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Today's
Stories
December 30, 2008
Paul Craig Roberts
May We No Longer Be Silent
December 29, 2008
Jennifer Loewenstein
Israel's Attempted Endgame in Gaza
Neve Gordon
What, Exactly, is Israel's Mission?
Joshua Frank
Obama and the "Special Relationship"
George Salzman /
Manuel Garcia, Jr.
The War Against Palestine: Exception From Humanity
Norman Solomon
A Hundred Eyes for an Eye
Ewa Jasiewicz
Gaza Today: "This is Just the Beginning"
Rob Larson
The Banks Laugh All the Way to the Bank
Kenneth Libby
Arne Duncan's Dark Years in Chicago
Robert Weissman
The 10 Worst Corporations of 2008
Elsa Johnson
High Noon at Black Mesa: Bush's Farewell Gift to Peabody Coal
Nicola Nasser
Resolution 1850: Bush's Parting Gift
Belén Fernández
Hanukkah Games
Worthy Group of the Day
Nuclear Information and Resource Service
December 26-28, 2008
Alexander Cockburn
The Medusa's Head
Dr Eyad Al Serraj
The Boming of Gaza: "An Earthquake on Top of Your Head"
Jeffrey St. Clair
Cancerous Air
Bradley Simpson
Obama's New Intel Chief, Dennis Blair, Ran Interference for Indonesia's Butchers
Ralph Nader
Government Without Laws
Gary Leupp
Obama and the Graveyard of Empires
Ellen Cantarow
Richard Falk, Israel and the NYT
Matt Landon
The Great Coal Ash Flood: a Report From Swan Pond Road
David Macaray
SAG's Terrible Dilemma
Patrick Bond
End of Neoliberalism? Sorry, Not Yet
Norm Kent
Invoking Bigotry: Obama and Rick Warren
Brian T. Ketcham
Fuel Efficiency is Easy--Just Don't Let Detroit Tell You How to Do It
Rannie Amiri
War Clouds Over Gaza
Larry Portis
Changing the Ethnic Vocabulary
Richard Rhames
Welcome to Soup Kitchen America
Stephen Lendman
29 Red Flags: Early Suspicions About Bernard Madoff
James L. Secor
Unheralded Coup
Ramzy Baroud
Iraq, the Plot Thickens
Harold Pinter
Art, Truth and Politics: the Nobel Lecture
Cpt. Paul Watson
Tracking the Cetacean Death Star
Howard Lisnoff
Nixon's Cambodian Shock Treatment
Michael Dee
The Bill of Rights, Killed in Action by the War on Drugs
Steve Conn
Eight Predictions for 2009
Poets' Basement
Valentine, Kaung, Moser and Graham
Worthy Group of the Weekend
United Mountain Defense
December 25, 2008
Judy Gumbo Albert
What Were Those 1960s Terrorists Thinking, Anyway?
Rev. William E. Alberts
The Sole of Christmas
Hannah Mermelstein
Caution: Settlers Ahead
Worthy Group of the Day
Citizens' Coal Council
December 24, 2008
Bill Quigley
Five Bailout Lessons From Katrina
Saul Landau
Then and Now: Venezuela and Cuba, 1960-2008
Sam Smith
Evangelism and Politics
Brian Cloughley
Torture, Slaughter and Lies
John Ross
Where's al-Zaidi's Pulitzer?
Eric Walberg
Cold War Shivers
Norm Kent
What Will Obama Do About Marijuana?
Stephen Martin
Reasons for Cheerfulness
Worthy Group of the Day
Collateral Repair Project
December 23, 2008
Michael Hudson
The Ponzi Paradigm
Michael Yates
The Tombstone Economy
Chuck Spinney
The New York Times Flames Out in Defense Dogfight
Vijay Prashad
India's Reckless Road to Washington, Through Tel Aviv
Brian Horejsi
Interior Decorating: Obama, Salazar and the Future of America's Public Lands
David Macaray
Obama's Best Pick?
Neil Watkins /
Sarah Anderson
Ecuador's Conscientious Default
David Michael Green
Hey, Reagan Democrats! Now Do You Get It?
