TV Guidance

TV Guidance

Jaime Weinman writes about all kinds of television and other kinds of popular culture. He does not write Gossip Girl episode reviews. Follow Jaime on Twitter: @weinmanj

Mr. Burns and Smithers go to Parliament

by Jaime Weinman on Tuesday, July 19, 2011 12:13pm - 14 Comments

As I write this, I’m still watching the live stream of Rupert Murdoch and James Murdoch testifying before the UK Parliament. And so the pie attack happened right in the middle of my writing it. That was weird. The effectiveness of pie throwing as a political act has always escaped me; since it’s inspired by the Three Stooges and other slapstick comedy, it seems to be a way for ordinary idiots to get close to wealthy dowagers (or whatever you call a male dowager) and invade their space. But Three Stooges shorts don’t have much political significance and neither does this.

All the pie thrower succeeded in doing was changing the focus of the conversation from “Rupert and James Murdoch aren’t doing so well” to “Rupert Murdoch is a victim and his wife is cool.” He helped the Murdochs tremendously, while thinking he was hurting them. The pie throwing was sort of an act of narcissism, which will have the opposite effect from what the pie-er probably wants. If it weren’t for him, the cable news chatter today would be about the scandals. Now it’s about pie.

Before the Pie Man became the star of the proceedings, the thing most people seemed to be talking about was that Rupert and James acted a lot like two of News Corp’s most beloved pieces of Intellectual Property, C. Montgomery Burns and Waylon Smithers.

Both James and Rupert have of course spent the morning denying everything and insisting they knew nothing. One of the weirder patterns of the hearing has been that James will be in the middle of a long speech about how little they knew, and then Rupert will interrupt him and say the same thing in fewer words. I get the impression the committee is liking Rupert better than James, just because James goes on and on and on and says nothing (all I really know for sure is that he’s not a lawyer, because he keeps saying “I’m not a lawyer”) while Rupert clearly hates their guts, but doesn’t waste their time.

The James-Rupert contrast is the most entertaining part of the show. Both have the same interests, both are sticking to the same story, but they project different personalities. The word a lot of people are using for James is “smarmy,” and he sure can be condescending to the people who ask him questions. A lot of “I understand where you’re coming from” and attempts to make it seem like we’d never accuse him if we understood the situation as clearly as he does. And his accent is a combination of every country where his family has business interests. He is the ultimate trans-national business scion who will patiently explain to us why we have no business questioning him.

Rupert’s manner is different. He bangs on the table to emphasize his words, sometimes every word in a sentence. He droops his head when he’s finished talking. His manner is gruff and contemptuous, and he only seems to be happy when he’s talking about the trashiness of his headlines or the backwardness of his competitors. Taking on “establishment” media in the UK, the U.S., and Australia is what Rupert Murdoch has always lived for; his whole thing is thumbing his nose at other publications and channels. (The Murdoch Wall Street Journal is a case in point: he saw it specifically as a way to take on the hated New York Times, and much of what he’s done with the paper is an attempt to get under the Times‘ skin.) Both Murdochs have contempt for everyone, but James’ contempt is smug, while Rupert’s is angry: even though he was born into wealth and got wealthier, even though he rubs shoulders with politicians everywhere, he still seems to define himself as an upstart who is fighting a battle against the powerful. He’s not, but that upstart pose is part of all his media outlets, and it seems to come from the man himself.

It also works better in testimony, I think, since James wound up looking really bad with his repeated denials and interruptions of the people he was talking to, while Rupert came off more as the angry old forgetful man. (Sometimes gaining comparisons to another Simpsons character, Grandpa.) Murdoch Sr. got the most unintentionally funny moments, like when he claimed he couldn’t remember saying something because “there were twenty microphones in my face.” Rupert Murdoch complaining that an aggressive media push may have caused him to be misquoted or quoted out of context – perfect.

Another favourite Rupert moment was his attempt to deny that he is “hands off” in running the company. The whole strategy here depends on him denying that he knew anything that was going on, you know it, he knows it. But he can’t bear anyone to think that he doesn’t have full involvement with what his company does, so he starts talking about how he works “10 to 12 hour days” and makes lots of big decisions every day. When someone says he was “kept in the dark,” Rupert contradicts him heatedly, saying “No one kept me in the dark!” But this particular paper, no, that he knew nothing about. The combination is implausible. He’d be much better off just saying he knew nothing about everything. But it’s as if he would rather contradict himself than sustain the blow to his pride that would come with us thinking he doesn’t do anything.

When I try to proclaim a “winner” it doesn’t usually work out (I once said Donald Trump was the winner in the Obama birth certificate thing), but I’ll try it again anyway. If the Murdochs don’t get through this well—and the pie incident increases the chances that they’ll get out of it intact—then the big winners will be Roger Ailes and Fox News. If they are implicated in the same scandals, or similar scandals, it may take years for it to come out, especially since Ailes is a bit separate from (and disliked by) Murdoch’s family. Meanwhile, with Murdoch’s UK interests teetering and the Wall Street Journal pulled into the thickets with Les Hinton, Fox News is reinforced as Murdoch’s most successful property, and Roger Ailes increases his power within Murdoch’s company.

