By Enemy Central on 3.10.05 @ 12:21AM
Guess who stole Dan Rather's show?
CBS News broke all viewership records last night, beating the
audiences of NBC, ABC, Al-Jazeerah, Charlie Rose, and the Al
Franken Show combined. What a grisly affair. By our count, 73
percent of those viewers were watching Dan Rather for the first
time, drawn to their screens like looters to a disaster, having to
see for themselves what bias looks like after it has crashed,
burned and vaporized. CBS produced no one to offer counseling or
even to provide a number to a trauma hotline. The solemnity was
stifling. We are a nation in recovery.
Darling Dan proved magnanimous. In a gesture to President Bush,
he exploited the tragedy of September 11 as no one has attempted to
since the GOP convention. We even were shown long-suppressed
footage of the attacks of that day. We can expect Dan to set up
shop at Ground Zero. Did you see how his hair was combed extra
carefully, how the makeup on his face seemed to carry an extra
layer or two, how he came out in his finest Sunday suit? Not every
man is fortunate enough to officiate at his own professional
burial. It marked the end of a very long ego-trip.
Some saw the appearance of Naderite Joan Claybrook as a gesture
to CBS's most faithful viewers. We saw it differently. Claybrook
was critical of the credit card companies that have the cheek to
bill credit card holders for the purchases they make on their
cards. But this was no kneejerk populist gesture. Claybrook was
rising to the occasion. If we're losing Dan, why go on? Eat, drink,
and be merry, she signaled, for tomorrow we shall die, Danless.
Raise up our glasses, run up our credit cards, live for today,
carpe per diem.
It took courage to resuscitate "Courage!" And shrewdness, as a
diversion from Dan's subliminal use of "frequency." All that
cunning Dan acquired during his Gunga days came in handy.
The worry now is that Dan might feel called upon to become the
next Pope. Why else did he extend courage "to the oppressed and to
those whose lot it is to struggle in financial hardship or in
failing health." Either that or he intends to run as Hillary's veep
or come back as Mother Teresa.
Okay, no more piling on, right? Remember, Dan was speaking in a
state of shock, having been rejected not only by his network, but
by Uncle Walter Cronkite, who before this week never had an unkind
word to say about anyone.
Yesterday we were all set to ask former President Jimmy Carter
to console our friend. The Washington Post saved us from
making a rash decision. It turns out that kisses from Jimmy may not
be in great demand. Back in 1990, the paper reported, he intervened on behalf of Habitat for
Humanity's founder, whom some suspected was a sexual harasser. Not
so, said Jimmy, drawing on his own experience. Here's how the
Post described the Carter's peculiar proclivities and
unfortunate encounters:
In the March 26, 1990, letter, Carter said he himself
was given to physical displays of affection and appreciation, such
as kisses on the cheek and hugs, to women he knew professionally
and socially that were sometimes not welcomed. He wrote that he
shook hands with several men and hugged and kissed several women at
the dedication of the John F. Kennedy Library in 1979 and that the
late president's widow had "visibly flinched" at his
actions.
Poor Jackie. Why wasn't Teddy around to protect her? Actually,
Jimmy's own words make it sound that he's mighty lucky he never
hired Anita Hill:
"Without minimizing in any way the significance of what
has happened at Habitat, let me say quite frankly that I have had
some similar kinds of relationships with some of my own female
employees and associates. If one ever complained officially, there
could be an avalanche of similar charges," Carter wrote in the
letter...
Say this for Dan: he was difficult, but no one ever accused him
of being a dirty old man!