The Olbermann Era
Tuesday 25 January 2011
by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Keith Olberman in Washington, DC, in 2009. (Photo: afagen)
A quick confession that might not sit well with many Truthout readers: I was, on a personal level, quite ambivalent about the loss of Keith Olbermann's show, "Countdown," when he announced his exit last week. If "Meh" can sum up an emotion, then that's how I felt when I heard the deal went down.
Don't get me wrong here: I was, and remain, a great and devoted fan of Keith Olbermann and the work he did at MSNBC. I have been a devotee of Mr. Olbermann since his old-school moustache days anchoring the ESPN show “Sportscenter” during the golden age of that program. But I have spent the last several years experiencing his “Countdown” work in text form, i.e. reading instead of watching, and in ten-minute online video snippets, because I avoid all cable “news” programming the way cats avoid water. All of it, even the stuff I tend to agree with.
When "Countdown" first began in 2003, I watched it almost every night - the only cable “news” show I consistently tuned in to - but quickly soured on the whole experience. I just can’t stand it, any of it. I can’t stand the emotional manipulation that comes with all forms of televised “news,” and have for many times many a day now refused to let them in my head. I also never saw the point in getting all riled up at eight o'clock at night. What was I supposed to do with all that rage after nine? Punch the walls and kick the cat, maybe indulge in a little firebombing? Didn’t seem prudent.
The production of "Countdown" - the flashes, the music, the jump cuts - made me feel like I had rocks rolling around in my head. This was not solely an Olbermann problem for me; all cable “news” programming leaves me feeling the same way, which is why I swore it off years ago. If CNN or MSNBC played footage of puppies playing with baby pandas next to a pile of bunnies and kittens, it would still give me a headache. It wasn't Keith's fault. I'm just allergic to the medium itself, and have largely avoided it for more than a decade.
All that aside, there is no doubt that Mr. Olbermann’s “Countdown” was something very special. In a polluted sea of corrupted corporate “news” brainwashing, his was a voice of loud, angry reason. He paved the way for the excellence of Rachel Maddow to make its own impressive mark on the TV “news” landscape. He spoke a great deal of truth that had not been heard on the airwaves for far too long. By modeling himself and his show after Edward R. Murrow, even going so far as to use Murrow's iconic "Good night, and good luck" sign-off at the end of every broadcast, he gave us a daily reminder that the "news" was not always like it is today, and that it can - nay, must - improve for the good of the republic.
His very existence became a thorn in the side of the corporation that owns his network, and the corporations behind all the other networks. He kicked some cash to a few Democratic candidates - Rep. Gabrielle Giffords being one - and it turned into a nine-day wonder of a debate about broadcasting standards and the hypocrisy of MSNBC's upper management. It still cracks me up when I think about it: here were these corporate network owners who scream bloody murder about money equaling speech, but when Olbermann exercised his constitutional right to participate in the political process by way of that particular brand of "speech," he got a two-day rip and a public scolding. The whole charade shamed his bosses deeply and publicly, and probably had more than a bit to do with his eventual departure from the network he pretty much single-handedly put on the map.
To me and so many others, he was a beacon of sanity during the bleak darkness of the Bush years. Remember the timeline here: the 2000 election catastrophe was followed by a ceaseless cable “news” refrain of, "This is an orderly transition of power, nothing to see here, go back to bed," which infuriated everyone who knew that particular game had been fixed. This was followed by the push for war in Iraq ballyhooed by every cable network - "Navy SEALS rock!" - until the bullets started flying and the IED's started going off. All throughout, the myriad scandals and crimes of the Bush administration went largely ignored and unreported...until Keith came along, reminding us that, "Today is the 521st day since the declaration of 'Mission Accomplished' in Iraq."
Mr. Olbermann was one of the only voices in broadcasting who openly discussed the outing of CIA agent Valerie Plame by the Bush administration. When the 2004 election results in Ohio were corrupted by brazen manipulation and vote fraud, it was Olbermann who raised the loudest televised cry. It was Olbermann who, day after day, hammered the awful truth about the invasion and occupation of Iraq. And it was Olbermann who pounded home the fact that the Bush administration was little more than a deranged criminal enterprise that threatened the very fabric of the nation.
