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Vote for Me, Al Franken by Richard Corliss
In
Well, Bush's presidency did change Franken's career. It made him a best-selling author, of Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right (a book whose subtitle cued Fox News to sue him, unsuccessfully of course, for appropriating the channel's catchphrase) and The Truth, With Jokes. In 2004 his passion to mobilize progressives against Bush's war, and for the election of a Democratic President, landed him the job as host of a daily, three-hour talk show on the new liberal network Air America Radio, where — for a time, and in a few markets, among certain demographics — he got higher ratings than Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly. Now,
at 55, the cum-laude graduate of Harvard, longtime cast member-writer on Saturday
Night Live and co-author of the alcohol-horror movie When a Man Loves
a Woman thinks he's good enough and smart enough — and doggone it, enough
people like him — to be the next U.S. Senator from Minnesota. On his final Al
Franken Show, he announced that he is running to reclaim the seat that
Sen. Paul Wellstone lost when he, his wife and daughter were killed in a
plane crash two weeks before the 2002 election, and which was won by
Republican Norm Coleman. The New York City-born Franken, whose parents moved
to the Regular
listeners (and I'm one of them) had expected this announcement for more than
a year. There was a time, early in his move from In
the last segment of his last show, Franken made it official. "I've
decided to move on to another challenge... I'll be running in 2008 for Paul's
seat." With an artful blend of humility and pride, he said, "I know
I have an awful lot to learn from the people of In a way, Franken has been running for office since the late '70s, when he would appear on SNL's Weekend Update segment and announced, "Vote for me, Al Franken. You'll be glad you did!" In his possibly ironic role as a relentless self-promoter, he proclaimed the 1980s "the Al Franken Decade." In 1999 he published Why Not Me?: The Inside Story of the Making and Unmaking of the Franken Presidency, the myopically prophetic account of how he won the 2000 election and shortly thereafter lost the presidency (though his attempt to personally kill Saddam Hussein sounds like a natural poll-gooser, doesn't it?). Franken
could have made millions more writing books and giving speeches than he did
as a talk-show host — especially for a network that often didn't pay his back
salary. But he had been startled to learn that 21% of Americans got most of
their news from talk radio, which at the time was overwhelmingly right-wing.
"I didn't want to sit on the sidelines," he said today, "and I
believed Air On
his first Air Franken fancies himself, apparently, as a singing comic. He'd warble a soulful "Misty" for Christy Harvey of the Center for American Progress; croak a version of "Bad to the Bone" for "resident ethicist" Melanie Sloan; shriek "Born in the USA" for Norm Ornstein, the lonely liberal at the American Enterprise Institute; play the "Little Elephant March" from Hatari for Washington insider Tom Oliphant. They and a few others — Joe Conason, David Brock, Lawrence O'Donnell, David Sirota — became Franken's daily or weekly regulars, his cabinet, his think tank. If the show occasionally droned, it provided high-calorie, factual information. Indeed,
in its three-year life the show has gone from heavy on the comedy to nearly
banishing it. He might refer to Ornstein as "the wonkiest wonk in wonkdom," but Franken was in the top 10. He might
use Grateful Dead clips as his bumper music, but in the last months his
favorite sound bite has been William Kristol's
comment, on Apr. 1, 2003, dismissing the "pop sociology in America that,
you know, somehow the Shi'a can't get along with
the Sunni, and the Shi'a in Iraq just want to
establish some kind of Islamic fundamentalist regime. There's almost no
evidence of that at all. At
the end he could crack a joke. When Conason
mentioned that columnist Dorothy Thompson was thrown out of For his arrival as a candidate has been long anticipated — especially by those ready to nail him, to link, say, al-Qaeda and al Franken. Today, Conason said, "I'm sure there's a catalog of jokes" that his enemies were waiting to spring on him. (Franken mentioned one: his faux-ignorant observation a few years ago on John McCain's half-decade in Viet Cong captivity: "I mean anyone can get captured. Isn't the idea to capture the other guy?") Franken has to hope that the state that nurtured Garrison Keillor, Mystery Science Theater 3000 and the Coen brothers knows both how to take a joke and when somebody is telling one. But
they also have to get used to Franken's tears. The guy can be simultaneously
tough and soft; you could call him a prickly sentimentalist. The other day he
sobbed softly as he read the lyrics to American Soldier, by Dixie
Chicks tormenter Toby Keith. While denouncing In a speech on his already-purring campaign website (www.alfranken.com), the new candidate says, "I talked to Minnesotans and listened. They told me that they're sick of politics as usual — and they're sick of the usual politicians." Enter the clown, who's ready to play not Hamlet but Disraeli. |
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