Warner Todd Huston
How Hollywood maligns the right
FacebookTwitter
By Warner Todd Huston
May 6, 2010

We all know of the great slights that Hollywood deals out to the American right. We see them all the time. From the TV shows that casts Republicans as villains, the movies that make Christians out to be hypocrites or even outright evil. Traditional motherhood and fatherhood also find constant ridicule at the hands of Hollywood. The overt examples are everywhere, of course. But the grand swipe isn't all that Hollywood indulges. There are also these ubiquitous, small, quick, too fast to notice swipes against the right perpetrated by Hollywood. A fine example of the side-swipe approach to denigrating the right came in the April 29 episode of The Mentalist, a CBS detective show starring Australian actor Simon Baker.

Now, at the top here I want to say that The Mentalist is generally an inoffensive, amusing little show fashioned in the Sherlock Holmes mode featuring a detective that sees every little clue and can with ease assemble these disparate facts to solve the crime. Baker turns in a funny performance with just enough underlying darkness to make his character interesting.

But, despite that it is generally a diverting entertainment, the show is just as disposed to slam anything from the right as any other and the April 29 episode gives us a prime example of that.

In the episode titled "Red All Over," the investigative team tries to solve the murder of a media mogul. One of the plot lines deals with the leader of a Scientology-styled cult played by famed actor Malcolm McDowell.

McDowell is presented as a slick, con man that is up to no good and hero Simon Baker reacts to him in that manner. In one of the central scenes the two characters verbally spar with each other each looking for vulnerabilities in the other's wall of self-surety.

In that scene detective Baker asks con-man McDowell about a self-help book he wrote that was personalized to a suspected bomber. Baker tells McDowell that he must know the bomber because he so carefully personalized the book. McDowell returns by telling Baker that he personalizes thousands of books like that. It is a trick, McDowell's character says, that he learned from his old friend "Ron Reagan."

And now you see what these right-hating denizens of Hollywood just did, don't you? They took the sleazy, com man character and made him out as a close personal friend of Ronald Reagan! They've maligned Ronald Reagan as one who would keep company with a low-life con man. Apparently, these Hollywood types expect every viewer to slap their heads and say to themselves, "of COURSE Ronald Reagan would be friends with a scummy con man!" It's a natural fit... right?

This was a quick, hard to notice shot at Ronald Reagan but for what reason? Couldn't they just as easily have said that the con man was a close personal friend with Jimmy Carter? How about Bill Clinton? No better con man ever set foot in the White House than Bill Clinton! Yet these TV writers had to reach back decades to slag Ronald Reagan!

This episode's slap at Reagan is a perfect example of the quick, anti-right slant that Hollywood wallows in every day in ways small as well as big.

© Warner Todd Huston

 

The views expressed by RenewAmerica columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of RenewAmerica or its affiliates.
(See RenewAmerica's publishing standards.)


Warner Todd Huston

Warner Todd Huston's thoughtful commentary, sometimes irreverent often historically based, is featured on many websites... (more)

More by this author

 

Stephen Stone
HAPPY EASTER: A message to all who love our country and want to help save it

Stephen Stone
The most egregious lies Evan McMullin and the media have told about Sen. Mike Lee

Siena Hoefling
Protect the Children: Update with VIDEO

Stephen Stone
FLASHBACK to 2020: Dems' fake claim that Trump and Utah congressional hopeful Burgess Owens want 'renewed nuclear testing' blows up when examined

Linda Goudsmit
CHAPTER 21: Montessori and Drag Queen Story Hour

Tom DeWeese
Thinking globally, acting locally: How sustainable rule took over your city

Marsha West
Taylor Swift may be causing her fans to stumble into witchcraft

Armand C. Hale
We are next

Linda Kimball
System of lies: Ideological paradise on earth and why the bloody, violent dream will not die

Rev. Mark H. Creech
Restoring ethical foundations: The Ten Commandments in American culture

Michael Bresciani
The all-white jury just convicted 'black man' Donald Trump

Jim Wagner
Islam for Dhimmis—Part II

Jerry Newcombe
Historical ignorance raises flags

Pete Riehm
Gloom and grift versus good and great

Cliff Kincaid
Honor victims of the U.S. government on Memorial Day

Linda Goudsmit
CHAPTER 20: In their own words: The sexual revolution begins in Kindergarten
  More columns

Cartoons


Click for full cartoon
More cartoons

Columnists

Matt C. Abbott
Chris Adamo
Russ J. Alan
Bonnie Alba
Chuck Baldwin
Kevin J. Banet
J. Matt Barber
Fr. Tom Bartolomeo
. . .
[See more]

Sister sites