It may not work out that way, but I think there’s a tendency to think that if Rupert Murdoch is in trouble, then Fox News might be in trouble too. That may not be the case; Fox News obviously does reflect Murdoch’s personality, but it also reflects Ailes’s, and the two don’t see eye to eye on everything. Fox News may come out of all this with more freedom to maintain an apocalyptic tone, not less.

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  • TonyAdams

    “The effectiveness of pie throwing as a political act has always escaped me; since it’s inspired … If it weren’t for him, the cable news chatter today would be about the scandals.”

    It is only one day, not even one day once msm talks about pie throwing for a few hours they will move on to regular news, and protest is good. Pie in face is very humbling. 

    English medieval petty criminals who had been sentenced to a few hours in the stocks were often pelted with rotten eggs, fruit and vegetables by their fellow villagers or citizens. It was a well-established form of insult or humiliation ….. The habit seems to have been strongly entrenched in Britain, although of course throwing things at people you don’t like is an ancient custom! Before he became Roman emperor….

    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=217280

  • TonyAdams

    “The effectiveness of pie throwing as a political act has always escaped me; since it’s inspired … If it weren’t for him, the cable news chatter today would be about the scandals.”

    It is only one day, not even one day once msm talks about pie throwing for a few hours they will move on to regular news, and protest is good. Pie in face is very humbling. 

    English medieval petty criminals who had been sentenced to a few hours in the stocks were often pelted with rotten eggs, fruit and vegetables by their fellow villagers or citizens. It was a well-established form of insult or humiliation ….. The habit seems to have been strongly entrenched in Britain, although of course throwing things at people you don’t like is an ancient custom! Before he became Roman emperor….

    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=217280

  • TonyAdams

    “The effectiveness of pie throwing as a political act has always escaped me; since it’s inspired … If it weren’t for him, the cable news chatter today would be about the scandals.”

    It is only one day, not even one day once msm talks about pie throwing for a few hours they will move on to regular news, and protest is good. Pie in face is very humbling. 

    English medieval petty criminals who had been sentenced to a few hours in the stocks were often pelted with rotten eggs, fruit and vegetables by their fellow villagers or citizens. It was a well-established form of insult or humiliation ….. The habit seems to have been strongly entrenched in Britain, although of course throwing things at people you don’t like is an ancient custom! Before he became Roman emperor….

    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=217280

  • TonyAdams

    “The effectiveness of pie throwing as a political act has always escaped me; since it’s inspired … If it weren’t for him, the cable news chatter today would be about the scandals.”

    It is only one day, not even one day once msm talks about pie throwing for a few hours they will move on to regular news, and protest is good. Pie in face is very humbling. 

    English medieval petty criminals who had been sentenced to a few hours in the stocks were often pelted with rotten eggs, fruit and vegetables by their fellow villagers or citizens. It was a well-established form of insult or humiliation ….. The habit seems to have been strongly entrenched in Britain, although of course throwing things at people you don’t like is an ancient custom! Before he became Roman emperor….

    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=217280

  • TonyAdams

    I think Macleans should do poll on yesterday’s Coyne v Wells – screen capture we can see. 

    Coyne pose serious or joking?

    Murdoch/News Corp/Fox News – it is astonishing how much attention people are paying to Murdoch and not other issues.

    Daily Mail – Sucking Up To Sun King Is Sign of Times:

    The need for atonement isn’t confined to Murdoch and his lieutenants, though. The political leaders who toadied to him most egregiously — Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron — should all apologise and repent for betraying us in this way.

    No one voted for them on the understanding that they’d show favouritism to Rupert Murdoch …. 
    There’s a lazy assumption that our political leaders have to prostrate themselves before media bosses and their underlings in order to get a fair hearing, but it’s neither necessary nor proper.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2015816/Phone-hacking-scandal-Sucking-Rupert-Murdoch-Sun-King.html

  • TonyAdams

    I think Macleans should do poll on yesterday’s Coyne v Wells – screen capture we can see. 

    Coyne pose serious or joking?

    Murdoch/News Corp/Fox News – it is astonishing how much attention people are paying to Murdoch and not other issues.

    Daily Mail – Sucking Up To Sun King Is Sign of Times:

    The need for atonement isn’t confined to Murdoch and his lieutenants, though. The political leaders who toadied to him most egregiously — Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron — should all apologise and repent for betraying us in this way.

