REVIEW

Paul Hackett and The Daily Show Take the Democrats to the Satirical Woodshed

Written by Dave Nalle
Published March 15, 2006
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Not surprisingly, Hackett was out for revenge, and a month later The Daily Show was there to help him get it. Clearly revenge is a dish best served with a nice side of sarcastic humor.

First they featured Hackett making some good, honest political statements in one of their typical bizarre interviews while juxtaposing his approach with comments on how to run a campaign from the most godawful political hack they could find. Then they placed Hackett in a hilarious series of mock campaign commercial outtakes in which he speaks honestly and is repeatedly interrupted by a campaign adviser who tries to bland-down his statements. He starts out criticizing the Iraq War and by the end of the process of making him an 'electable candidate' they have him petting a chicken held by a little girl saying "I'm in favor of agriculture, and adorable children." The segment wraps up with the slogan "Paul Hackett for US Senate, He Won't Rock the Boat" and crediting the ad campaign as "paid for by people who don't know what they're doing and are scared shitless to make strong choices."

It's a brilliant piece of satire that really lays out the problems in the Democratic party, particularly their spinelessness and their slavish devotion to a status-quo of failure and lack of leadership. Hackett defines what the Democratic party needs if they want to succeed in the future, so they did their best to destroy him because his honesty embarrasses them and his success would be a threat to the power of their entrenched elite.

Hackett performs perfectly in his role as the malleable candidate his party would have liked him to be. Since he's apparently given up his political aspirations he should consider a career in the media. He'd make an excellent anchorman/commentator for a cable news network that wasn't afraid to stir up some controversy. Of course, if he ever does go back to politics he might be one Democrat I'd vote for. Maybe he should just keep moving up the chain of command and run for President next.

As for the election in Ohio, gun-grabbing tax and spender Mike DeWine is one GOP Senator I would shed no tears over seeing booted out of office, but while Hackett would have been a marked improvement, a hack like Sherrod Brown really has very little to offer. I suspect that between the negative reaction to their betrayal of Hackett and Brown's tedious mediocrity the Democrat bigwigs have blown a chance to gain another seat in the Senate, and I'm not weeping for them either.

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Dave Nalle has been a magazine editor, freelance writer, capitol hill staffer, game designer and taught college history for many years. He is Vice Chairman of the Republican Liberty Caucus, working to promote liberty in the GOP. He designs fonts for a living and lives with his family just outside Austin. You can find his writings on politics and culture at Republic of Dave, on conspiracy theories at IdiotWars and on design and fonts at The Scriptorium.
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Paul Hackett and The Daily Show Take the Democrats to the Satirical Woodshed
Published: March 15, 2006
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Politics: U.S., Culture: Media, Culture: Humor and Satire, Video: News, Video: Talk Show, Video: Television
Writer: Dave Nalle
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Comments

#1 — March 15, 2006 @ 02:19AM — RogerMDillon

Hackett and others like-minded from both sides need to form a third party.

Ed Helms was the correspondent and deserves a mention.

Demand a refund from your editor. Jon Stewart and Charles Schumer are misspelled.

#2 — March 15, 2006 @ 02:27AM — Dave Nalle

I guess I'll have to take that up with Microsoft. MS Word just can't get those name spellings sorted out.

But I do agree - a third party would be a very good thing.

Dave

#3 — March 15, 2006 @ 03:52AM — ratdg1

Hackett was never leading Brown by 20%. The only polls conducted (one in December by the Feinstein Group, one in February by the Hackett campaign) both showed Brown leading Hackett by 20% or so.

#4 — March 15, 2006 @ 10:22AM — Dave Nalle [URL]

Right you are, Rat. I've clarified that sentence. I seem to have slightly misread one of my sources. He was only leading among those voters familiar with his bio, so it was necessary to stop him before he could raise enough money to raise name recognition and beat out Brown.

Dave

#5 — March 15, 2006 @ 11:21AM — Bliffle

Sometimes you've gotta take a stand, and I think the big reason GWB has been so popular is because ordinary US citizens thought that he was one guy willing to fight against enemies, fairly or unfairly, no holds barred. IMO, McCain has failed that test by not going toe-to-toe with GWB in 2000. And the dems fail it everyday with their entrenched unwillingness to fight. Who wants a dem CinC? A waffler? In a hostile world we need a fighter. Oh, and a clever resourceful strategist (better luck next time).

