Monster

The deranged smear jobs that have characterized the McCain campaign's anti-Obama ads -- misleading or shamelessly false, aimed at the dopes -- bear the stamp of Steve Schmidt, a protege of former George Bush operative Karl Rove. And Rove was a protege of the late and infamous Lee Atwater, the godfather of the right-wing culture-war smear and arguably one of the most demonic mentalities to exert a profound influence upon the American political process.


And yet Stefan Forbes' Boogie Man, a portrait of Atwater's life and career which I saw last summer at the L.A. Film Festival, is, believe it or not, not a smear job. It doesn't sidestep the facts and doesn't blink at the hard stuff, but it's relatively fair-minded. Call me left-biased, but it seems to bend over backwards to give Atwater a fair shake. Really.

InterPositive Media will be releasing Boogie Man this Friday (9.26) in New York and Washington, D.C. and in L.A. on Friday, 10.3, at the Sunset 5. The idea is to open in about 20 additional markets "immediately thereafter," says a release.

Consider this 9.19.08 N.Y. Times piece by Eleanor Randolph called "The Political Legacy of Baaad Boy Atwater":

"For all the nastiness of this year's presidential campaign, the downward spiral into ever-meaner electioneering really started about 20 years ago," she begins. "The political Magus who ushered in our new muddier era was Lee Atwater, best known for engineering George H.W. Bush's win in 1988. Mr. Atwater became such a mythic figure in American politics that he was praised at his funeral in 1991 for being Machiavellian 'in the very best sense of the word.'

"As many Democratic victims could attest, Mr. Atwater was Machiavellian in the actual sense of the word. Boogie Man, a new film by Stefan Forbes, details Mr. Atwater's impish, strangely seductive charm, his mean boogie guitar and mostly his political chicanery. A lot of the latter sounds very familiar to anyone following the 2008 campaign.

"For starters, Mr. Atwater knew how to seduce the news media. He could wink and laugh and drop a fake story on the best of them. Lee Bandy, a respected political journalist for The State newspaper in South Carolina, recalled the time that he accidentally helped one of Mr. Atwater's candidates, former Gov. Ronald Reagan of California. Later, Mr. Bandy recalled that 'Lee laughed and said, 'Bandy, you got used.'

"Using the news media apparently was not the hard part for Mr. Atwater. The real trick was finding the way to get inside peoples' heads.

"One of the cruelest examples of this maneuver involved former State Senator Tom Turnipseed, a South Carolina Democrat who ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 1980. As a youth, Mr. Turnipseed had shock therapy for depression, which he talked about on occasion.

"Mr. Atwater, who was working for the Republican, was not sympathetic. He went around the state telling people that the Democratic candidate had once 'been hooked up to jumper cables.' No matter how much Mr. Turnipseed talked about education or crime or dirty tricks after that, voters only saw the jumper cables.

"For the 1988 campaign to elect then-Vice President Bush, the indelible image that helped defeat Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts was a black man named Willie Horton. Willie Horton committed rape while on furlough from a Massachusetts prison under a program that was actually started by another governor, a Republican.


"Despite his public denials that he had anything to do with an anti-Dukakis commercial featuring Mr. Horton, this film has Mr. Atwater encouraging an outside group to spread the word. The tactic worked. Mr. Atwater and friends managed to turn Willie Horton's face into the only thing some voters could remember about the Democratic nominee.

"Struck with brain cancer in 1990, Mr. Atwater began to repent. He apologized to Mr. Dukakis and Mr. Turnipseed, among others. He tried to get his former acolytes, like Karl Rove, to back off. But, by then, it was too late.

"Many of today's third-party ads like the Swift Boat attacks that helped defeat Senator John Kerry in 2004 are linear descendants of the Willie Horton campaign. A supposed slip of the tongue that in fact gets some truly nasty tidbit on the record -- that tactic is straight from the Atwater manual. As are nasty blog items, quickly denied by candidates who know full well that their supporters are behind them.

"These tricks contribute to voter apathy. They destroy good people. They make it harder for candidates and their families to brave the campaign trail. But too many of today's political strategists forget Mr. Atwater's final appeal. They are out there looking for something else -- more jumper cables."

No American Cow<< previous | next >>Letterman Does It

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on September 24, 2008 at 6:37 PM

comment #1

Pablo Villaça Author Profile Page says ...

I think Steve Schmidt just made Papa Rove very proud by inventing a new strategy: the time-out. Just like when a team is losing a game and watching the opponent distacing itself on the scoreboard and the coach then decides to stop the game so the leaders will be cooled down and lose momentum.

They even had Bush calling Obama "back to Washington". Wow. That's right: let's stop the campaigning so these two guys can make all the difference back in the Senate. Hm-hum.

Posted by Pablo Villaça Author Profile Page at September 24, 2008 7:57 PM

comment #2

hiviper Author Profile Page says ...

A piece of shit like Atwater "finds the truth" right before he's about to die only for selfish reasons.

Live as an honorable, moral man before you know you're going to meet your maker, coward.

Posted by hiviper Author Profile Page at September 24, 2008 10:06 PM

comment #3

snackyx Author Profile Page says ...

"A piece of shit like Atwater "finds the truth" right before he's about to die only for selfish reasons. "

Didn't Chuck Colson find Jesus once his ass was being rung up the flagpole? Gee--funny how that works.

Posted by snackyx Author Profile Page at September 25, 2008 7:17 AM

comment #4

TheJERMSguy Author Profile Page says ...

Political campaigns will always be Machiavellian. McCain didn't win the presidential primary until he started lying about his opponents. it was disheartening to watch, but that's what it took. he remembers the lesson of 2000. Dirty tactics win.

But hey, the campaign between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson was bitter and ugly too. The recount scandal between JQ Adams and Andrew Jackson makes the Bush-Gore incident look like a gentleman's handshake. Papers in 1864 were comparing Lincoln to Satan.

Posted by TheJERMSguy Author Profile Page at September 25, 2008 10:05 AM

comment #5

DarthCorleone Author Profile Page says ...

Mr. Atwater became such a mythic figure in American politics that he was praised at his funeral in 1991 for being Machiavellian 'in the very best sense of the word.'

I find that very amusing. I wasn't aware there was a good sense of the word "Machiavellian," much less a best one. You might as well as call someone a "hypocrite" in the best sense of the word.

Posted by DarthCorleone Author Profile Page at September 25, 2008 10:59 AM

comment #6

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

Watch the last couple minutes of that montage in the Moyers piece. He certainly payed for it. When do we get Oliver Stone's ATWATER?

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at September 25, 2008 12:24 PM

comment #7

robbiefantastic Author Profile Page says ...

"Call me left-biased"

i believe this is the understatement of the year!

Posted by robbiefantastic Author Profile Page at September 25, 2008 12:51 PM

comment #8

janee Author Profile Page says ...

Si vous etes interesses par le dossier, ou desirez en savoir plus, contactez-moi par mail, et je vous mettrai en contact.
Best regards,Jane, CEO of hyper v high availability

Posted by janee Author Profile Page at May 18, 2011 3:58 AM

Leave a comment