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Matthews Smears Neo-Cons; Compares Obama to Denzel Washington By Media Research Center August 25, 2008 Hailing Barack Obama's attacks on John McCain's foreign policy as "profound" with "the fire I've been waiting for," during live MSNBC coverage Saturday afternoon of Obama introducing running mate Joe Biden, Chris Matthews was pleased "he finally took on John McCain on the issue of our time, which is Russia" as "he used the word bluster twice." Matthews then smeared John McCain and conservatives as warmongers: "There are a lot of neo-conservatives out there that just love the old black and white Manichaean cold war feeling again. They'd like to get rid of color television, in fact. Let's go back to the '50s and let's fight with the Russians again." That earned approving laughter from co-anchor Keith Olbermann who later cited Biden's call "to restore America's soul" and wondered: "Does it bring it up to this kind of Lincolnian greater than the sum of the parts public good mission almost?" Matthews explained to his viewers that Obama "referred to it as bluster because if you read the really smart columnists," and those would be "people like David Ignatius and Tom Friedman" who are "in the middle politically," Obama was just "calling it what it is, bluster. It's just words, just sword-rattling, and he called it today. I thought that was profound." At about 3:42 PM EDT, just after Biden finished speaking, Matthews oozed over Obama's address with "dignity and indignation," comparing him to actors Denzel Washington and Spencer Tracy. Really: "When I was watching Barack, I said there's the fire I've been waiting for. Maybe it was the camera angle, but I was looking up, if you look at some of the stronger performances, and they're almost always strong by the actor Denzel Washington, when he's really sticking it to the bad guys at the end of the movies, when he's really making his sort of Spencer Tracy moment, there's something about the face, there's something about that statement of strength and even anger where you really make your point with dignity and indignation, and I thought he was doing it today for the first time as a candidate: Barack Obama taking the fight to the bluster of the opponent." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Saturday, with audio/video, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] IMDb's page for Washington: www.imdb.com IMDb's page for Tracy: www.imdb.com On Ignatius and Friedman being "in the middle politically," I'll give him Ignatius, but only someone well to the left could see Friedman as anything other than liberal. (ABC and CBS went live at about 3:03 PM EDT/2:03 PM local CDT. CBS returned to tennis and then golf after seven minutes, but ABC, with Charles Gibson in on a Saturday, stayed on for more than a half-hour to show the entirety of Obama and most of Biden, though Gibson talked some over them, before joining a Little League championship game already in progress. NBC stayed with it's taped Olympic coverage.) From MSNBC's post-event coverage of the Saturday, August 23 Obama-Biden event in Springfield, Illinois: CHRIS MATTHEWS, IN WASHINGTON, DC: What I liked about the performance by Barack Obama was this: He finally took on John McCain on the issue of our time, which is Russia, of course, and it's invasion of Georgia. And he used the word bluster twice. Now, there are a lot of neo-conservatives out there that just love the old black and white Manichaean cold war feeling again. They'd like to get rid of color television, in fact. Let's go back to the '50s [laugher from Olbermann] and let's fight with the Russians again. They're only comfortable in that setting. .... KEITH OLBERMANN, IN NEW YORK CITY: In his speech, Joe Biden specifically tied John McCain to swift boating. He made, as Chris just pointed out, the swift boating terms in our country, he put that term and John McCain together and he said flatly that we need to restore America's soul. This kind of terminology, does it effectively lift this campaign out of Democrat versus Republican and make it into something of a well, I hate to use the comparison, but we're doing it obviously in front of Lincoln's state house, does it bring it up to this kind of Lincolnian greater than the sum of the parts public good mission almost? |
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