Tagged: David Sirota

Posted: January 7, 2013 at 7:02 am

Heckuva Job in Denver, Brownie?

Until this weekend, Michael DeWayne Brown (aka “Brownie,” of George Bush FEMA fame, who botched the federal response to hurricane Katrina) and David Sirota (a progressive author and former political operative) co-hosted a radio show in Denver called The Rundown.  Sirota was a Schweitzer employee and Montana resident for a while, hence my Colorado blogging interlude.

The station, Talk Radio 630, is owned by Clear Channel, the right-wing radio behemoth conglomerate that owns pretty much every radio station in America.  And the show is aired amid a roster of other right-wing talk, so Sirota has been one of the lone liberal voices on the station–until this week, when Sirota left the program suddenly.  It is now Brownie’s show solo.

There are several theories about Sirota’s departure.  The first is that he was kicked off the show for suggesting, in an interview with Don Lemon on CNN after the Newton school shooting, that mass shootings are carried out disproportionately by white men, and for further suggesting that we should ask critical questions about the reason for this distinct racial profile of a mass shooter since that’s what we do to other groups.  These are points that merit discussion, but cause rage among conservatives.  The second theory is that Sirota was badly outclassing Brown (who was not doing a heckuva job representing the conservative viewpoint) so badly that the radio station had to shake things up to appease the conservative audience. And the third theory is that Sirota couldn’t deal with a bunch of mouth breathers calling in every day babbling unintelligibly, so he skipped out.

An interesting wrinkle in Sirota’s departure is that the radio show had very high ratings.

But if you ever happened to listen to the show online, you observed distinctly that Sirota was indeed constantly outwitting the dense Brown; and it clearly made for a hostile relationship between two of them on air.

Brown is not an intelligent man.  He is, like most right-wing radio personalities, someone whose intellectual output consists of spouting FOXNewsisms and little else.  Listen to him talk and you will quickly understand that his legendarily pathetic, disorganized handling of the New Orleans Hurricane was not some mishap befalling an otherwise qualified officeholder.  Rather, it was the work product of a giant dunce, one of many put by George Bush into high positions.

Also, I suspect that for the same reason that Hannity jettisoned his liberal sidekick Colmes some years ago turning Hannity and Colmes to merely Hannity, right-media producers are generally moving away from the cross-fire type of format.  They’ve found that right-wing audiences do not like it one bit when a liberal outwits a conservative on the air, preferring instead a unilateral format to an adversarial one, preferring to hear unchallenged propaganda rather than a conversation that could hash out some truth. Conservative audiences get very upset by liberal arguments (or just logical arguments) to which there are no good rebuttals.  They get irritated by the whole business, and turn the dial.

So the jerk Brownie now has a solo act in Denver, penciled in somewhere around the Limbaugh show and other inane programming.  I’m sure he’ll do just fine.

Posted: June 21, 2012 at 12:07 pm

Gay and Chic, Savvy and Dirty, and now Exposed

David Sirota, a national radio host and pundit who used to work on Governor Schweitzer’s campaigns, has written a deliciously intriguing column about a new development in an otherwise dormant Montana controversy–the Mike Taylor ad.

In 2002, the Mike Taylor ad was all the rage in Montana politics.  Max Baucus was up for re-election, and the Montana Democratic Party ran an effective and nasty ad against Baucus’s opponent, Mike Taylor, that pretty much finished him off.  They’d unearthed video of Taylor from his days as a 1970s Denver hairdresser. It was from an infomercial in which Taylor had a male client in the salon chair, and was talking to the camera about the value of face cream. He rubbed the cream into the guy’s temples while he was discussing the importance of moisturizing.

Taylor was also dressed like a slightly less masculine version of Jon Travolta in Saturday Night Fever.  At one point on the video, he reaches his hand down into the pubic vicinity of the guy sitting in the chair, and this action is accentuated (in the campaign ad) with a slow zoom and a tricky cropping of the video.