For me, Mr. Olbermann delivered his most memorable, impassioned and important "Special Comment" in 2006, in the aftermath of George W. Bush's press conference in the Rose Garden, in which Bush played the Nazi card and essentially implied that anyone who disagreed with him and his policies was an ally of al Qaeda. That night, Mount Olbermann erupted:
It is to our deep national shame - and ultimately it will be to the President's deep personal regret - that he has followed his Secretary of Defense down the path of trying to tie those loyal Americans who disagree with his policies - or even question their effectiveness or execution - to the Nazis of the past, and the al Qaeda of the present.
Today, in the same subtle terms in which Mr. Bush and his colleagues muddied the clear line separating Iraq and 9/11 - without ever actually saying so - the President quoted a purported Osama Bin Laden letter that spoke of launching, "a media campaign to create a wedge between the American people and their government."
Make no mistake here - the intent of that is to get us to confuse the psychotic scheming of an international terrorist, with that familiar bogeyman of the right, the "media."
The President and the Vice President and others have often attacked freedom of speech, and freedom of dissent, and freedom of the press.
Now, Mr. Bush has signaled that his unparalleled and unprincipled attack on reporting has a new and venomous side angle: the attempt to link, by the simple expediency of one word - "media" - the honest, patriotic, and indeed vital questions and questioning from American reporters, with the evil of al-Qaeda propaganda.
That linkage is more than just indefensible. It is un-American.
Mr. Bush and his colleagues have led us before to such waters.
We will not drink again.
And the President's re-writing and sanitizing of history, so it fits the expediencies of domestic politics, is just as false, and just as scurrilous.
"In the 1920's a failed Austrian painter published a book in which he explained his intention to build an Aryan super-state in Germany and take revenge on Europe and eradicate the Jews," President Bush said today, "the world ignored Hitler's words, and paid a terrible price."
Whatever the true nature of al Qaeda and other international terrorist threats, to ceaselessly compare them to the Nazi State of Germany serves only to embolden them.
More over, Mr. Bush, you are accomplishing in part what Osama Bin Laden and others seek - a fearful American populace, easily manipulated, and willing to throw away any measure of restraint, any loyalty to our own ideals and freedoms, for the comforting illusion of safety.
It thus becomes necessary to remind the President that his administration's recent Nazi "kick" is an awful and cynical thing.
And it becomes necessary to reach back into our history, for yet another quote, from yet another time and to ask it of Mr. Bush:
"Have you no sense of decency, sir?"
The manner of Mr. Olbermann's departure remains shrouded in mystery; the man himself has made no comment on the matter, which may have something to do with the deal that was cut to end his contract two years early. Many have opined – correctly, in all likelihood - that the looming Comcast takeover of NBC Universal played a large role. As Buzzflash Editor Mark Karlin wrote over the weekend:
According to James Wolcott of Vanity Fair, the chairman of Comcast Spectacor, Ed Snider, is funding a right-wing cable channel/Internet site called "RightNetwork." Wolcott sniffs at "RightNetwork" as a "pseudo-populist operation" starring an array of right-wing freaks.
Ominously, Wolcott notes "that it was Snider who invited Sarah Palin to drop the hockey puck at the Flyers' season opener in 2008, and Palin's been dropping pucks ever since."
There's little reason to doubt that Olbermann's abrupt exit from MSNBC was the first puck to drop as Comcast slap shots MSNBC away from being a progressive beachhead.
In one man we find the confluence of so many pressing issues. Mr. Olbermann stands at the center of the dire need for – and dire lack of – progressive voices within “mainstream news” broadcasting; he threw his shoulder against the wall of corporate hypocrisy; he stood and bellowed against the misdeeds of those in political power; and, ultimately, he stands today as the likely victim of the continued right-wing domination of the “news” media.
People are understandably outraged and disturbed over his abrupt and ill-defined departure from MSNBC…so how, in the face of all this, can I justify my “Meh” reaction?
Well, I already explained the first reason.
The second reason is simple: Keith Olbermann is not dead. He was not beamed to Neptune, never to be seen or heard from again.
Write it down, carve it in stone, make a note, and bet the farm:
Olbermann will be back.