Worthy Group of the Day
Focus on the Corporation
December 22, 2008
Pam Martens
Madoff's Money Trail Leads to Washington
Gary Leupp
Base Alienation:
Obama's Team of Rivals
Mike Whitney
Bail Out the Economy?
More Pay is the Only Way
Karl Grossman
Lost in Space: NASA at 50
Niall Meehan
Conor Cruise O'Brien: Historian, Politician, Censor
Steve Conn
Where Would Larry Summers Dump the Guantanamo Mess?
Uri Avnery
Israeli Elections:
Spot the Difference
Corey D. B. Walker
The Politics of Freedom
David Swanson
The Purloined Constitution
Worthy Group of the Day
Socialist Worker
December 19 - 21, 2008
Alexander Cockburn
An Ethnic Cleansing in America
Jeffrey St. Clair
Salazar and the Tragedy of the Common Ground
Paul Craig Roberts
Country Without Mercy
Patrick Cockburn
The Baathist "Coup Plot"
Felice Pace
Green Myopia: Obama's Appointments Reveal What's Wrong with the Environmental Movement
Diane Farsetta
The Pentagon's PR Slush Fund
George Ciccariello-Maher
By the Time I Get to Arizona: ICE Raids and Resistance in Flagstaff
Eric Bergoust
Extinct Lifestyles: Redefining Prosperity
Marjorie Cohn
Torture Without Regrets:
Cheney's Unrepentent Confession
Stan Cox
Clothes and Commentaries That Don't Fit
Michael Donnelly
Clinton III: Continuity We Can Believe In
Robert Weissman
The Auto Bailout
Ralph Nader
Excluded Democracy: Scholastic and the Two Party System
Alan Farago
Shock and Awe Economics
Sam Smith
Not All Public Work is the Same
Timothy G. Hermach
What Happened on the Way to the Inauguration?
Seth Sandronsky
Who's Not Getting By and Why
Rannie Amiri
All Quiet on the Gazan Shore
David Yearsley
Bach as Jihadi
Martha Rosenberg
Wyeth's Pay-to-Play
Dave Lindorff
White House Lied About Iraqi Yellowcake Buy (But That's Not the Biggest Scandal)
Christopher Brauchli
Weekend at Bernie's: the Confinement of Mr. Madoff
Missy Beattie
President Meathead
Richard Rhames
Corporatizing the Kids
Stephen Martin
Full-Spectrum Dominance of the Big Lie
Paul Krassner
Milk and Twinkies
Lorenzo Wolff
Does Coldplay Give a Shit Anymore?
Poets' Basement
Kathwari, Halling and Payne
Worthy Group of the Weekend
Heartwood
December 18, 2008
Phillip Doe
The Man in the Hat: Salazar and the Status Quo
Ronnie Cummins
Vilsack: Another Shill for Monsanto
Jesse Sharkey
No School Left Unsold:
Arne Duncan's Privatization Agenda
Saul Landau
Postcard from Venezuela
Peter Morici
What's Next for the Fed?
