“Game Change” Same Old Liberal Propaganda

My bride and I dropped HBO a couple of years ago, to save money.  I’m glad that we did. The Liberals who run it have screwed up what used to be a very good movie channel.

They’ve turned it into a propaganda platform for their political ideology, featuring the misogynist rantings of the decidedly unfunny Bill Maher and made-for-HBO movies, such as Game Change, about the nomination of Former Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin as the Republican Vice-Presidential Nominee.

The Weekly Standard has the story:

Nicolle Wallace was the onetime consultant to CBS News and media aide to George W. Bush who was assigned to work with Sarah Palin after the Alaska governor was chosen as John McCain’s running mate. It was Wallace who assured the McCain campaign that her dear friend Katie Couric, a committed liberal with a history of interviewing Republicans and conservatives in a quietly nasty way, was the right journalist to conduct a major early interview with the extremely conservative vice-presidential nominee.

Palin has only herself to blame for how horribly she came off, but as she was the most hotly sought-after interview in the world at the time, the McCain campaign could have picked and chosen and been cleverly calculating about which journalist would win the prize. Wallace was responsible for one of the great blunders in political advance work of modern media history.

Now, imagine you’re making a movie about the Palin story, one that demonstrates a modicum of sympathy for Sarah Palin’s excoriation at the hands of the media. (I know, I’m talking crazy, but go with me here.) In such a movie, Nicolle Wallace’s catastrophic guidance could have been portrayed in several ways. It could have been played as a simple goof, a wrongheaded political calculation. Or as an example of a kind of golly-gee naïveté, with Wallace being snowed by a seductive Couric. Or as a careerist move killing two birds with one stone, with Wallace seeking to stay in the good graces of her former colleague Couric despite several years of working for Republicans.

Needless to say, that is not how Nicolle Wallace is portrayed in Game Change, the new HBO movie based on the John Heilemann-Mark Halperin bestseller. No, indeed. Wallace is the movie’s heroine. She is the voice of reason, the increasingly alarmed witness to the evil McCain has perpetrated by foisting Palin upon the world. It is through Wallace’s interactions with the vice-presidential candidate that we see confirmed every bad thing anyone has ever said about Palin (save that she is not the mother of Trig—it steers clear of that Sullivanian filth). Wallace (played by Sarah Paulson) delivers screenwriter Danny Strong’s inadvertently hilarious Blue State zinger when, dripping with righteous scorn during a confrontation with Palin, she says with disbelief, “Yeah, you’re just like Hillary.”

Wallace’s deeply principled revulsion is mirrored by that of Steve Schmidt (Woody Harrelson), the McCain campaign chief whose initial excitement at Palin’s political skills and smarts is fast superseded by his awareness of her religious fanaticism (Schmidt gets a horrified look on his face when she says she sees the hand of God at work) and her ignorance.

Yes, if ever you wanted circumstantial evidence that the sources within the McCain campaign who spent October 2008 dumping on Palin anonymously might have included Wallace and Schmidt, you need look no further than HBO’s Game Change. The movie presents a moral case for the disreputable conduct of aides who, we can presume, fearlessly drop dirty dimes anonymously to save their own standing in the liberal culture from which they desperately wish not to be excluded.

Those closest to Gov. Palin, and the Arctic Fox, herself, aren’t particularly impressed by the movie, to say the least.

According to ABC News:

In response to the movie “Game Change” focusing on her historic selection as the GOP vice presidential nominee in the 2008 campaign, Sarah Palin says in an email to ABC News that the film doesn’t matter to her.

“I believe my family has the right priorities and knows what really matters,” Palin emailed. “For instance, our son called from Afghanistan yesterday and he sounded good, and that’s what matters. Being in the good graces of Hollywood’s ‘Team Obama’ isn’t top of my list.”

Palin’s allies have dismissed ”Game Change,” which is based on the book that described the former Alaska governor’s lurch onto the national stage, as a bundle of lies. Her former aide Jason Recher called it a “false narrative cobbled together by a group of people who simply weren’t there.”

Randy Scheunemann, who advised Palin during the campaign, said that “to call this movie fiction gives fiction a bad name.”

Other aides who worked on the campaign – campaign manager Steven Schmidt and top aide Nicolle Wallace – have said the film is a generally accurate portrayal of Sen. John McCain’s selection of Palin, whom they allege was emotionally and intellectually not up for the job.

Of course, Schmidt is now working as a on-air contributor for MSNBC, where Ms. Wallace is a frequent guest as a Political Pundit.

No agendas here.  Nope.  Nothing to see at all…literally.

4 thoughts on ““Game Change” Same Old Liberal Propaganda

  1. cmsinaz's avatar cmsinaz

    Steve Schmidt was on morning Joe this am saying everything in that movie was true

    Liar!

    Mika and the crew continued the Sarah bashing

    Shameful

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  2. Well, speaking as a “Christian American Liberal” (with actual paid experience as a film critic), I think you missed the forest for the trees. After watching “Game Change”, I have never felt as sympathetic toward Palin as I do now.

    First off, you are confusing the issue of completeness with accuracy. In a drama based on real events, the goal is to reduce and simplify characters and contrast them to illustrate themes and ideas. You have here an “old soldier” experienced political veteran contrasted against a small-town neophyte. The movie is not primarily about Palin! It’s about how the process of a national campaign can distort impressions and corrupt good motives.

    The hubris of McCain’s advisers is well-illustrated. Palin’s selection was a hail-Mary pass tried late in a losing game. Nobody with her limited education and experience (then, not now) could possibly have been made ready for a national campaign in that short a time. The fact that she had other notable pressures like a new baby and the deployment of her son is made very clear. And I knew I was watching a performance of genius when Julianne Moore said Palin’s actual words from speeches, and “sold” them more effectively than the original Sarah had.

    Of course your idea that HBO, or any movie channel, exists primarily to promote a political agenda is ludicrous on the face of it. Sure they have Bill Maher, but where’s the liberal agenda in their big moneymakers, Game of Thrones, Eastbound and Down, and Luck? Every pay channel tries to have stuff for all audiences, all ages (at different times of day) and all sides of the spectrum. The goal is to get people to pay to watch specific shows that will appeal to them, not to watch ALL the shows.

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    1. Considering that I worked for 10 years for Time/Warner, and have almost 30 in Corporate Video Production and A/v Services, I am very aware of certain corpations’ political agendas. Time/Warner is a Liberal organization, as you are a Liberal writer. Governor Palin is an intelligent woman, no matter how you, the MSM, the GOP Establishment, and the jackwagons in Hollywood attempt to portray her. If you will notice, I did no attempt to critique the movie scene-by-scene. That would be unnecessary. All I had to do was familiarize myself with the sources of the information used to write the movie and their political ideologies and histories.

      Research. Try it sometime.

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  3. Gohawgs's avatar Gohawgs

    “Game Change”, produced/bankrolled by Tom Hanks…

    The latest obamanation re-election campaign short film, narrated by Tom Hanks…

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