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From: "Alamaine, IVe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: September 20, 2006 8:19:35 AM PDT
Subject: [ctrl] Olbermann navigates tightrope minus a net

http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=televisionNews&storyID
=2006-09-19T075408Z_01_N19319823_RTRIDST_0_TELEVISION-OLBERMANN-DC.XML

Olbermann navigates tightrope minus a net
Tue Sep 19, 2006 3:53 AM ET

By Ray Richmond

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Keith Olbermann sometimes feels as if
he's out there by himself on the high wire, a lone (or nearly lone) voice
of reason in a world gone mad. Emboldened by the left as the right man in
the right place at the right time, dismissed by the right as a Bush-
bashing tool of liberal propagandists, the host-anchor of MSNBC's nightly
"Countdown" newsmagazine has long been a zealous polarizing force as a
journalist who wears his heart in plain sight.

But while using his platform in part to protect what he sees as truth,
justice and the American way and its ongoing assault from the Bush
administration, Olbermann has suddenly evolved into more than merely Bill
O'Reilly's sardonic whipping post. He's morphed before our eyes into the
second coming of Howard Beale.

Surely you remember Howard. He was the character (played with Oscar-
winning brilliance by Peter Finch) who took on the establishment with his
televised "mad as hell" rants in the seminal and prescient film
"Network," which this fall marks 30 years since its release.

While Olbermann has fully embodied the Beale zeitgeist more than ever, he
has done so with decidedly more clear-eyed focus than the manic rage
practiced by that particular fictitious icon. Over the past three weeks,
he has crafted and delivered a pair of impassioned, acerbic essays that
first slammed defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld (on August 30) and then,
on September 11, one skewering President Bush for his politicizing the
events of five years before.

An excerpt: "How dare you, Mr. President, after taking cynical advantage
of the unanimity and love, and transmuting it into fraudulent war and
needless death, after monstrously transforming it into fear and suspicion
and turning that fear into the campaign slogan of three elections?"

It was a devastating and lengthy commentary that last week became an
immediate sensation in the video download universe (earning nearly
300,000 page views on YouTube alone). Coincidentally or no, Olbermann's
household numbers are up 73% in the first two weeks of September from
August.

While there is no argument that Olbermann can at times be self-indulgent,
somewhat arrogant, over the top and stridently passionate, he is also the
most compelling news personality of his generation. Love him or hate him,
he is a charismatic, righteously indignant force of nature who is
inspiring fervent cheers and detesting jeers in equal measure.

"No voice came to me and told me to do this," Olbermann says. "It's
simply the eruption of the need to say something. If this country was
founded on anything, it's the fight to the death to protect the right of
someone to say that which you disagree with. I just think maybe I'm first
in voicing skepticism of the administration that's been irrationally
muted."

Unlike Beale, Olbermann maintains that he is not going nuts and has
simply been inspired by his senses of history and right and wrong to take
to the air with both lungs breathing fire. While he has increasingly
become an enemy of the state, the support he's received from his network
bosses has been complete. In fact, MSNBC reran his September 11
"Countdown" commentary on Friday night and featured him as a guest on the
"Today" show that same morning, which the host obviously appreciates.

"Yet at the same time I actually don't feel I've changed what I'm saying
much at all," he maintains. "I believe it's this administration's
continued move away from reality and toward rewriting our history that
has made what I'm saying finally seem more relevant. That's the truth."

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

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Alamaine, IVe
Grand Forks, ND, US of A
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
"All are lunatics, but he who can analyze his delusion is called a
philosopher." - Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)

Don't ask about caste or riches but instead ask about conduct. Look
at the flames of a fire. Where do they come from? From a piece of
wood"and it doesn't matter what wood. In the same way, a wise
person can come from wood of any sort. It is through firmness and
restraint and a sense of truth that one becomes noble, not through
caste. -Sutta Nipata
~~~~~~~
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