#6 — March 15, 2006 @ 12:12PM — Amrita [URL]

Ed Helms was hilarious - the one quote that stayed with me was when the hack explained how the 'strategy' was to sit back and wait for the Republicans to hurt themselves and Helms shot back, "Yes, last night I got mugged and as he was beating me over the head with a bottle, I stood still and waited for him to accidentally hit himself on the head and knock himself out."

#7 — March 15, 2006 @ 14:27PM — RogerMDillon

You're relying on Word to give you proper spellings.?! Should we now question your other "research" since finding these names was very easy to do? C'mon, man, step up your game.

#8 — March 15, 2006 @ 16:20PM — Dave Nalle

Roger, when I run a document through word to check spellings it doesn't actually CATCH any misspellings. I rely primarily on my own ability to spell, which is pretty damned good. Can't hurt to double-check, though. I admit that I do have a problem with names, though. I can barely remember the names of my own relatives.

Dave

#9 — March 15, 2006 @ 16:23PM — Dave Nalle

Sometimes you've gotta take a stand, and I think the big reason GWB has been so popular is because ordinary US citizens thought that he was one guy willing to fight against enemies, fairly or unfairly, no holds barred.

Absolutely true, I think. And not just in the war on terror, but on other issues as well.

And the dems fail it everyday with their entrenched unwillingness to fight. Who wants a dem CinC? A waffler? In a hostile world we need a fighter. Oh, and a clever resourceful strategist (better luck next time).

This is what makes this Hackett business so incredibly stupid. The Democrats have leaders who fit the description you're giving, but they abuse, betray and deride them and drive them away from the party or from politics alltogether. Half the democrats hated Hackett for being a former soldier and the other half hated him for not being willing to play along with the entrenched power structure. That's a formula for failure.

Dave

#10 — March 15, 2006 @ 17:12PM — Bennett

"when I run a document through word to check spellings it doesn't actually CATCH any misspellings."

Other than one of your recent posts that had "high coost of goods" in the second or third paragraph.

Even MS word recognizes "coost" as a misspelling.

But hey, you're an editor, so you can self publish. Despite EO stating that "We ALL benefit from peer review." You, apparently, do not.

Really sad, Dave. Like Roger said, step up to your (slippery) game.

#11 — March 15, 2006 @ 17:37PM — Dave Nalle

It was a mistake, Natalie. I've already acknowledged it. And I agree that we all benefit from peer review and will avoid self-publishing in the future.

My spelling is still pretty good, but anyone can make a typo or have a key stick. And BTW, according to the editorial search function I have never used the phrase 'high cost of goods' OR 'high coost of goods' in an article on BC.

And WTF is my 'slippery game', anyway? My 'game' here is merely to get interesting material published in the Politics section in a timely manner and keep people involved and participating. Do you have a problem with that?

Dave

#12 — March 15, 2006 @ 17:48PM — Dave Nalle

Ed Helms was hilarious - the one quote that stayed with me was when the hack explained how the 'strategy' was to sit back and wait for the Republicans to hurt themselves and Helms shot back, "Yes, last night I got mugged and as he was beating me over the head with a bottle, I stood still and waited for him to accidentally hit himself on the head and knock himself out."

I've got to agree that Helms did a great job. I was a bit concerned at first when he took over these interviews from Stephen Colbert who was so good at it, but he's stepping up well. That bit about the bum actually went on even longer. I liked the final line - "he did knock himself out eventually, but I didn't notice because I was unconscious".

Dave

#13 — March 15, 2006 @ 18:25PM — Bennett

Blogcritics.org: New Reasons I'm Glad I Don't Live in Britain

"... put an end to that era of horrors, but the coost of her pro-business and entrepreneurial reforms was the high ..."

http://blogcritics.org/archives/2006/01/27/034503

#14 — March 15, 2006 @ 18:35PM — Dave Nalle

Ah, I just searched for the phrase you quoted. By god, you caught me making a typo. Congratulations. Do you consider this a personal milestone as well as a positive contribution to this discussion?

Dave

#15 — March 15, 2006 @ 18:40PM — RogerMDillon

You should place "well researched" ahead of "timely manner" on your list of priorities.

#16 — March 15, 2006 @ 18:42PM — Dave Nalle

I'm supposed to 'research' typos now? Come again?

Dave

#17 — March 15, 2006 @ 19:51PM — Bennett

Just noting, once again, how what you write tends to be a bit off from reality.

You self-publish without running your stuff through a spell checker, thereby making a mockery of the editorial review process of Blogcritics.

You don't take the time to get the correct spelling of the main characters in your post, yet that's one of the most important things in a post - according to the BC Writing Guidelines.