Dave Lindorff
Prosecuting Bush and Cheney for Torture
Panos Petrou
Days of Rage in Greece
Jeff Cohen /
Norman Solomon
The 2008 P.U.-litzer Prizes: the Stinkiest Media Performances of the Year
Worthy Group of the Day
Organic Consumer Alliance
December 17, 2008
Peter Lee
Pushing Pakistan Over the Edge
Conn Hallinan
Angels and Demons in Mumbai
Mike Whitney
Bernanke's Fatal Flaw
Jeff Halper
Obama and the Israel-Palestine Conflict
Alan Farago
The Audacity of Parkland
Peter Morici
The Big Hole
Norm Kent
Obama Lights Up
Col. Douglas MacGregor
The Price of Expediency
Margaret Kimberley
Blacks and Gay Rights
Ron Jacobs
The Myth of the Good Guy:
Waiting on a President to Do the Right Thing
Worthy Group of the Day
Campaign to End the Death Penalty
December 16, 2008
Vicente Navarro
A Forgotten Genocide: the Case of Spain
Patrick Cockburn
Each Shoe was Worth a Thousand Words
Thomas Michael Power
Back to the Pump: an Economic and Environmental Dead End
Jason Hribal
Orangutans, Resistance and the Zoo: the Story of Ken Allen and Kumang
Farzana Versey
Straw Warriors and the Pantomime of Patriotism
Wajahat Ali /
Ahmed Rashid
Indian Muslims: Defining Their Loyalty
Mats Svensson
The Order to Destroy has been Given
Paul Fitzgerald /
Elizabeth Gould
Mumbai Terror's Afghan Roots
David Macaray
Workplace Violence and Termination Etiquette
Howard Lisnoff
Left Control of Academia? The Case of William Felkner
Worthy Group of the Day
AWR: the Last, Best Hope for Saving the Big Wild
December 15, 2008
Andy Worthington
Hit Me Baby One More Time: a History of Music Torture in War on Terror
Franklin Lamb
Why Hezbollah Stiffed Carter
Karl Grossman
Dr. Chu's Nuclear Prescription
Brian Cloughley
Land of the Free (To Torture and Imprison Without Trial)
Mary Lynn Cramer
Stiglitz's Foolishly Flawed Morality
Steve Early
From Nicky Pockets to Blago:
Why Pay-to-Play is Bad for Labor
Thomas Christie
Pentagon Train Wreck Awaits Obama
Ken Paff
Remembering Ron Carey: a Great Labor Leader
Niranjan Ramakrishnan
What is India to Do?
Dave Lindorff
A Hero of Our Time: Muntadar al-Zaidi
Alan Farago
The Artless Dodger
Worthy Group of the Day
Davis-Putter Scholarship Fund
December 12 / 14, 2008
Alexander Cockburn
Hail to Chicago, Beacon of American Values
Michael Hudson /
Jeffrey Sommers
The End of the Washington Consensus
David Price
The Leaky Ship of Human Terrain Systems
Jeffrey St. Clair
Nukes Up the Hudson
Frank Barat
An Israeli in Gaza: an Interview with Jeff Halper
John Ross
Writing a Thesis in Blood
Binoy Kampmark
Humanitarian Imperialism: Obama and the Genocide Task Force
David Macaray
Killing the Auto Bailout: a Dagger to the Heart of Organized Labor
Ralph Nader
Antidotes to Plunder: a Holiday Reading List
Eamonn Fingleton
Whatever Happened to Iris Chang?
Lawrence Velvel
Why Blagojevich Might Be Acquitted
Behzad Yaghmaian
The Housing Crisis: a Timebomb China Can't Defuse
Sam Husseini
Putting the Pro in Protest
Tom Barry
Incentives to Detain:
How Immigrants Drive Prison Profits
Howard Lisnoff
Why I Went to Jail
Laura Carlsen
Mexico's Immigration Problem
Raj Patel
The WTO and Other Fairy Tales
Ron Jacobs
The Manufacturing of History
Paul Watson
Risky Business Down Under
David Yearsley
They Also Serve Who Only Pull or Tread
Lorenzo Wolff
So You Want Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star...
Kim Nicolini
Finally, a Vampire Movie You Can Sink Your Teeth Into
Susie Day
Proposition 1984: the Problem with Heterosexuals
Poets' Basement
Gibbons, Lerch and Crete
Worthy Group of the Weekend
Energy Justice
December 11, 2008
Patrick Cockburn
Total Defeat for U.S. in Iraq
P. Sainath
After Mumbai
Vicken Cheterian
The Zarqawi Generation
Ray McGovern
Will Obama Buy Torture-Lite?
Dedrick Muhammad
Post-Racial Racism at the Post: the Undying Obsession with Black Family Values
Lee Sustar
Victory at Republic
Peter Morici
The Big Drag
Ayesha Ijaz Khan
Must They Hate Us So?
George Wuerthner
Another Subsidy to Big Timber?
Christopher Brauchli
Mr. Berg's Strange Obsession
Worthy Group of the Day
Animal Balance
December 10, 2008
Ismael Hossein-Zadeh
Whose Interests Will Shape Obama's Change?
