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O'Reilly who will soon be retiring from the radio waves (due to an acute case of failure) so that he can spend more time with his TV Factor family will again push his independent fairness. Perhaps Michael Smerconish, a sometimes O'Reilly fill-in, is the only other "conservative" host who says he's objective. Difference is, Smerconish is the only one of the two who many times actually is. Bill's task will be headier than the rest. He'll not only face a Democratic juggernaut, he'll have to swallow the reality of his worst nightmare:
Senator Al Franken.
He's good enough, smart enough, and doggone it, he's got votes enough to have nipped incumbent Norm Coleman in the race for the Minnesota senate seat.
So fun.
First Bill loses his hilarious attempt to sue for slander over Franken's book, "Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them," sending Al's books sales and bank account into the stratosphere, then he dismisses Franken's run for Senate as "no chance," which had to send some undecideds into the Franken corner. And now he's faced with six -- that's right, six -- years of trying to come up with different ways to try and smear Franken. While the other talkers admittedly relish the opportunity to attack their opponents, Bill's ever-clumsy attempts at trying to appear balanced, are fueled only by hate and his bitterness at never being accepted by the Big Boy's Club at the networks. The result just ends up as a bonanza for Keith Olbermann, who'll need very little original writing or research to fill his "Worst Person of the Day" segment.
Meanwhile, across the dial, expect the next two weeks to be full of insincere wishes for President Obama's success along with a heaping helping of Ann Coulter. The Lean Queen of Mean will be pimping her newest screed, "Guilty: Liberal Victims and Their Assault On America," and the broadcast-right will be more than happy to supply Annie with plenty of oxygen to fuel her precious prose. Their audiences might want to use the occasion to start a new drinking game: Take a swig every time she says, "B. Hussein Obama." Their faithful viewers and listeners could need a serious buzz to face their upcoming long years in the political wastelands.
Award-winning TV writer and author of Great Failures of the Extremely Successful, Steve Young was an original talk show host at L.A.'s KTLK and blogs at steveyoungonpolitics.com
Comments? Send a letter to the editor.Albion Monitor January
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