The line between reality and fiction, entertainment and politics becomes ever more blurred.
This was, of course, the week in which the Trump-Kim summit occurred. That is, the day the President held a meeting with Kim Kardashian in the Oval Office. Or as the New York Post (the world’s greatest purveyor of tabloid puns) put it: ‘Trump Meets Rump.’ But as well as being the moment when unreality finally seemed to have overwhelmed the Oval office, it was also the week that the most bitter realities of politics were being fought out in the realm of entertainment.
On Monday night, the American comedian Roseanne Barr sent out a Tweet in which she claimed that former Obama aide, Valerie Jarrett, was a cross between the “Muslim Brotherhood and Planet of the Apes”. In the hours that followed, Barr claimed not to know that Jarrett was black, telling friends that she had thought she was Jewish, and that in any case she had been on a combination of pills including the sleep aide Ambien at the time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPStmQ6JvDw
The ABC TV network which ran her comedy show did not hang around; it didn’t merely fire Barr, it cancelled the whole show. This was a bold move by the network, which could hardly have been motivated by the bottom-line, given that Roseanne was one of the most viewed shows on any US network.
As with every Tweet and every decision made in US entertainment today (see ‘West, Kanye’), this one couldn’t be made without a whole set of political interpretations being read into it, fences being erected and attacks being made on behalf of – and against – the accused. All topped off by a set of follow-on revenge campaigns.
Barr herself has been a vocal supporter of Trump, and – it must be said, judging by her timeline – a fairly happy spreader of a number of crazed conspiracy theories. But when a Trump supporter (whose admiration Trump has, in the past, returned) is dumped for a racist Tweet, the faithful cannot stop there. Perhaps they could do if the celebrity were non-aligned. But so long as they have nailed their political colours to any mast, the fall of anyone on either side is – as much as their rise – something to be argued over as though it were real politics and events in the Oval office mere entertainment.
And so, in the days following the furore, many prominent Trump supporters have argued that Barr has only been chased off the network and had her entire show cancelled so peremptorily because she is a Trump supporter. And that claim having been made, her ‘side’ then scours the land looking for the weak-points of its enemies’ shores against which it might send raiding parties.
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