Cherkovski, who is now writer-in-residence at San
Francisco's New College. Weiner told Cherkovski that he dreamed of becoming
a stand-up comic in the mold of Lenny Bruce and they talked of doing a
comedy routine together.

But he didn't make the big splash he had hoped for. Schwartz says Weiner's
increasingly bizarre behavior eventually alienated him from the North Beach
crowd. "After he had been there a while, his personality began to change. He
became much more aggressive. He would collar you and demand that you eat
with him, listen to him," he says. According to Schwartz, Weiner openly
carried a gun and made public scenes when he ran into his former friends and
acquaintances. "He would come into Cafe Trieste and start yelling at me that
I was a nobody and he was a somebody."

Today, Savage still has few kind words for his old lefty literary friends.
In "The Savage Nation," he writes off City Lights as "that once-famous
communist bookstore" and rips into an unnamed beat poet, calling him
"latrine slime." "Now he just screams at us in the streets," sighs
Ferlinghetti, who once went to Hawaii with Weiner and his family. He views
Weiner's reincarnation as Michael Savage as "total opportunism," the
crowning achievement of someone who was "always looking to make a fast buck"
and "always trying to think up new schemes to get famous."
Weiner did have a knack for combining the promise of herbal medicine with
good old-fashioned hucksterism. From his home, he started vanity projects
such as the Fund for Ethnic Medicine and the Alzheimer's Research Institute,
which he plugged on his book jackets and in letters to the New York Times.
He concocted feel-good beverages like Tea of Life and Herbal-Seltzer and
sold a line of herbal supplements from a Web site called Herbs That Heal.
Visitors to the now-defunct site were welcomed with photographs of Weiner
collecting herbs in the South Pacific, soulfully soaking in the culture of
what Michael Savage belittles as the "turd world." The 1992 edition of "The
Herbal Bible," published by his wife's imprint, Quantum Books, modestly
noted that its author was "credited with starting the herbal revolution."

He was also a prolific writer, churning out 18 titles in 20 years. "[D]on't
assume for a minute that they were junk books and marginally published," he
snaps in "The Savage Nation." "They weren't. They were top of the line. They
were the Rolls-Royce of the field." "Earth Medicine -- Earth Foods" and
"Weiner's Herbal" are well-respected references and are still cited widely
on herbal and homeopathic Web sites. Most of his books, with their glorified
lists of plants and their properties, are about as dry as a handful of
powdered dogwood root (which, according to Weiner, makes a good tonic for
treating fevers). But buried in the details is a sprinkling of flaky
affirmations and kooky assertions.

For example, in "Plant a Tree: a Guide to Regreening America," Weiner wrote
dreamily about our "plant allies" and suggested that every state appoint its
own "tree czar." "Dictators seem to like trees," he ruminated. "Who knows
what a benevolent, nature-loving tyrant might do for the retreeing of
America?" In "The Way of the Skeptical Nutritionist," he ventured that a
person's ideal diet should be determined by his or her ethnicity. "Getting
Off Cocaine: 30 Days to Freedom" promised blow addicts "an alternative plan
for getting 'high' -- legally and naturally!" The treatment involved
ingesting a daily cocktail of Sudafed, vitamins C and E, and amino acids, as
well as self-administering the occasional coffee enema. "Use a good quality
coffee," Weiner advised. "Not decaffeinated or instant."

Michael Savage's homophobic rants against what he calls "anal rights" were
foreshadowed by the 1986 book "Maximum Immunity." In it, Weiner glommed onto
some of the wilder ideas about AIDS that were circulating at the time. He
called for mandatory nationwide AIDS testing and suggested using massive
doses of vitamin C to slow down and even reverse the disease's progress.
When he was done suggesting cures, he looked for scapegoats. He demanded
that gays "accept the blame" for the rise of AIDS, then grumbled, "Those who
practice orgiastic sex, with many partners, and use street drugs are not
likely to respond to reason."

"Maximum Immunity" also hinted that its author was dealing with some heavy
issues of his own. In one passage, Weiner wrote about his decision to take
up jogging so that he might avoid his father's untimely fate. Everything
went well until he started hearing things. "An inner 'voice' began to
demand, 'Stop ... I can't take this anymore.'" he wrote. Fearing a "nervous
collapse," Weiner traded his running shoes for a bike and soothed his
jangled nerves by curling up on the sofa with a mug of passionflower herbal
tea and ingesting "megadoses" of vitamins. Feeling much better, he
concluded: "I learned to calm the inner debate that had threatened to drown
me in madness!"

Such extreme mood swings are regular occurrences on "The Savage Nation."
Even the phrase "I can't take this anymore!" (usually shouted at full
volume) has become a Savage catchphrase. James Hilliard, who produced "The
Savage Nation" at KSFO for nearly three years in the late 1990s, says that
talk radio provided Savage with an outlet for his unpredictable temperament.
As he recalls, "The show was really driven by Michael's mood. At times, he
could be very quiet, mellow, low-key, and then be a maniac on the air."