To make matters worse for Taylor, he had spent the campaign season dressed up as Teddy Roosevelt, with a lumberjack shirt and boots, and wire-rimmed spectacles to go with his toothy grin and push-broom mustache, talking about the all of his big game trophies and other tough-guy accomplishments.  This effort to market himself as a Montana Archetype was quickly deflated by the hairdresser ad.

And when the ad hit the airwaves, rather than just laughing it off by saying that everybody (or at least lots of people) dressed and looked funny in the 1970s, stupid Taylor instead gave a press conference at which he broke into tears and accused Baucus of suggesting that he was gay. That was the end of the campaign, but not the controversy.

Some leading Democrats actually complained about the anti-gay overtone of the ad, which was effectuated with a camera trick that turned what was probably an innocent motion of Taylor’s hand into what looked like a crotch-grab. The ad also did a zoom and slomo of Taylor’s hands rubbing the moisturizer into the guy’s temples.  There was little doubt as to what the creators of the ad were implying.

Baucus, as you might guess, was shocked, shocked to discover that such and ad had been made by the Democratic Party and he immediately made it clear he’d had nothing to do with the commercial.  And his statements implied that he did not condone the obvious “gay baiting” employed in it.

Putting aside the gay-baiting, it would actually have been illegal for Baucus to have been involved in the making of the spot in any way, because it would have been an “illegal coordination” between his campaign and the Democratic Party.  These entities may not collaborate on TV ads.  It would be a violation of federal law.

And yet in Businessweek magazine last week, Baucus slipped up in an interview, admitting that his campaign had had a hand in the making and airing of the commercial, and that he himself had received advanced notice of it and even got an opportunity to sign off on it.  His admission was made in the context of describing the talents of his former Chief of Staff, Jim Messina, who is now Obama’s campaign manager and was the subject of the Businessweek article.  Baucus used the Mike Taylor ad as evidence of Messina’s prowess as a political operative, since Messina was his campaign manager when the Taylor ad ran.

Baucus says:

Jim is tough. I’ll never forget when he showed me that ad. We were in Bozeman in a motel. The curtains were drawn. He said, ‘Max, what do you think?’ They were afraid I wasn’t going to like it. I loved it!

Perhaps Baucus had a momentary mental lapse, and forgot that his participation in the enterprise was supposed to be on the hush hush.  Or maybe he just decided that it no longer matters because it was so long ago.  If nothing else, it’s an opportunity for us all to revisit a very famous, if inappropriate,campaign ad.  And as for Mike Taylor, he was a right-wing buffoon who pretty much deserved everything he got, regardless of who was involved or how inappropriate it might have been.

And, as a post-script, I will add that Mike Taylor, and his wife Janna who is a right-wing GOP state senator, recently topped the list of federal farm subsidy recipients in Montana–they’ve pocketed $1,000,000 worth of checks from the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations, much of it for simply sitting on their asses.  So Baucus had it partially correct: Mike Taylor is a queen–a welfare queen.

Posted: November 25, 2011 at 12:13 pm

Baucus Bumps

With the failure of the super-committee, it looks like Max Baucus’s bumpy ride is not smoothing out any time soon. He has his work cut out for him to regain some credibility with voters. He appointed himself onto the committee, a questionable decision since most observers at the time felt that there was little chance of the committee agreeing to anything.  And they were right.

Not surprisingly, Brian Schweitzer joined in the super-committee bashing-fest this morning while guest hosting an Air America radio program on AM760 out of Denver (listen online here to Hour 1, Hour 2, Hour 3).  He even conducted an on-air contest in which callers got a chance to rename the super-committee, with Schweitzer’s belt buckle as the first prize.

Baucus was at least nominally in the right place ideologically, trying to get a deal including tax increases and spending cuts. However, Baucus is one of the authors of the Bush tax cuts, a fact which he heralded often in earlier times. Thus is he sleeping in a bed he made.