This week’s episode served as the final episode in the 8-part marketing presentation that brilliantly defined Sarah Palin as a political brand while simultaneously putting the nail in the coffin of her presidential ambitions. It seemed like a good idea I suppose – using the ruse of an Alaskan documentary to produce a long-form political ad - but even her most hardcore fans had a hard time buying the Mama Grizzly crap that she was selling. And she never stopped selling it to the bitter end.
In this installment we visited a reindeer farm, traveled to Nome and Valdez to mine for gold, took a quick detour to Anchorage for an airshow and ended up at the family compound to celebrate Sarah’s parents’ 50th wedding anniversary. 11 year old daughter Piper played the role of student to Sarah’s teacher for this hour, and delivered perhaps the most unintentionally astute line of the entire series as they flew into their first destination.
“Down below is the 800 miles of trans-Alaskan pipeline,” Sarah explained to Piper as they descended into Valdez, “it travels over three different mountain ranges – and guess where it ends up?”
“In the water?” Piper quips.
Their first adventure was a kayak trip on Valdez Glacier Lake. Apparently the glacier has thinned over 300 feet in the last century, and seemed to be deteriorating at a rapid rate during their journey as pieces of ice and debris rained down around them – not that anybody mentioned it. The main purpose of the trip was to recreate part of the journey that prospectors took during the Klondike gold rush of the late 1800s, and to pan for gold on the beach shore. When Piper didn’t find enough bling in Valdez, they jetted to Nome where they panned for more gold on a post-apocalyptic beach lined with people who looked like they were engaged in Alaska’s equivalent of playing the slots. As Palins dug and shook sand and ran around, Sarah went on and on about how life was all about competition and hard work and Alaska - like she was that kid in elementary school who wouldn’t stop tapping you on the shoulder saying “guess what?” - and everyone sighed and said “we know, WE KNOW,” hoping somebody – anybody - would come along and ask for her autograph so she would leave them alone.
From Nome, they met Todd at the Anchorage Air Show where Sarah talked about crying at the sight of Blue Angels (we’re assuming she was referring to the planes) before traveling back home for her parents’ 50th anniversary. In the final scene of the series, Sarah and family presented her parents with pieces made from the gold that they had harvested - and everyone talked about love and family and being true Alaskans and I barfed and it was OVER.
For people like me, and probably for the majority of those of us who have witnessed Sarah Palin’s rise to prominence, her allure as a personality is as mysterious as it is depressingly obvious. In an age where solid branding is the only way public figures can attract a dedicated following, Sarah developed her talking points and stuck to them religiously – especially during the course of this program. Throughout the 8 episodes, we were sold the image of a hard working, blue collar everywoman who values family above all else and who will protect that family, and her country, by any means necessary – and preferably with a firearm. She’s become an iconic character – a modern day Annie getting her gun – embodying a bad ass, maternal and ‘naughty librarian’ appeal in one package. Not an easy feat.
Unfortunately this past Saturday we realized a nasty consequence of the anger that Sarah Palin has come to symbolize – anger made all the more insidious by the pretty package it was sold in. By almost all accounts, Congresswoman Giffords and the victims of Saturday’s shootings were gunned down by a troubled, mentally unbalanced young man – and that was not Sarah Palin’s fault. But as has been pointed out by former President Bill Clinton (among others), the vitriol and anti-government sentiment perpetuated by Sarah and her ilk can be heard by everyone – mentally stable or not – and using graphics like the infamous tea party target map from November’s elections (with rifle crosshairs over target districts, including Congresswoman Gifford’s) can only serve to potentially further incite the passions of those who may not be able to control them. And, like it or not, as a society we all have to take responsibility for those people.
Sarah doesn’t quite understand this perspective - not that we expected her to. Nor does she seem to even acknowledge that her imagery was what it appeared to be. A spokesperson for Sarah’s PAC explained that the crosshairs were never intended to be interpreted as rifle sites – a ridiculous explanation given that her rhetoric has always been defined by Clint Eastwood bravado (perhaps she’ll next be trying to convince us that her “Don’t retreat, RELOAD” reference evolved from Willow’s unwillingness to do laundry.) I would have had more respect for her if she made the argument that crosshairs on a map doesn't lead people to commit murder - a point certainly worth debating.
As her show comes to an end, those of us terrified by the prospect of a Palin presidency can breathe more easily. Sarah has proven that she can harness the energy of an angry minority and even transform that anger into political change, but Americans don’t respond to anger for long. “You gotta give ‘em hope,” Harvey Milk famously said - a trick Sarah Palin has yet to master.


Salon.com
Comments
Hate-speech has been linked to hate-crime (and that is what this is, not only murder and assassination) by legal precedent. We cannot ignore that, because to do so is moral cowardice.
Has anyone looked through a rifle scope lately? Sarah's "hate mad" featured scopes.
Elijah Rising
stop the advance of the 451s
This was, in all ways, great insight into a modern American tragedy.
rated with love
you misunderstand the message here. It is not to pin the tragedy on the right. First of all, it is not by all means clear that the shooter was left wing. By most accounts he was a mentally disturbed individual with wide reading interests, including Mein Kampf, which is not a reading preference of the left. The idea here is the right has been particularly using violent, igniting and fear mongering imagery ever since Obama was elected. Even if that imagery did not inspire this particular shooting, it is dangerous to continue. And pinning imaginary Palin assassination on Clinton is just stupid.
Nicely done
knighwriter, your recaps have been brilliant. This one is especially good.
Most Canadians are baffled by American politics and I admit to being one of them. Yes, we're boring and proud of it! Someone please keep Palin off the air!
Thank you, KW.
You know what is the major difference between people like this d. young and people like me?
When I troll, I bring home walleye for dinner.
http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?IndictSP
So far there are more than 3500 signatures. Thank you. And Knightwriter, you're wrong, Palin IS responsible and she must be held accountable. And Lougner is a rightwing terrorist.
Rated.
Its interesting, though, that the cowboy/hunter/outdoorsman image need not be used for hate. Reagan and Teddy Roosevelt used it back in the day.
Today it represents something else totally. I wonder why the demographic it appeals to has changed so much?
http://www.hecklerspray.com/sarah-palins-tv-show-gets-axed-because-it-was-gigantically-dismal/201154918.php
acid reflux diet
Your opening salvo said it all. A one-two punch packed into one sentence. Thank heavens this long national saga is over. Please put your shoulder to a more worthy wheel, like Paula Abdul's new show (hehe), but I'd really love some of your personal work here too, K. Best to you in 2011.
Hate Merchants like Palin and Beck -- and their mentor William Kristol -- have blood on their hands.
And all the perfumes of Arabia won't make them smell sweet again, Deborah.
By the way YOU STINK!!!!
In 2008: That’s exactly what Barack Obama said he would do to counter Republican attacks “If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun,” Obama said at a Philadelphia fundraiser Friday night. “Because from what I understand folks in Philly like a good brawl. I’ve seen Eagles fans.”
Ooops!