Mary Lynn Cramer
The Multi-Trillion Dollar Question
Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Nuclear Weapons Obsolescence
Joshua Frank
Breaking the Stranglehold on Middle East News Coverage
Jack Ely
Stop Sobbing About Free Music Downloads: a Message to the Music Industry from the Lead Singer of the Kingsmen
Steve Conn
An Obama Public Works Program?
Lee Sustar
Republic Workers Target Bank of America
Glen Ford
The Die is Cast
Stephen Lendman
The Persecution of Syed Fahad Hashmi
Nadia Hijab
The Face of America
Dave Lindorff
We All Need a Union
Website of the Day
This One's For You, Senator Dodd
December 9, 2008
Mike Whitney
Card Check
Fawzia Afzal-Khan
Us vs. Them
Ghada Karmi
The UN Resolution That Time Forgot
Dave Lindorff
A Car Dealer Explains Why the Bailout is a Raw Deal
Steve Breyman
Notes on a Green Economy: Managing Stuff in the 21st Century
Lee Sustar /
Nicole Colson
Raising the Stakes at Republic
Rev. William E. Alberts
God of Our Fathers
Martha Rosenberg
Bill Richardson: Secretary of Bloodsports
Sam Husseini
How Holbrooke Lied His Way Into a War
David Macaray
The UAW in Peril
Website of the Day
This Toxic Life
December 8, 2008
Steve Early
Is Obama Backing Off a Crucial Pledge to Labor?
Michael Hudson
Obama's Favoritism: Wall Street, Not the Auto Industry
Patrick Cockburn
Talking to a Lashkar Militant
Diane Farsetta
An Officer and a Conflicted Man: McCaffery, the Pentagon and Fleishman-Hillard
Paul Craig Roberts
Chapters in Imperial Hypocrisy
Daniel Gross
The Chicago Sit-Down Strike
Saul Landau
To Bail or Not to Bail?
Harvey Wasserman
Why John Bryson is Unfit for Energy Secretary
Mike Ferner
The New Generation of "Non-Lethal" Weapons
Norman Solomon
The Silent Winter of Escalation
David Michael Green
The Other Foot
Website of the Day
The Remains of Detroit
December 5 / 7, 2008
Alexander Cockburn
Honeymoans From the Left
Brian Cloughley
Shambles in Afghanistan
Paul Craig Roberts
Muslim Revolution: How Washington Arrogance Helped Drive the Mumbai Attacks
Liaquat Ali Khan
Mumbai and the Kashmir Tinderbox
Farzana Versey
Mumbai's Charge of the Lightweight Brigade
Peter Lee
Pakistan Nears the Breaking Point
Peter Morici
Slouching Toward a Depression?
Ralph Nader /
Toby Heaps
Junk Cap-and-Trade
Yinon Cohen /
Neve Gordon
Obama Could End the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Will He Meet the Challenge?
Wajahat Ali
Perverse Justice: the Holy Land Foundation Convictions
Johnny Barber
Aswad's Story:
Illegal Detention and the Declaration of Human Rights
Alan Farago
Fallout from the Pass-Through Economy
Jeremy Scahill
Obama Doesn't Plan to End Occupation of Iraq
Mike Whitney
Powergrab in Ottawa
Ranjit Hoskote
Jahiliyya Versus Jihad
Carl Finamore
Thank God I'm an Atheist! (Or Boy is Bill O'Reilly in for a Big Surprise)
Marjorie Cohn
Obama and Women's Rights
Norm Kent
Tommy Chong, the Unanticipated Warrior
Missy Beattie
What Lies Ahead
Binoy Kampmark
Committing Suicide On-Line: the Briggs Case
David Macaray
The Best and the Brightest Redux: Too Many Brains, Not Enough Humility
Nancy Stohlman
Relational Activism
Ron Jacobs
Irreverent Politics Then and Now
David Yearsley
Thematics From the Golden Past
Lorenzo Wolff
Troubled Songs of Home and War
Poets' Basement
Orloski: The Door Opener
Website of the Weekend
In Prison My Whole Life
December 4, 2008
Ece Temelkuran
Inside the Ergenekon Case
Ralph Nader
Turning Crisis into Opportunity: Who Will Seize the Moment?