This maniacal tendency, and the roiling emotions that fueled it, were laid
bare in "Vital Signs," Michael Weiner's first and only book of fiction,
published in 1983. A collection of confessional, stream-of-consciousness
stories, it follows the exploits of Samuel Trueblood, who just happens to be
a 40-ish New York Jew, an herbalist and writer with a tumultuous personal
life, a substantial assortment of inner demons and a bit of a Napoleon
complex. "I am physically not tall, but my eyes burn with fire," he states.
"Two black fires of Hell." Trueblood narrates a series of misadventures,
from procuring an illegal backroom abortion for his fianc�e to beating the
stuffing out of an abusive cop.

Trueblood describes his life as one long search for inner peace. He blames
much of his discontent on his "childhood beneath tyranny," during which he
was cowed by his bullying father. Trueblood describes how his father mocked
him with "brutal jokes and chides, 'gentle' kidding: 'You're not a fag, are
you Sam?' the little man would say each time the boy dared wear a colorful
shirt or flashy trousers." Unable to shake his dead father's disapproving
influence, the adult Samuel is tortured by feelings of weakness and
inadequacy. "I am filled with fears," he admits, "nearly all the time
feeling I am about to become totally insane."

Even after moving to mellow Marin County, becoming a successful herbalist
and starting a family, Trueblood remains plagued by his "underlying
sadness." Not even trusty passionfruit tea can bring him off this bummer. In
one passage, he almost loses it in front of his wife and two young children:

"Inner voice screaming at me for years, first rational, then crazy, telling
me to do mad things. Every form of relief tried, painting, psychotherapy,
running, diet, vitamins, etc., etc. Almost uncontrollable now. Impulses to
stab children, strangers, wife, self with scissors."

Eventually, Trueblood seeks solace in chasing skirts. (Though he admits to
being drawn to "masculine beauty," he confides that "I choose to override my
desires for men when they swell in me, waiting out the passions like a
storm, below decks.") While his wife stays home with the kids, he beds a
young "cockswell" with a "dykish haircut" and skin "[s]ofter than that
Northern Indian prostitute in Fiji whose covering was as soft as that of my
own penis." And so it goes for another 50 pages.

No doubt the anti-abortion, anti-gay, pro-family Michael Savage would
disapprove of such a perverted excuse for literature, with all its
gratuitous references to illegal abortions, repressed homosexuality and
shameless philandering. But it's impossible not to notice the similarity
between Trueblood, the tormented seeker, and Savage, a man whose "inner
voice" precipitated an existential crisis over jogging. Neeli Cherkovski
says that the chapter in "Vital Signs" about Trueblood's father is based on
Weiner's own life, recalling that he went with the author back to the Bronx
to see the site of his father's store. But Cherkovski won't speculate about
the rest. "I think he [Weiner] is a person who had a lot of wild
experiences," Cherkovski says. "He tested a lot of waters." Even the book's
dedication, to Weiner's wife, suggests that he wasn't making everything up:
"Who would listen to such tales and live with he who lived them but she, the
unshakably faithful Janet."

For most of the 1970s and 1980s, Weiner focused on curing people's
illnesses, not society's ills. "For 10 or 15 years, I was the revered herbal
doctor," he recollected at the Radio & Records convention. "I was Mr. Nice
Guy Nutritionist. Nobody knew my politics. I was talking about healing and
I'd go to health food conventions and I'd give speeches about vitamins and
herbs. Nobody ever saw this as controversial ... They liked me!"

But beneath the surface, Weiner was becoming more and more conservative.
Stephen Schwartz, who went from being a self-described Trotskyite to
neoconservative and is now senior policy analyst at the Foundation for the
Defense of Democracies, says that Weiner was a "typical left liberal" in the
1970s. Neeli Cherkovski, who is gay, notes that Weiner was not homophobic
when they first met. However, he says Weiner's shift rightward coincided
with his increasing aversion to gay activism. Robert Cathcart, who's been
close to Weiner since the mid-1980s, says he's always known his friend as an
outspoken conservative, at least in private.

Since Weiner's conservative leanings took a hard right turn, he's complained
that he was held back because of his race, gender and political beliefs. He
currently gripes that no institute of higher education would hire him,
despite his qualifications. "I discovered I could not gain a professorship
even after applying many times," he writes in "The Savage Nation." "My
crime? I was a white male." The r�sum� he has presented over the years tells
another story. On air, he's mentioned that he was once affiliated with
Harvard. On the back of his books, he has boasted of being a faculty member
at U.C. Santa Cruz, a visiting scholar at the Hebrew University School of
Pharmacy and a senior research fellow at the University of Heath Sciences at
Chicago Medical School. He's also claimed to have done "important research"
for the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health. Not
bad for someone who's been blacklisted from the ivory tower.