Somewhere, somehow, some day, in one form or another, Mr. Olbermann will be with us again. We will hear or read his own words on the matter of his departure, and then we will hear him again, and again, and again. Giants do not fall easily, and this particular era of political commentary is not over by a long chalk. Edward R. Murrow had his own troubles with management in the darkness of the McCarthy days, and it did not keep him down or silent one iota. So shall it be with Mr. Olbermann in these dark days of corporate hegemony.
Same as it ever was.
Giants do not fall easily. Count on it.
In the meantime, good night, and good luck.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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thank you Mr Pitt... A
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 12:02 — Anonymous (not verified)thank you Mr Pitt...
A presenter that writes in carefully crafted compound sentences, all of which relate to the previous ones and build on each other and must be read (and listened to) aggressively and with brain engaged is, damnably, a rarity anymore and, regardless of your 'side', this sort of reasoned, rational discourse is something we all both need, and need to work at learning to understand as we take it in. All of this we thank Mr Olbermann for, and revel in the fact that indeed, The Olbermann Era is hardly over, merely (did I say merely!?) hitting its stride.
Mr Pitt's take on the whole
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 12:11 — Anonymous (not verified)Mr Pitt's take on the whole of COUNTDOWN show is on point. I never could watch it. I came to massively admire Mr Olbermann for his Special Comments and essays at the end of the show. They were COMPLETELY unlike everything else. Cogent, focused, and whther you agree or disagree with any perceived INTENT, they were stunningly written, and at a post-grad level of grammar and construction while their message was completely human, direct, clearly laid out for ANYONE to understand, and unmistakable and affecting.
He's not just good, he's damned good. And he delivers his writing on camera stunningly.
Actually, Murrow was
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 12:28 — Catbeller (not verified)Actually, Murrow was eventually removed from the air for his sin, and was reduced to invisibilty until the day he died.
I will miss countdown. What
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 12:33 — Lawrence Seib (not verified)I will miss countdown. What I really liked about the show was the humor. Most of the news(not all) I would get from other sources, but Olberman's spin was the best.
Larry
The NBC-Comcast merger must
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 12:41 — MG (not verified)The NBC-Comcast merger must be anti-trust. It stinks! It is bad for America, yet somehow FCC chairman Julius Genachowski saw fit to approve it anyway. Heckuva' job Julius!
I'm sure Keith O. will be back. But like Will Pitt, I can't stand cable news, "news", whatever, and haven't watched it for 20 years. But Olbermann, Maddow, and Amy Goodman are the only ones attempting to balance the overwhelmingly rightward slant to news on cable TV these days. Not just rightward, but with a mendacious, cruel, and dumbed-down attitude, enough to drive a normal person crazy. And the commercials! Remember when cable TV sold itself on the premise that there were no commercials?
Get real!! Olb worked for a
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 13:59 — Nation Enablers (not verified)Get real!! Olb worked for a massive Military Contractor. And his show was a comedy act, leave it to unbelievably ridiculous liberals like Pitts to lament the passing of a super hero. (Wait! Must of what Pitt writes is kvetch flavored comedic material, so we see where he's coming from,)
Bush III just appointed GEs "great leader" to help Americans get more jobs, (If that doesn't leave you peeing your pants in laughter, you should really turn off the tv.)
The "big pipe" is no source for anything other then what corporations see fit to distribute, Keith can be replaced by another party basher when it's seen as ratings viable.
There is no law in this
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 15:42 — Anonymous (not verified)There is no law in this country. All matters of justice are now in the hands of the citizens.
Something ought to be done about Comcast.
To me the show was the only
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 16:47 — Anonymous (not verified)To me the show was the only one that gave us relief from the yammering of the right wing. Oh, he reported on it, to be sure, but framed it with something mainstream media news almost entirely devoid us, an openly expressed judgment. It was often humorously put, but really, he did not indulge in the usually not too subtle kinds of put downs and snideness of what Jon Stewart once said of Fox News; "meanest sorority ever." To me, it was refreshing not to hear someone logical try to engage the irrational spokespeople on the right who yell over the top of everyone trying to say something they don't like. His guests almost always had something interesting to say, and he was largely deferential to them.
That was worth its weight in gold. And we nowhere see anything of its like.
Once again, thank you Mr.
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 16:50 — Brenda (not verified)Once again, thank you Mr. Pitt. I do feel that both
you and Mr. Olberman confront us with the truth.
