Wednesday, April 16, 2008

That braying ass



Seems a less than flattering view of Chris Matthews has come out in a recent article.

Crooks and Liars:


I’m honestly not trying to be unkind, but that is quite clearly the intent and thrust of this Sunday’s NY Times Magazine feature on Chris Matthews.


Cable political coverage has changed, however, and so has the sensibility that viewers — particularly young ones — expect from it. Matthews’s bombast is radically at odds with the wry, antipolitical style fashioned by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert or the cutting and finely tuned cynicism of Matthews’s MSNBC co-worker Keith Olbermann. These hosts betray none of the reverence for politics or the rituals of Washington that Matthews does. On the contrary, they appeal to the eye-rolling tendencies of a cooler, highly educated urban cohort of the electorate that mostly dismisses an exuberant political animal like Matthews as annoyingly antiquated, like the ranting uncle at the Thanksgiving table whom the kids have learned to tune out.
It is almost a cruel caricature: Matthews is prone to effusively repeating phrases in increasingly louder tones; the narcissistic yet self-conscious and uncool geek enthralled with Tim Russert and threatened by kewl kids Keith Olbermann and David Gregory. It’s not the NBC News Division, it’s high school all over again with grown men several decades past knowing better. Digby:


What really cracks me up in the article is the extent to which people who are just as bad as he is in their own ways try to distance themselves from him. Just as bad are those who go out on a limb to praise him — because he’s so good for them. He does have a TV show, after all, which makes him very important no matter how ridiculous he is:

...
But, I can be unfair. He can be reasonable and sensible, but the guy has just slid more and more into a caricature in the last few years.

Atrios:


I'm still digesting the NYT Magazine profile of Chris Matthews. It's remarkable that it even exists as whatever its merits it's rare for members of the media attack their own like this. More than that, profile pieces of any kind are rarely this vicious. As our stupid discourse focuses on elitism this week, it's worth staring at this paragraph until your eyes bleed.


“I don’t think people look at me as the establishment, do you?” Matthews asked me. “Am I part of the winner’s circle in American life? I don’t think so.”
Annual salary: $5 million.
Gosh, why would anyone think of him as part of the establishment? He goes to all the parties, hangs around and chit chats with the politicos, and lauds them, but he isn't one of them.

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