The last straw apparently came in 1994, when publishers rejected Weiner's
latest manuscript, "Immigrants and Epidemics," which contended that
infectious diseases such as T.B. were being brought into the U.S. by
Southeast Asian immigrants. Fed up, Weiner rented a recording studio in
Sausalito and produced a mock talk show with his wife and a couple of
buddies playing callers. Michael Savage was born.

In his new job, Savage employed all the self-promotional tricks he had
picked up while going from Charles Darwin wannabe to world-famous herbal
expert. In early 1996, he applied to become dean of the U.C. Berkeley
Graduate School of Journalism. Unable to appreciate the journalistic
qualities of Savage's radio program or his 18 books, his alma mater denied
him an interview, instead hiring China scholar and journalist Orville
Schell. Savage sued Berkeley with the help of a conservative legal fund
started by David Horowitz (who wrote approvingly of the case in Salon),
accusing it of discriminating against a conservative in favor of a man he
has called a "front for the communist Chinese mafia." The case never went to
trial. During the run-up to the 2000 election, Savage laid claim to the
phrase
"compassionate conservative," and said he planned to sue George W. Bush for
intellectual property theft. Like many of Savage's threats of imminent
litigation, this one soon faded away. But sure enough, he had self-published
a book called "The Compassionate Conservative Speaks" in 1995 and, ever the
savvy businessman, had trademarked the term in 1998.

Even Savage's two kids were swept up in his relentless drive for publicity.
His Web site advertised Rockstar, a liver-cleansing beverage marketed by his
son that enables its drinkers to "party like a rock star." Last spring,
Savage told his listeners about a third-grade teacher in San Diego, Calif.,
who had saved a child from choking, and demanded that the state school
superintendent give her an official commendation. "If she was a minority
teacher and picked up a paper clip on the floor, then a commendation would
be in order," he sniped. He neglected to mention that the "hero teacher,"
Rebecca Lin Yops, was in fact his daughter, who had changed her last name
after her recent marriage.
Armed with his natural loquaciousness and a kill button, Savage's love
affair with the sound of his own voice deepened. Obsequious fans obliged him
by calling him "Doctor Savage," prompting him to expound his theories on how
gays and immigrants spread disease and were corrupting the nation. "It's the
greatest revenge there is, having a talk show," he crowed in "The
Compassionate Conservative Speaks." And as his rhetoric became ever more
grandiose and outrageous, his ratings -- and political clout -- grew. "The
Savage Nation" became the Bay Area's No. 1 drive-time radio program. Savage
lunched with Democratic San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown and started landing
big-name conservative guests such as Benjamin Netanyahu and Vice President
Dick Cheney, who, apparently unaware of the show's usual host-centered
format, commended Savage for "providing a forum where we can have a good
discussion."

Looking for a way to leverage his newfound influence, Savage founded the
Paul Revere Society, a political club whose goals have included the
imprisonment of antiwar activists for sedition, loyalty oaths for immigrants
and the eventual establishment of "a haven for compassionate conservatives"
called "Revere-Town." A fee of $40 gets new members a Savage Nation baseball
cap and an anti-affirmative action pamphlet called "The Death of the White
Male." There's also the promise that one day they might get to meet the
founder and executive director in person. But given Savage's reclusiveness,
they may have to wait a while. The group's last major event took place in
November 2000, when it held its fifth annual "Compassionate Conservative
Convention" in San Rafael, not far from Savage's home. Since then, Savage
made himself available to fans only at dinner parties, and only after they
forked over more than a hundred bucks. Meanwhile, according to papers filed
with the IRS, this nonprofit "educational organization" took in over
$150,000 in donations in 2001 and expects to take in $250,000 this year.

The success of "The Savage Nation" and its spinoffs is the culmination of a
lifelong quest for attention, fame and money. And that raises the question
of whether Michael Savage is just a persona created to milk conservatives
and taunt liberals. Robert Cathcart thinks his old friend intentionally
exaggerates his politics and personality to get a rise out of his audience.
"It's showmanship," he says. "He makes enemies of everybody. He doesn't
believe half the stuff he says. On air, he's the ultimate type-A
personality, but he quiets down at home." Former "Savage Nation" producer
James Hilliard concurs. "I think Michael does have an excellent sense of
putting on a show," he says. "I think he learned or was told at an early
point that this is an entertainment medium, and he thought of himself as an
entertainer."
However, as Savage rips into another hapless caller or gets exercised about
the latest liberal atrocity, it often feels like he's crossed the line
between public shtick and personal catharsis. On the air, he lets everything
hang out, truly living up to the warning of "psychological nudity"
advertised at the beginning of every show. This is what makes "The Savage
Nation" so simultaneously maddening and fascinating -- as Savage heads over
the brink one more time, you have to wonder whether someday he'll go over
for good. Cathcart and Hilliard are right when they say the show is not just
about politics. But it's not just about entertainment, either. It is about
one man grappling with his ambitions and fears while America listens. For
Michael Weiner, talk radio is the ultimate talking cure.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
About the writer
David Gilson is a journalist who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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