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October 11, 2009

Another Fine Mess: Comics Whack Obama


By MARK LEIBOVICH

WASHINGTON — Is President Obama in trouble with his late-night comedy base?

It’s likely he hasn’t noticed or doesn’t care. He is, after all, in the midst of his oft-invoked “full
plate” of supposedly “defining moments” in his presidency — a “defining” decision on
Afghanistan, “defining” legislative battle on health care, among other “defining” things.

But there is perhaps another more subtle set of "defining” episodes playing out for Mr. Obama in
the televised comedy salons that had previously, by and large, been relatively gentle spaces for
him. The bits about him are getting harsher. They are no longer just gentle gibes about Bo the
dog, big ears, bad bowling and beer summits.

A conspicuous (if not “defining”) episode occurred Oct. 3 on Saturday Night Live in a skit set in
the Oval Office. The president (played by Fred Armisen) was defending his record against critics
who had accused him of turning the United States “into something that resembles the Soviet
Union or Nazi Germany.” Not so, protested the faux-Bama.

“When you look at my record, it’s very clear what I’ve done so far,” he said. “And that is nothing.”

The sketch went on to show Mr. Obama/Armisen running through a checklist of things he had
vowed to do — closing Guantánamo Bay prison, overhauling health care. All were marked, Not
Done.

“Looking at this list I am seeing two big accomplishments,” he said. “Jack and Squat.” And ouch.

Mr. Obama has of course been a puzzle to comedians for some time. They agonized during the
campaign about how his low-key and confident manner did not lend itself to edgy caricature. The
challenge was made greater by the sensitivities inherent to lampooning a black candidate.

And from the outset, Mr. Obama has been praised as someone who “gets late night,” whose ironic
and self-deprecating humor is well-suited to the genre’s sensibilities. He was the first sitting
president to appear as a guest of Jay Leno’s and David Letterman’s. “You ignore their influence at
your peril,” said Dan Pfeiffer, the White House’s deputy communications director. “They are often
leading indicators of where the narrative is headed.”
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leading indicators of where the narrative is headed.”

But recent indicators could be proving ominous. There has been a proliferation of jokes that feed
on — or are fed by — a resuscitated old narrative against the president that goes back to last
year’s campaign when both John McCain and Hillary Clinton tried to portray Mr. Obama as an All
Talk/No Walk showboat.

Last Tuesday, Jon Stewart advanced the Saturday Night Live “do nothing” theme on “The Daily
Show.” It began as a standard Stewart video-clip juxtaposition of Mr. Obama (and surrogates)
promising to end the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. It continued with clips from the
ensuing months of Defense Secretary Robert Gates and National Security Adviser Jim Jones
saying they had not yet gotten around to reversing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” citing Mr. Obama’s
“full plate” of business. (“The president needs a metaphor czar,” Mr. Stewart said.)

What followed was Mr. Stewart, exasperated with a man he had supported, throwing his hands up
and essentially imploring the president to, you know, do something.

“All that stuff you’ve been putting on your plate?” Mr. Stewart said. “It’s [expletive] chow time,
brother. That’s how you get things off your plate.”

After a roar of laughter and applause from the audience, Mr. Stewart reminded Mr. Obama that
“You are president of the United States.” It sounded like something between a liberal call to
action or cry for help. As Mr. Stewart grew more animated and the crowd grew louder, the
routine took on the feel of a televised catharsis.

“There have been some clear shots coming across the bow from the comic left,” observed Ric
Keller, a former Republican congressman from Florida who once wrote jokes for Jeb Bush, the
former governor.

Others have noted another creeping caricature of Mr. Obama as a ditherer. On Thursday, for
instance, Mr. Leno joked that no one should expect the president’s decision on sending more
troops to Afghanistan anytime soon. “Remember, it took five months to decide on a puppy,” he
said.

Jeff Nussbaum, a Democratic speech and joke writer, disagrees that late-night comedy is a
leading indicator of a cultural zeitgeist. “To use an economic term, it is more of a lagging
indicator,” he said, something that responds to perceptions that are already entrenched. In
practical terms, President Obama has now been in office almost nine months, Mr. Nussbaum
said, and “comedians now have a greater body of work to go after, for better or worse.”

By and large, the bulk of late-night barbs directed at the president remain glancing at best. “The
jokes are still largely about things like how the media lionizes Obama, or what the opposition is
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jokes are still largely about things like how the media lionizes Obama, or what the opposition is
saying about him,” said Bob Lichter, of George Mason University’s Center for Media and Public
Affairs, who has been tracking themes in late-night humor since 1988.

Mr. Lichter said it was too soon to tell whether the Saturday Night Live skit is a “harbinger or
outlier” in how comics will treat Mr. Obama. At the very least, it provided a comic articulation of
a potentially devastating message: “The danger is that Mr. Obama is going to be defined by
inaction and not living up to expectations,” he said.

Mr. Lichter posits Mr. Obama’s Nobel Prize as a kind of test case for how people are perceiving
him, and whether a caricature has taken hold of a man more celebrated than accomplished. “It
will be telling to see how the comedians treat this,” he said.

As if trying to strike pre-emptively against inevitable ridiculers, Mr. Obama seemed eager to
embrace the “I haven’t done anything yet” conceit in his Rose Garden remarks Friday morning.
“Let me be clear,” he said. “I do not view it as a recognition of my own accomplishments.” But it
was also striking how so many people seemed to greet the Nobel news with shock followed by
laughter, as if truth and caricature has achieved a newly seamless blend in the Obama imprint.

Really, the words rang distinctively comic: “Did you hear that Barack Obama won the Nobel
Peace Prize?” It sounded like the set up to a joke — one of those jokes where the set-up itself is
the punch-line.

“That’s pretty amazing, winning the Nobel Peace Prize,” Jay Leno said, first out of the box Friday
night. “Ironically, his biggest accomplishment as president so far ... winning the Nobel Peace
Prize.”

An earlier version of this article misspelled the given name of the host of “The Daily Show.” He
is Jon Stewart, not John.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

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