Harry Browne
The Bush-Obama National Security Strategy
Eamonn Fingleton
The American Car Industry: a Riposte to the Knockers
Conn Hallinan
The Syria Attack
Mike Whitney
Fiasco in Somalia: Another CIA Cock-Up
Stewart J. Lawrence
Obama and Latinos: Richardson, Alone, is Not Enough
Paul Fitzgerald /
Elizabeth Gould
Message to Obama: Stop Killing Afghanis
Karyn Strickler
Show Us the Green, Before We Show You the Money
Jennifer Matsui
Obama-Cola: the Great National Temperance Beverage
Website of the Day
"He Ain't Got Laid in a Month of Sundays..."
December 3, 2008
Andrew Cockburn
What's Wrong with the U.S. Military
Sheldon Rampton
Mormon Homophobia: Up Close and Personal
Robert Weissman
Nationalize GM
Yifat Susskind
From Mumbai to Washington
William Blum
The Obama Bummer:
Vote First, Ask Questions Later
Alan Singer
The Ghost of the Defunct Economist
David Macaray
Trampled Under Foot at Wal-Mart
Martha Rosenberg
Born With a Statin Deficiency? Line Forms to the Left!
Mats Svensson
The Crimes Have No Period of Limitations
Website of the Day
Why Bill Richardson's Nomination Should be Opposed
December 2, 2008
Jeremy Scahill
Obama's Kettle of Hawks
Paul Craig Roberts
The New Arms Race
Ayesha Ijaz Khan
The Mumbai Terror Attacks: Is Pakistan to Blame?
Sarah Anderson /
John Cavanagh
Skewed Priorities: How the Bailout Dwarfs Spending on Other Global Crises
William Blum
The Mythology of the War on Terrorism
John Ross
Mexico's Drug War Goes Down in Flames
Dave Lindorff
A Tale of Two Terror Attacks
Nicola Nasser
A Peace Process That Makes Peace Impossible
Steve Conn
Operation Redskin Removal
Robert Bryce
Coal Hard Facts
Website of the Day
Country, Funk, Soul
December 1, 2008
Patrick Cockburn
From Baghdad to Mumbai, by Way of Pakistan
Damien Millet /
Eric Toussaint
Obama's Economic Team:
Records of Failure
Vijay Prashad
The Fires in South Asia
Deepak Tripathi
Obama's Foreign Crises
Joshua Frank
Madam Secretary Clinton and the Middle East
P. Sainath
The Unlikely Martyrdom of Free Market Jihad
Alan Farago
The Right's War on Regulators
Binoy Kampmark
Sydney's Ball and Chain
Chris Genovali
Silent Fall
David Michael Green
Hope You Die Before You Get Old
Stephen Martin
The Chinese are Coming, the Chinese are Coming!
Website of the Day
Robert Rubin: Coward, Liar or Both?
November 28-30, 2008
Alexander Cockburn
In Time of Trouble
Mike Whitney
The Obama "Dream Team": Rubin Clones and Other Fakers
Ted Honderich
What is the Meaning of Obama's Election?
Tom Kerr
Preserving Filthy Lucre (Or Becoming My Dad)
Mike Ely
The Conquest of New England
David Yearsley
Hymns of the Conquest
Deepak Tripathi
Uproar in Police-State Britain
Sonja Karkar
Gaza's Death Throes
Ramzy Baroud
Salvation in a News Broadcast
Robert Weitzel
Israel's Settlement on Capitol Hill
Robert Roth
Can We Create a Movement for Change?
Carlos Fierro
Obama and the End of Racism?
