By Enemy Central on 11.14.03 @ 8:53PM
All the usual blowhards, out of ear's range.
A Mighty Wind came calling on Washington and vicinity, leaving
no leaf unturned and all the usual blowhards out of ear's range.
But then Richard Cohen came along and found a way to cut through
its chilling and deafening roar. "I've taken a liking to Jessica
Lynch," he announced on Friday, and suddenly local thoughts turned
to blue skies and warm sun and all the frolicking they invite. All
credit must go to Larry Flynt, for proving once again he's a uniter
of men and women and not a divider. If not for Larry's disclosure
that he's got the goods on Ms. Lynch, or what Richard calls "fun
pictures," our Washington Post columnist might never have
noticed that a young blonde he concedes "is not exactly my type"
just might be.
Sen. John Kerry stayed out of this discussion. He was busy
making tough executive decisions of his own, such as firing
campaign manager Jim Jordan for backing a guaranteed loser. Then
when two Jordan colleagues fired themselves, Kerry bade them a good
riddance, on the grounds that these were people he "barely" knew.
It might be they were outside agitators on assignment for Howie
Dean. To reassure his legions, Kerry also stressed that there was
nothing Clintonian about his relationship with the two departing
Jordanaires, saying they "are not really involved with me."
Finally, he let on that "my campaign will be better off moving
ahead with people who want to be there," leading to speculation it
will be unstoppable once Kerry joins everyone else in abandoning
it.
Jean-François could take a page from President-elect
Emeritus Al Gore, who interrupted his empty schedule to play
opening act to the Mighty Wind over Washington. It was his second
speech in three months. Huffing in top debate form, his hair
restyled in a look Naomi Wolf, if you pay her enough, would term
"wethead," he lunged at his audience to denounce Big Brother Bush
and the USA Patriot Act. He likened the latter to Abe Lincoln's and
FDR's wartime policies, not to mention the break-in at Daniel
Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Rumor has it he's contemplating a
party switch, as a protest against overwhelming Democratic support
for the Patriot Act when it passed two years ago. And you can be
sure the backing for it was ever greater than reported, since by
definition not every Democratic vote was counted.
In a related development, a man often mistaken for Al's big
brother is one Gore Vidal. He's actually a distant relative, though
less distant now that he's relocated from an obscure Italian
location to the Hollywood Hills, the very same that once attracted
Charles Manson, and he's come out swinging, suggesting or perhaps
recommending that Messrs. Bush and Ashcroft be hanged exactly as
the Founders would have hung them for violations against the
Constitution. Hmm. Has Gore V. pondered what the Founders would
have done to him in the wake of his predilections?
A new singing sensation is sweeping the nation ahead of Boy Al
and the Mighty Wind. In the second coming of Gordon MacRae, Curly
Joe Lieberman has been taped giving a live sampling of standards
from Oklahoma! in preparation for that territory's
February 3 primary. "We know we belong to the land," he begins,
adding that that land will be subject to strict regulatory and
zoning controls. "And the land we belong to is grand!" he
continues, thinking tax rates. "So when we say/Yeeow! Ayipioeeay "
-- we hear the most memorable singing debut since Ray Stevens'
pre-terrorist era homage to desert and windstorm, "Ahab, The Arab."
Mr. Ahab was a self-styled sheik of the burning sand who would
croon "Yeeow, Ayipioeeay" to his cool camel named Clyde.
Incidentally, equal time and other fairness doctrines make it
imperative that Howie Dean be given a part in Curly Joe's musical.
He's the spitting image of Jud, no? That is Jud Fry, not Wynonna
Judd, whom Howie with his ability to have it every which way would
soon be calling Winona Ryder, especially after the previous
Wynonna's DIU, which in turn he'd conflate with Winona's shopping
habits.
In an effort to get away from this madness President Bush will
spend a few days in jolly old UK next week. Predictions are that
he'll draw a bigger turnout of haters and soccer losers than
attended Diana's funeral. There will be a "Stop Bush" rally on
Tuesday in London, and on Wednesday the president will move into
Buckingham Palace. Is that a good idea, if Prince Charles is
anywhere close by? Have the Dixie Chicks been invited to provide
the official welcome? Many questions remain, but not who the real
man of the hour is. Doing some advance work of his own, he warns
British readers in today's Guardian that the "unlearned"
Bush has betrayed tutor Tony Blair in favor of Ariel Sharon and
Elliott Abrams. So who's this paleoconservative EOW? Why, Sidney
Blumenthal, of course.
topics:
Hollywood, Constitution