When I saw the "coost" typo, back in January, I had just read a comment (of yours) where you let the community know you were allowed to self-publish - and all the while EO was telling the rest of the contributors to BC that NO ONE was given the right to self-publish...

There are a lot of great writers that don't contribute to BC anymore. And that kinda crap one of the reasons.

Carry on.

#18 — March 15, 2006 @ 19:57PM — Matthew T. Sussman [URL]

When us editors self-publish, it's a mistake, OK? And Dave's admitted to that. And yes, we all know you disagree with him on a multitude of topics. My assumption is if it was an editor you agreed with, odds are you wouldn't be holding this or typos like "coost" over his head. And he's not the only editor in the history of Blogcritics to make a typo or self-publish by accident. I've done it myself.

Sheesh.

#19 — March 15, 2006 @ 20:19PM — gonzo marx

now now, uss and Bennett...don't let this individual get yer panties in a twist with each other...

IMO, Bennett is just having a bit of Fun with the self-righteous....the whole feet of clay thing

your mileage may vary

Excelsior!

#20 — March 15, 2006 @ 20:27PM — Matthew T. Sussman [URL]

Well Gonzo, I was part turned off by the "it's things like that that steer away good writers from BC" -- I don't know what or who he means by that.

Plus I just didn't want the thread to devolve into an anti-Nalle bukkake session. I mean heck, I don't even have my videocamera on.

#21 — March 15, 2006 @ 21:18PM — Dave Nalle [URL]

I just wish people were discussing the actual article rather than my habitual misspelling of John...er...Jon Stewart's name. Focusing on trivia rather than content seems to benefit no one.

As for the 'coost' error - why not mention it at the time so that I or another editor could correct it? Why let it sit for months unnoticed and uncorrected. That suggests very little real concern for editorial quality. The way I see it, getting things right is more important than the process, though doing it as efficiently as possible is desirable.

And bringing all of this up just to derail a discussion thread seems inherently sort of malicious when an email suggesting a correction could do the job in a much more positive way.

Anyone want to actually discuss the article now?

Dave

#22 — March 15, 2006 @ 21:49PM — Brian Sorrell [URL]

Dave I think that it's really important to focus on issues of speling. What kind of right-wing horse crap is this trying to distract regular people's commentary of the state of American education (and dictionaries) with your elitist demands to discuss your own article. Quit trying to stir up trouble by going back to the sources and pushing people around.

... Wait, what I meant to say was:

You make a good point that is not to be missed: Stewart's biggest asset is his iconoclastic stance toward over-labeled positions. And his sharp wit.

Ok, Stewart's two chief weapons are his iconoclasm, his sharp wit, and his self effacing willingness to put himself in the midst of....

His THREE chief weapons are iconclasm, sharp wit, his self-effacing nautre, and ridiculous impersonations. Damn.

Ahem. Seriously: when everyone's a target, you start getting real information. That's a very big deal, and you don't find this sort of thing in mealy-mouthed mainstream coverage. The Daily Show is just about the only valuable news available, besides blogcritics.org (speling, grammers, and punctuat!on notwithstanding.)

Brian.

#23 — March 15, 2006 @ 22:37PM — MCH

Sussman,

Please, spare us with the "Nalle's not perfect" sermon...he put himself up that high horse all by his lonesome.

#24 — March 15, 2006 @ 23:02PM — Mark Saleski [URL]

an anti-Nalle bukkake session

now THAT is clever.

gross, but clever.

#25 — March 15, 2006 @ 23:21PM — Dave Nalle [URL]

I actually don't own a horse. They're too expensive to maintain.

Dave

#26 — March 16, 2006 @ 00:11AM — Scott Butki

Good piece, Dave.

I linked to your piece with my report on the show

#27 — March 16, 2006 @ 14:30PM — Dave Nalle

Thanks, Scott. Are you really reviewing it every day? That's a hell of a lot of work. How do you find the time?

Dave

#28 — March 16, 2006 @ 17:11PM — Scott Butki

That's my plan. I'll get back to you on the time question.

#29 — March 16, 2006 @ 19:25PM — Scott Butki

I think this is my way of dealing with missing - sometimes - journalism, such as it is.

#30 — March 17, 2006 @ 06:34AM — Joanie [URL]

Congrats! This article has been placed on Advance.net

#31 — March 17, 2006 @ 21:03PM — Scott Butki

Congrats, Dave.

#32 — March 17, 2006 @ 21:34PM — Dave Nalle [URL]

Thanks, Joanie. Been quite a while since one of my articles got on Advance.

Dave

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