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Our Boy Bill
May 9, 2002
Darn. Drat. Doggone it. I'll go further: Rats. In
other words, I am severely disappointed.
My heart leaped up when I heard that Bill Clinton
might get his own TV talk show. At last the man seemed to
have found his calling! But it turned out to be a flash
in the pan. No such show is in the offing. The genius of
America's greatest talker will have to find other
outlets.
I was especially curious to see how our young former
president would address the obvious challenge of the
opening monologue. For several years now, it has become a
fixed convention of talk shows that the host must begin
with five or ten minutes of off-color Clinton gags. How
would Clinton himself handle that one? "Hey -- did you
hear the one about ... me?"
And then there would be the guests. We would have
seen the master in action, feeding his line to pretty
Hollywood starlets. There would be other guests too:
zookeepers would bring exotic animals, and Bill would
react with mock horror when they relieved themselves on
his desk or shoe; a serious note would be lent by
interviews with officials of the International Monetary
Fund; and Don Rickles would add a note of mirth with
rapid-fire insults to the good-natured ex-president.
The theme song? Possibly "Let Me Entertain You,"
with that bump-and-grind sound; or, more sentimentally,
"Thanks for the Memories."
Sidekick? Al Gore, of course; picking up where Tommy
Newsome left off. Al would be Tommy without the
excitement.
Come on, admit it. You miss Bill too. Even if you
hate him. Or maybe especially if you hate him. His
successor is a bore who has to stop and breathe hard
before finishing a sentence, if he manages a complete
sentence at all; he must be the only guy in the history
of the Ivy League who had to major in remedial English.
But Bill's gift of gab was a wonder of nature. His syntax
was as complex as an Olympic skating maneuver, and no
matter how many times he twirled in midair he always
landed on his feet.
It would be stretching a point to say Bill made us
proud of our country, but at least you never feared that
he was being outsmarted by foreign heads of state. Most
presidents, alone in a room with some European prime
minister, look badly outnumbered; not Bill. He would
probably emerge from the meeting wearing the
distinguished visitor's watch.
Someone has quipped that Bill is like a joint
creation of Mark Twain and William Faulkner. It could be
added, without unfairness, that he was at the opposite
pole from poor Hamlet, tormented by ethical dilemmas. As
his youthful hero Jack Kennedy once observed, "Life is
unfair," and Bill, far from being demoralized by this
grim truth, quickly learned to make it work in his favor.
While carrying a Bible, for good measure.
Conservatives charge that Bill demeaned the
presidency. Well, it was high time somebody did! Bill
treated politics with all the respect it deserved, which
is why he was so successful. He didn't clutter it up with
dignity or nobility; he showed us all the tricks
Machiavelli forgot to mention. Even when he was exposed,
he got away with everything, and he managed to amuse us
while he was at it. Constitutionally obligated to see
that the laws were faithfully executed, he only just
stayed a step ahead of the law himself! It was a riot,
not unprecedented in Southern politics, but new on the
national scale.
What a cast of characters he brought into our
national life! Aside from Al Gore, his straight man, and
his stern wife Hillary, who comically underlined his
mischief, he introduced us to Jocelyn Elders, Janet Reno,
James Carville, Madeleine Albright, Donna Shalala, Ron
Brown, Hugh Rodham, George Stephanopoulos, Dick Morris,
Gennifer Flowers, Paula Jones, Monica Lewinsky, Harold
Ickes, Kathleen Willey, Marc and Denise Rich, the
MacDougals, the Thomasons, and many, many more. Yet amid
all these colorful personages, there was never any doubt
who was the star of the show.
And that star quality deserves a show -- a talk
show. After all, one of Bill's great achievements has
been to enliven the talk shows as no other president
could have done. A pity this great national resource is
going to waste.
Joe Sobran's Biography.
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