Whatever became of Barack Obama?
There’s a fascinating profile of the curiously low-profile former President in New York magazine. The author, Gabriel Debenedetti, observes that Obama has “mostly opted out of liberal America’s collective Trump-outrage cycle”. Very wise. However, there was at least one time when the antics of the 45th President properly got to the 44th.
It should have been the least controversial of occasions – a speech to the National Scout Jamboree. The event takes place every four years, a gathering of the Boy Scouts of America, at which the current President of the United States of America is invited to give an appropriately wholesome address.
However in 2017, Donald Trump took a somewhat unconventional approach:
“Addressing a crowd of roughly 40,000, who were expecting the usual talk about citizenship and service, the president uncorked a political diatribe packed with jabs at Obama, Hillary Clinton, and the Washington, D.C., ‘cesspool’… and reminiscences of Election Night 2016 and the pundits he embarrassed. ‘You remember that incredible night with the maps, and the Republicans are red and the Democrats are blue, and that map was so red it was unbelievable. And they didn’t know what to say,’ Trump told the Scouts. They seemed bewildered at first but before long broke into chants of ‘USA!’ Adult observers were openly horrified…”
I’d urge you to read a more detailed account of the speech (also in New York magazine). It is truly extraordinary stuff – and not just because a serving President chose to address a gathering of boy scouts in the manner of a crazy uncle, but also because the crowd lapped it up.
Obama was appalled:
“…the Boy Scouts speech really troubled him. Kids their age are the most impressionable group there is, Obama reminded friends at the time, likening them to sponges. If the president shoves a divisive political argument at them, that’s what they will absorb.
“It was a very Barack Obama thing to get agitated about. Throughout his entire political career, he has attached an unusual degree of significance to storytelling, and he has often spoken of the importance of modeling what it means to be a good citizen.”
Obama is right – storytelling is of the greatest importance. However, in this respect, those with the greatest influence are Obama’s friends in Hollywood, Silicon Valley and other strongholds of the cultural elite. So what stories have they been telling?
Well, not much to inspire or encourage the people of America’s flyover country. If portrayed at all, fictional America beyond the big cities is a cartoonish abode of rednecks, bigots and zombies – a place to escape from, not to feel proud of.
What the media does like doing, however, is telling tales of transgression. The hero or heroine who defies convention, tears up the rule book, upsets the establishment, is now routine to the point of cliché. The rebel, the maverick, the anti-hero: in popular culture there is no other way to be good – or at least interesting.
Writers now have to work much harder to make edgy characters stand out from the crowd. It’s no longer enough to be a brooding, morally-ambiguous loner like Batman or Wolverine. Who isn’t these days? No, to cause any sort of frisson in a contemporary audience you need to plumb the depths of a Deadpool.
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SubscribeI couldn’t agree more. The Labour Party today concentrate all their effort on minority groups, and minority issues. Not to say they don’t deserve it, but there are bigger things to fry. Please do not say that all people deserve all. Yes there are big fish fiddling taxes, yes there are little fish fiddling, so have a rounded view, just like most of the population.