    No one voted for them on the understanding that they’d show favouritism to Rupert Murdoch …. 
    There’s a lazy assumption that our political leaders have to prostrate themselves before media bosses and their underlings in order to get a fair hearing, but it’s neither necessary nor proper.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2015816/Phone-hacking-scandal-Sucking-Rupert-Murdoch-Sun-King.html

  • TonyAdams

    I think Macleans should do poll on yesterday’s Coyne v Wells – screen capture we can see. 

    Coyne pose serious or joking?

    Murdoch/News Corp/Fox News – it is astonishing how much attention people are paying to Murdoch and not other issues.

    Daily Mail – Sucking Up To Sun King Is Sign of Times:

    The need for atonement isn’t confined to Murdoch and his lieutenants, though. The political leaders who toadied to him most egregiously — Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron — should all apologise and repent for betraying us in this way.

    No one voted for them on the understanding that they’d show favouritism to Rupert Murdoch …. 
    There’s a lazy assumption that our political leaders have to prostrate themselves before media bosses and their underlings in order to get a fair hearing, but it’s neither necessary nor proper.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2015816/Phone-hacking-scandal-Sucking-Rupert-Murdoch-Sun-King.html

  • TonyAdams

    I think Macleans should do poll on yesterday’s Coyne v Wells – screen capture we can see. 

    Coyne pose serious or joking?

    Murdoch/News Corp/Fox News – it is astonishing how much attention people are paying to Murdoch and not other issues.

    Daily Mail – Sucking Up To Sun King Is Sign of Times:

    The need for atonement isn’t confined to Murdoch and his lieutenants, though. The political leaders who toadied to him most egregiously — Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron — should all apologise and repent for betraying us in this way.

    No one voted for them on the understanding that they’d show favouritism to Rupert Murdoch …. 
    There’s a lazy assumption that our political leaders have to prostrate themselves before media bosses and their underlings in order to get a fair hearing, but it’s neither necessary nor proper.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2015816/Phone-hacking-scandal-Sucking-Rupert-Murdoch-Sun-King.html

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Z4UWLSSOOCOIUJ3IAC6OPVGREU d.

    I want the facts to come out through police warrants served on Rupert’s assets, and prosecution, not through these girly-men parliamentary/Senate farces. Hello, Eric Holder, are you listening?

    This is no ‘scandal’. He’s no Tiger Woods.

    If there’s no serious police-work, then thank-you LulzSec. Unlike some top British bobbies, you cannot be bought.

  • Anonymous

    “The pie throwing was sort of an act of narcissism, which will have the opposite effect from what the pie-er probably wants.”

    If we view the throwing of pies as sort of an act of narcissism, are we certain that the pie-thrower wanted anything more than to be seen on T.V. throwing a pie at Rupert Murdoch?

  • http://harebell.wordpress.com/ harebell

    “When someone says he was “kept in the dark,” Rupert contradicts him heatedly, saying “No one kept me in the dark!” But this particular paper, no, that he knew nothing about. The combination is implausible.”

    That’s the critical issue for me. It is inconceivable that he didn’t know, because he always knows.

  • http://twitter.com/FancyLads FancyLad

    Seems to me that the behavior of much of the Guardian/NYT/BBC type western media, has changed from anger at News of the Worlds abhorrent behavior, to a concerted attempt to shut down Murdochs media empire for good.
    As soon as the scandal got legs, it was obvious that the real target was derailing Murdoch’s Sky bid. When that was successful, hubris ran rampant and secretly cherished dreams of depredating NewsCorp now seem a possibility.

    Which is where we are now. The (partially untrue) perception that global left-wing media elitists are collaboratively trying to destroy one of the worlds only populist conservative media outlets because it’s of a different political bent, is taking hold.

    This is going to backfire badly with the plebs (especially the millions that lost their beloved, trashy News of the World), and NewsCorp is going end up in a stronger position in public opinion; whilst the NewYorkTimes/Guardian/Beeb bunch (and the left collateraly) will be perceived as a leftwing media Stasi, smashing the presses of the political other.

  • http://twitter.com/FancyLads FancyLad

    Seems to me that the behavior of much of the Guardian/NYT/BBC type western media, has changed from anger at News of the Worlds abhorrent behavior, to a concerted attempt to shut down Murdochs media empire for good.
    As soon as the scandal got legs, it was obvious that the real target was derailing Murdoch’s Sky bid. When that was successful, hubris ran rampant and secretly cherished dreams of depredating NewsCorp now seem a possibility.

    Which is where we are now. The (partially untrue) perception that global left-wing media elitists are collaboratively trying to destroy one of the worlds only populist conservative media outlets because it’s of a different political bent, is taking hold.

    This is going to backfire badly with the plebs (especially the millions that lost their beloved, trashy News of the World), and NewsCorp is going end up in a stronger position in public opinion; whilst the NewYorkTimes/Guardian/Beeb bunch (and the left collateraly) will be perceived as a leftwing media Stasi, smashing the presses of the political other.

    • Anonymous

      You say that as if this event changes the already pre-conceived perceptions in some way.

From Macleans