This is the problem we have
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 16:57 — David (not verified)This is the problem we have as so called progressives. We will eat our young. You are so wrapped up in your self absorbed ego, Mesmerized by your own words, that you can't even see that one of only a few people we had that could speak to our cause....WE JUST LOST. Good luck with yourself.
cable news of all stripes
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 17:19 — thom delahunt (not verified)cable news of all stripes compares with pre-packaged truck stop food: it all tastes like the package wherein it's wrapped.
KO helped keep me sane
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 17:26 — radline9 (not verified)KO helped keep me sane during the latter half of the Bush years. I knew I wasn't alone. Now, look at the legacy he left. Rachel Maddow, Ed Schultz, and Lawrence O'Donnell. KO worked his heart out for us and i thank him whether or not he comes back. I hope he comes back. What a powerhouse!
yes, keith will be missed.
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 17:41 — newsfrombelow (not verified)yes, keith will be missed. he did about as much good on cable news as could ever be expected.
i do not put rachel maddow in keith's league. too many suck up interviews with the likes of brezinski and powell and others have left me wondering who she truly identifies with.
even olbermann at his best could not address in gruesome detail the ongoing project of american empire, the logic of the pentagon's global project for "full spectrum dominance."
imperialism is torture, and obama has proven that it is a bipartisan package of brutality for global export.
keith criticized the worst forms of empire, without attacking its institutionalized essence and reproductive power.
rachel seems to, more often than not, embrace the military as a great institution of american progress because she gets all giddy thinking about more gays and lesbians serving openly in the imperial force field abroad.
i wish the left had a presence on the cable news networks. keith was as close as we have come in terms of mass audience impact.
but the reality is becoming post television. the left's best hope is online and offline, the further away from the oligopolists and monopolists the better.
meanwhile, as keith would put it, back on the homefront, the question which should always unify the left is simple and urgent: "where are the jobs," mr speaker?!!!
Thank You for an excellent
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 17:46 — Paul W (not verified)Thank You for an excellent piece, Mr. Pitt. I, too, believe you're right. Keith Olbermann will be back and most of us will be better for that fact.
ER Murrow was fired. He did
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 18:02 — Anonymous (not verified)ER Murrow was fired. He did lose his voice.
As usual, the progressives
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 18:15 — Anonymous (not verified)As usual, the progressives can't stomach anything with an edge. Couldn't watch, mad me feel angry, hopeless, sniffle, sniffle. Well maybe the smooth-talking President will make you feel better with words carefully chosen not to offend the rich and powerful.
This is why I left the Democrats, it's a party full of spineless wimps.
Truly I will miss Keith
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 18:22 — Eilish (not verified)Truly I will miss Keith until he pops up again -
I never have to miss Mr. Pitt.
All my friends and acquaintances who are from center to Tea here in AZ never miss him either, courtesy of me.
This is the 4th day since
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 18:41 — Anklejive (not verified)This is the 4th day since Keith Olbermann left MSNBC, and the 2,827th day since the previous president declared Mission Accomplished in Iraq. Good night, Keith, and good luck.
With all due respect, Mr
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 18:55 — oldhippie01 (not verified)With all due respect, Mr Pitt is a LEGEND........ in his OWN MIND. KEITH OLBERMANN Rocks.........
In the space of less than
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 18:56 — bjbear71 (not verified)In the space of less than one year we have lost Bill Moyers to retirement and now Keith Olbermann to the Comcast/NBC merger. I can't stand it, both these men were and are my heroes in journalism. We need their voices, their opinions and their work. Please come back to tv, Keith!!
I watched Keith Olbermann
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 19:14 — Anonymous (not verified)I watched Keith Olbermann and Amy Goodman. Now I watch Amy.
I will miss Keith
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 19:34 — Anonymous (not verified)I will miss Keith Olbermann's Special Comments, and his readings of Thurber. Like Mr. Pitt, I expect to hear/see KO again. He is too much of a firebrand to fade into obscurity.
I hope he takes a few weeks/months off, and when he re-emerges I will be the first in line to hear/see him.
This Comcast/NBC deal is behind not just KO but Ed Schultz' (big voice for today's labor movement) being ... sidelined. Thankfully Big Ed still has his three-hour daily radio show.
Our FCC has been bought and paid for by the corporations. That is the cruelest of Obama's betrayals.
