海角大神

Tears of a Clown

Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank examines the media and political phenomenon that is Glenn Beck.

Tears of a Clown: Glenn Beck and the Tea Bagging of America By Dana Milbank Doubleday 261 pp., $24.95

In his polemic biography of Glenn Beck, Tears of a Clown: Glenn Beck and the Tea Bagging of America, Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank vows redundantly to expose the lachrymose talk show host by 鈥渜uoting him in his own words.鈥 It is a technique, the author points out, that Beck himself purports to use in attacking his vast cadre of political opponents, dead or alive, who range from Woodrow Wilson and Teddy and Franklin Roosevelt to Malia Obama, the president鈥檚 daughter.

In the case of Malia, 11 at the time of the broadcast, Beck quoted her in his own words for a radio skit. Here鈥檚 one line Beck created for her: 鈥淒addy, why do you still let Sarah Palin destroy the environment? Why are 鈥 Daddy, why don鈥檛 you just put her in some sort of camp?鈥 Here鈥檚 another question that Beck鈥檚 Malia asked her father: 鈥淲hy do you hate black people so much?鈥

Beck subsequently apologized for dragging the president鈥檚 family into the mud 鈥 families of his myriad ideological enemies are strictly off limits he had said both before and after maligning Malia 鈥 but practicing what he preaches is hardly one of Beck鈥檚 strong suits.

Crossing the line, however, is. For example, Beck spent a lot of air time 鈥 he鈥檚 on television and radio weekdays 鈥 propagating while simultaneously 鈥渢rying to debunk鈥 the rumor (although that might be too strong a word for it) that FEMA is setting up concentration camps for American citizens. In a show about the possibility of such camps in America, he asked guest James Meigs of Popular Mechanics if an Internet video narrated by a militia movement leader showed 鈥渁 government-run concentration camp where atrocities 鈥 every reason to believe atrocities are going on?鈥

鈥淵es,鈥 Meigs mechanically replied. On the next show, a day later, it was revealed that the video was of a North Korean camp, and weeks later Beck denied that he had ever said that the Obama administration was building concentration camps. He was just asking questions, trying to debunk something that clearly had him on high alert (virtually everything has him on high alert). Beck鈥檚 questions tend to be along the lines of, 鈥淎re you still cheating on your spouse?鈥 Can鈥檛 disprove you aren鈥檛, well....

Milbank鈥檚 fast-paced chronicle of Beck World ably details the meteoric rise of a low-rent radio shock jock to national phenomenon in less than a decade. Beck鈥檚 radio and television shows combined draw some 10 million Americans, nearly 4 percent of the public. Beck, Inc. is pulling in some $32 million annually. If he cries a lot on the air, he is crying all the way to the bank, the author points out. Not bad for a former abuser of drugs and alcohol who described his late 20th-century self as a 鈥渄irtbag.鈥

Hanging Beck with his own words is like shooting fish in a barrel. For starters there are so many of them. He called Obama a racist, and not just a garden variety bigot, but a man 鈥渨ho has a deep seated hatred for white people.鈥 (That must make cabinet meetings pretty uncomfortable). Beck鈥檚 on-air shenanigans, too, are juicy targets, like the time he was waxing wroth about President Obama鈥檚 alleged sins against America while he simulated pouring gasoline on a guest. During the creepy charade Beck said, 鈥淧resident Obama, why don鈥檛 you just set us on fire?鈥

Interspersed with documenting a litany of quarter-truths, inaccuracies, clownishness, acute paranoia, mean-spirited invective, innuendo, pseudo history, and conspiracy theories, Milbank weaves in the basic story of Beck鈥檚 life. For a time, when he was a Connecticut DJ, he and Senator Joe Lieberman were pals. He and his second wife converted to Mormonism, and Milbank traces some of Beck鈥檚 apocalyptical tirades to certain beliefs of the Church of Latter Day Saints. In one chapter he delineates the similarities in the rhetoric of Beck and Father Charles E. Coughlin, the rabble-rousing priest of the 1930s who, like Beck, excoriated Franklin Roosevelt and predicted America鈥檚 demise as just around the corner.

In the end, Milbank loosely links Beck鈥檚 angry schtick to several criminal acts, including the murder of three police officers, committed by likely viewers. The author stops short of blaming Beck for the deaths, writing, 鈥淏ut the episode does show how Beck鈥檚 words are inspiring the fringe....鈥 Beck himself sometimes cautions his fans not to do anything rash, presumably like pouring gasoline on someone.

The book grew out of a newspaper column that Milbank wrote, and one wonders if Beck is worth more than 750 words 鈥 or even that many. Or this review, for that matter. But the sad truth is that he is considerably more than a clown. He is a political bully who has the Republican Party cowed. Milbank quotes no less a light than conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks, who wrote that 鈥渆very single elected leader in the Republican Party is afraid to take on Rush [Limbaugh] and Glenn Beck.鈥 Now there鈥檚 something to worry about.

David Holahan is a freelance writer in East Haddam, Conn.

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