Though I am hardly an expert on these matters, it appears to
me I am dreaming more frequently than is natural about the United States Junior
Senator from Minnesota, Al Franken.
How often do I dream about (now Senator) Al? Every couple of months. That seems like a lot, doesn’t it? Does anybody else dream about Al Franken that
frequently? My guess is “unlikely.” As is that Al dreams, even semi-annually,
about me.
The dreams are, with minimal alterations in situation and
wardrobe, the same. I am talking to Al
and, though he appears to be listening, he has this glazed look in his eyes, as
if he were simultaneously doing the “twelve times” table in his head.
This look of not having Al’s complete attention is familiar
to me, having experienced it in actual life.
As I have written elsewhere, I worked with Al on a TV series called Lateline. After rejecting his offer to partner up on
the project, I later came aboard as a consultant, helping Al and his subsequent
partner John Markus develop the scripts.
Show business is a circumscribed world (or a circumcised
world, if you believe that the Jews control show business.) I had once hired John Markus as a Junior
Writer on The Cosby Show. He went on to run that show, and remained in
New York (where The Cosby Show was
produced), subsequently hooking up for the Lateline
project with Al Franken, who also lived in New York (before he ran for Senator
of Minnesota, when he moved to Minnesota, because you can’t run for Senator
from Minnesota if you’re living in New York.
Historical Note: Al
Franken grew up in Minnesota. So he
wasn’t a carpetbagger. He was just a guy
who had not lived there for thirty-five years.)
The last time I saw Al was when he agreed to let me to come
to the studio and watch him broadcast his radio show for Air America. This was in
2005, when I was in New York to attend my daughter Anna’s graduation from
nearby Sarah Lawrence.
During Lateline, I
would make script suggestions, and though at first Al was frequently almost
reflexively resistant to my ideas, he was eventually placated by John, who is a
consummate placater; plus he knew (that very often) I was right. My awareness of Al’s respect for my writing
wisdom was reflected in the fact that an overwhelming number of my proposals were
ultimately incorporated into the script.
In time, Al and I would collaborate with increasing
fluidity. We got the best out of each
other, reaching pinnacles of creativity we could never have achieved on our
own. The respect was mutual. Nothing made me happier than when one of my
pitches was met with one of Al’s spontaneous, rolling, appreciative laughs.
The climate abruptly changed, however, when the talk turned
to politics. In that arena, I had no
credentials and no track record. As a
result, my pronouncements in that area were acknowledged like those of a six
year-old discussing the pros and cons of excessive regulation on a Free Market
economy.
I am admittedly not a Student of the Game like Al, who, long
before going into politics, had an intensely wonky understanding of the
workings of government. But I think I
know something.
The following may be a self-serving rationalization, but, to
get the fullest understanding of a situation, I think it’s constructive to
examine the landscape through lenses of different focal lengths, from minutely microscopic
to “Big Picture” wide angle, but without the distortion. The war in the trenches, and the war on the
map. Each perspective illuminating in
its own way.
I recall Al being busy when I walked into his office before
the radio broadcast. The appropriate
move was to say “Hi” and repair to my perch in the studio Control Room to
observe. But I could not help
myself. I felt duty-bound (to my ideas)
to open my mouth.
It seemed to me, I unsolicitedly opined, that the Democrats
had, not only the right but the popularly supported positions on virtually
every important issue (and they still do today) – reasonable gun-ownership
regulations, immigration reform, gay marriage, the protection of Social
Security, rewriting the tax code depriving the super-rich of money-hiding
opportunities unavailable to the middle class – I was not that smooth-talking,
but I was harvesting that milieu.
I concluded that, despite the Democrats being reasonably, morally
and popularly on the right side of these things…
The Republicans – at least recently – inevitably won.
(“Winning” being defined as “nothing gets changed”, which,
for Republicans, if not perfection, is superior to a conciliatory compromise in
the Democrats’ direction.)
I was looking for an explanation as to why exactly that
was. And how that unfortunate reality
could possibly be changed.
Al eyed me like a man in the presence of a talking
horse. A horse that had no idea what it
was talking about.
It’s the same look I receive in my dream – me, articulating
my beliefs, Al wondering whether he turned out the lights in his office.
All this, of course, is speculation. I have not spoken to Al since his
election. The problem is, the situation
has altered. Now, I am not just a
chatterbox know-nothing; I am also a potential donor to his campaign.
The result (I’m imagining) if my dream became a reality?
More attention.
But an equal amount of disdain.
Though it’s impossible to test if that’s true. In the, now, “candidate-contributor”
configuration, I fear any encounter between Al and me might take the form of a wannabe
actor showing a sudden interest in the producer’s semi-interesting offspring.
So I’m stuck with the dream – I’m railing against the
system, while Al internally rattles off the names of the states and their respective
capitals.
I thought dreams were supposed to be wish fulfillments.
It seems mine
could use a better writer.
2 comments:
You knew this would spur political discussion, right? :) I tried voting Democrat in 2006. Yay, we can finally stop wasting money on this "war". Nope. They gave Bush all the military money he wanted in exchange for money for their farmer constituents. That taught me to not trust either one of those parties again. (Previous post had wrong date. I meant 2006, but typed 2008).
Post a Comment