David Macaray
How to Kill a Union
David Rosen
A New Sexual Agenda
James Cockcroft
Indigenous People Rising
Stan Cox
The Most Disappointing Gift
Steve Conn
Talking Turkey About College Basketball
Stephen Martin
The Electromagnetic Pulse and Economic Warfare
Richard Rhames
Busty Bimbettes, Bombs and Brand Obama
Kim Nicolini
Women as Products and Cannibalistic Achievers
Lorenzo Wolff
A Battle Cry for the Confused and Vulnerable
Poets' Basement
Woods, Harrison and Corseri
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December 30, 2008
Everything Was Not As It Was Made to Appear
The Education of David Frost
By BOB SOMMER
The recent opening of Frost/Nixon coincided not only with the holidays but also with the legacy-building tour of President George W. Bush, who’s been scrambling like an undergraduate with a term paper due to paste together something resembling an honorable narrative about his disastrous presidency—quotations, footnotes and all. He got F’s on all the tests. Now the term paper is his last shot.
Among the many parallels between Bush and Nixon—from promoting and escalating unpopular wars to a near sociopathic fear of political opposition and dissent—is their exhaustive effort to create their own legacies, to scoop the historians and fill the space before they get to it (as if this were a real possibility for any president). Bush has the luxury of engineering his effort from the White House. Nixon, no such luck. The public didn’t want to hear from him once he wagged his last V signs from the helicopter door and took off. He was no longer newsworthy, and as a disgraced ex-president, he couldn’t get the kind of interviews he wanted, the Sarah Palin kind, which would have allowed him to ramble on without the “filter of the media”—that is, without the tough questions.
The gentlemanly, piano-playing Merv Griffin might have given Nixon the chance to redeem himself before the public—and Griffin would have paid for the privilege. But then, in 1977, three years after Nixon resigned his office, along came David Frost, the effervescent British dandy of television, offering over $600,000 for a series of now-famous interviews. So far afield was Frost from his mainstay of celebrity interviews and variety entertainment that legitimate news organizations would have nothing to do with him, so he invested personally in the project while scrambling to assemble both a production team and underwriters for the program.
Nixon is much with us in the era of Bush. It’s not too much to say—and I’m not the first to say it—that Bush is a direct descendent of both Nixon’s political tactics and his hubris toward the presidency, a hubris that sometimes resonates with the somber tones of Shakespearean tragedy. Most of the key elements of tragedy are present for both Nixon and Bush. They occupy positions of importance; they’re tragically flawed by pride and arrogance. The hero’s death as a result of his flaw is usually a requirement of tragedy, but the deaths of millions of innocents in wars they waged might easily stand in. Yet neither rises to the standard of Shakespearean tragedy for the simple reason that, unlike Macbeth or Othello or Lear, both Bush and Nixon are individually too small, and too sordid, for heroic stature. They may have been (and one still is) leaders of the free world—but their natures are finally petty, self-absorbed in ways that prevent them from falling from high places because they never really arrived there.
The great heroes of Shakespeare have a level of self-awareness, and self-examination, that is simply beyond the scope of either Nixon or Bush. Such traits lead to the final key element of the tragedy, which is recognition of their own flawed natures. Frost/Nixon opens with fragments of the infamous tapes revealing the level of Nixon’s involvement in the so-called “dirty tricks” of his administration. His nature is revealed as less vengeful than simply vindictive. His concern isn’t for matters of state but for petty, underhanded tactics to destroy his political enemies. The closest we get to an apology from Nixon in the interviews with David Frost comes in the form of the classic political non-apology apology: “I let the American people down”—a phrase that comes not so much from the heart as from prompting by Frost.
Nixon agreed to be interviewed not only for money and to redeem his legacy, but because he also nurtured the faint hope that he might re-enter politics. Self-deluded better describes Nixon than self-aware. King Lear’s words to his daughter Cordelia—“When thou dost ask me blessing, I’ll kneel down / And ask thee forgiveness.” (V, iii, 10-11)—are nowhere in the galaxy of Nixon’s imagination. Nor Bush’s, for that matter.
Frost’s interviews with Nixon ought to have filled a near-universal American need for catharsis. Indeed, the movie takes for its climactic focus the one moment in which Nixon comes closest to uttering some admission of guilt, but his view of right and wrong—and of the Constitution!—is so distorted that we might almost be willing to grant him an insanity plea: “I'm saying that when the president does it, that means it is not illegal.” The potential catharsis of this moment in Frost/Nixon is also flawed by the dramatic liberties of the movie itself, which is based on a successful stage play by Peter Morgan, now brought to the screen by director Ron Howard.