Keith's a nice guy, but he's
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 20:04 — Anonymous (not verified)Keith's a nice guy, but he's a screamer. I know that's the thing these days, but it's pathetic. I can't stand anybody on TV. I'd rather listen to Amy Goodman on the radio. Humor is good. Shouting is boring.
OMG, Anonymous on 1/26 at
Tue, 01/25/2011 - 20:17 — Frances in California (not verified)OMG, Anonymous on 1/26 at 1:04 - suck it the hell up! . . . and get over yourself!
we need "goodnight and good
Wed, 01/26/2011 - 03:39 — Anonymous (not verified)we need "goodnight and good luck" tee shirts. a nationwide movement.
"Journalism schools" where
Wed, 01/26/2011 - 10:13 — granny (not verified)"Journalism schools" where are you and where have you been over the past decades? Sucking up to the media corps who gave you little piles of money? No wonder the products have been so gutless!
The ruse between the left
Wed, 01/26/2011 - 12:07 — doris (not verified)The ruse between the left and right in the media is as fake as the difference between the two parties. If you want to support real progressive journalism, listen to KPFA.org. It's small, but it's real. Democracy Now! is a product of it, and other shows could become more well known if those whose voices they represent would be supported.
It became obvious early on that Obushma and his ilk sold us down the corporate river, and that fact is validated further every single day. He talks a wonderful talk, but his walk is in lockstep with the oligarchs. His appointments are hideous, as are the unconstitutional actions of this "Constitutional scholar." With the Shrub, we knew up front were We the People stood, but Obushma is such a fabulous liar-in-chief, it's more difficult for the adoring fans of the beautiful brown orator to realize they've been wagged, BIG TIME! He's such an eloquent liar!
Don't know why I even bother
Wed, 01/26/2011 - 12:57 — goobagooba (not verified)Don't know why I even bother writing in this forum. Probably just an expression, since everybody else feels the need, and since there appears no united front to fend off the onslaught of corporate encouragement of narcissism that passes for network news. Excuse me, "information."
As one of the above said, it's all about the pipe, or as another said many years ago, "the medium is the message." The point is to reduce thought, to present lies so often they become accepted, regardless of the source and regardless of the number of times and ways they are debunked. Count the ads.
Actually, pay attention to the ads: they are a composite demonstration of the ways the left, right, and center are being alienated from their roots.
I too, never watched cable
Wed, 01/26/2011 - 13:21 — Floresta (not verified)I too, never watched cable news; I haven't watched TV for over twelve years because its just too dang dumb and banal.
However, I did read and watch Keith on the net.
During the horrible Bu$h years, his rants of sanity were wonderfully cathartic and helped keep me sane.
How's about emailing MSNBC? Make your complaints heard and while you all are at it, do the same over at Faux...
Wow! What a response. Proves
Thu, 01/27/2011 - 18:11 — Sunny (not verified)Wow! What a response. Proves Olbermann is indeed an essential commentator for people who think. OK, just compare his supporter's literacy to some one drinking tea and the party.
And thanks again William dear.
Hit the corporate media
Fri, 01/28/2011 - 13:32 — Ned Ludd (not verified)Hit the corporate media where it hurts and does the most good by dumping your TVs. and radios. These devices are the biggest source of toxic mental pollution in the home.
To Gary McGough: Judging
Sat, 01/29/2011 - 14:33 — Anonymous (not verified)To Gary McGough:
Judging from the context of your message I'm sure you didn't mean to say Keith Olbermann is "the epitome of intelligently presented, polished, absolute and outrageous behavior". I think you meant "antithesis" rather than epitome, although I can't make sense out of your use of the word "outrageous".
Keith will be missed-but not
Fri, 02/04/2011 - 00:54 — eggzakly (not verified)Keith will be missed-but not for long. He will be back. Think of what a K.O.-Tom. Hartman show could do for 6ree Speech. (Just an idea).
didn't take Keith too long
Tue, 02/08/2011 - 12:39 — Jim McCombe (not verified)didn't take Keith too long to find a new home on TV as this was just released this morning.
The big loser will be MSNBC and it will be interesting to see how much he is going to hurt them especially if he occupies the same time slot as he had on his former net work.
I would guess once he goes on the air, there will be a mass exodus by the Olbermann loyalists from MSNBC to Current TV and with few restraints if any in his material.