The Back-Slapping Media Elite
ELLEN:
We are on opposite schedules. While you were writing yesterday's last
dispatch, I was eating noodles and steamed vegetables from a palatable take-out
joint in Tribeca, watching Hardball , and preparing to tuck my
almost-5-year-old son into bed. His birthday is next week (ironically, on the
same date as my mother, who passed away 16 years ago) and that's all he can
talk about.
You didn't respond to my take on Columbine.
On "hate" crimes, I see your point, but I think the media and
attention-starved politicians have trivialized the issue. The most publicized
"hate" crime in recent memory was the sad death of Matthew Shepard, the gay man
in Wyoming. I don't believe that was a "hate" crime designed to send a message
to a whole class of people. It was the case of a couple of losers who were
drunk, homophobic, and out of control. It doesn't compare to abortion-clinic
bombings. In any case, my point remains: What's the point of "hate crime"
legislation other than to assuage liberals? For example, I hope Shepard's
killers are fried, but they can't be killed twice, right?
In today's Times , Maureen Dowd comes close, perhaps subconsciously,
to endorsing George W. Bush. She writes about the cocaine question, as every
pundit is these days, and chastises Bush for not answering that query when he's
stated that he's been faithful to his wife. Yet she closes the piece: "He seems
to have good instincts, and he knows how to get good advice. But does that
qualify him to lead the country? That's the substance abuse we should worry
about." Dowd is an odd duck: Most often she writes about Hollywood, fashion,
everything trivial, while wrapping it up in some political context. Last
Sunday's column about Warren Beatty's running for president (which would be a
lot of fun, no?) was typical: She said he won't because as Carly Simon sang so
long ago, "He's So Vain." She certainly didn't deserve the Pulitzer (even
though it's a bogus award, an example of the media elite slapping each other on
the back), especially when Nat Hentoff, now one of the few reasons to read the
Voice , was her competitor.
But I'm behind in my work. The classified director from the Voice has
just moved over to NYPress and she starts today. She'll need a quick
primer in NYPress in-house culture, which I guarantee you is far
different from our rival's.
Best,
RUSS