A telling sign that fiction has mixed freely with history was the audience laughter at the viewing I attended, often in response to set-up jokes. Despite an early sequence of newsreel footage of the carnage in Vietnam, the movie lacked a sense of the magnitude of Nixon’s crimes and their consequences—and thus why catharsis mattered. “Docudrama” is by its nature a confusing genre—neither fish nor fowl, and thus lacking either taste or substance. (Maybe tofu is a better analogy.) The high production values that Ron Howard brings to any project seemed almost distracting. Set moments that featured profiles of actor Frank Langella in startling likenesses of Nixon were undercut by dialogue that sometimes descended to mere sit-com punchlines: Nixon asking Frost if he’d been “fornicating,” for instance. Langella did a lot with what he was given, but the essential confusion about what the movie should be had the effect of taking away one thing as soon as it gave another. The story of these interviews told in a pure documentary fashion surely would have merited the kinds of accolades won by Al Gore for An Inconvenient Truth and Michael Moore for Fahrenheit 9/11.
The central story of this movie is the education of David Frost, an extraordinarily successful television entertainer, but no journalist—though the task, by his own standard, is not journalism but to reach as large an audience as possible and thus vault his career forward. The dramatic movement is toward Frost’s realization that there’s more at stake than ratings—and that he’s been played for a fool by Nixon. Frost has plenty of hubris of his own, dismissing research that his staff assembled at great effort—and more importantly, dismissing their passionate wish—especially James Reston’s—to see Nixon given “the trial he never had,” as Reston says, through a public interrogation. The wounds of Gerald Ford’s unconditional pardon were fresh in 1977, as were the lies, the crimes, and the human cost of Vietnam.
But Frost is not large enough for tragedy either. His moment of self-awareness leads to a more determined effort to succeed in his final interview with Nixon—and the script here borrows from the stock Hollywood rallying effort that leads every underdog sports team, debate team, dancer, singer, and on and on to victory in the climatic scene. Yet it fails to lead Frost toward a fresh determination to raise his career beyond the purely self-serving path it has traveled. And while the movie portrays his finest moment with heroic overtones, it also somewhat speciously offers this as redemption for allowing most of the opportunity—which he created but also failed to recognize for its full value—slip away.
The movie’s inaccuracies can’t be passed over. They were more than distracting; they drained the story of the confidence and satisfaction one might have taken away with a fuller understanding of this fascinating historical moment.
Here are a few keys for viewers:
No, Nixon didn’t drunk-dial Frost in the middle of the night to commiserate over sharing Frost’s fate of always being on the outside: “That’s our tragedy, isn’t it, Mr. Frost, that they still look down on us.”—they being the insiders, the cliques, the sons of privilege whose recognition, Nixon presumes, neither of them ever won. It should be said, however, that this scene is Frank Langella’s finest in the movie.
No, James Reston didn’t spend Easter weekend, just days before the Watergate interview, researching the last minute smoking gun of Nixon’s conversation with Charles Colson about the Watergate break-in. He did that work months earlier.
No, the taping was not done in four sessions, and it was not done in the sequence described in the movie. The Watergate sequence alone took four sessions.
No, Jack Brennan did not interrupt the taping when things went south for Nixon. He did attempt to communicate with Frost by holding up a sign, which Frost mistook for a request for a break.
And emphatically no, Nixon did not utter his famous “When the president does it…” line in response to a question about Watergate. That came in another interview and referred to surveillance of political dissenters.
(For more detail on these inaccuracies, interested readers should see Robert Zelnick’s review of the stage play and the timeline of these events at historycommons.org.)
I would not suggest viewers avoid this movie. It has merit and interest, but caveat spectator. Everything was not as it’s made to appear.
Bob Sommer’s novel, Where the Wind Blew, which tells the story how the past eventually caught up with one former member of a 60s radical group, was released in June 2008 by The Wessex Collective. He blogs at Uncommon Hours.

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