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Dana Milbank, in a nutshell

June 29, 2009 2:31 pm ET by Jamison Foser

BooMan on Milbank:

There was a brief period of time, probably in 2004, when I thought Dana Milbank was doing a decent job of showing a sane level of skepticism about the Bush administration's pronouncements and behavior. He wasn't striking for his wit or his moral outrage. He just stood out as someone who was occasionally willing to call bullshit in a town where that seemed never to happen. His schtick appeared to be irreverence of a kind slightly more substantive than that provided by Lady Dowd. But something changed. If I had to guess, what changed is that Milbank started getting invites to be on the cable news. And that made him somebody. He joined the Big Boys like Howard Fineman and Ron Brownstein. His opinion was supposed to move the national discourse. ...

He lost his outsiderish up-and-coming edge. His condescension stopped reaching up and started hammering down. Instead of telling us that our betters are full of crap, he told us that his lessers were unworthy. And, at some point he reached a stage of inness where he felt comfortable enough to wallow in his sense of accomplishment and to develop a sense of entitlement.

I have long thought that the worst thing that can happen to a journalist (from a quality-of-journalism standpoint, not from a paycheck standpoint) is becoming a regular guest on cable news. The way to get on, say, Hardball, is for Chris Matthews to think you have smart things to say.  The way to get Chris Matthews to think you have smart things to say is to say things Chris Matthews agrees with.  This has obvious flaws.  It also, I think, contributes to a homogenization of viewpoints available in the media.

Theories about television aside, BooMan's contention that Milbank seems to have shifted from afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted to the opposite seems right.  Milbank's defenders often point out, as Howard Kurtz did today, that he was critical of the Bush administration.  True -- though the Bush administration made it pretty hard not to do so.  But those defenders never seem to remember Milbank's mockery of people who were trying to hold the Bush administration accountable, which drew rare criticism from the Washington Post's assistant managing editor and ombudsman.

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    • Author by LuvLuLu (June 29, 2009 2:53 pm ET)
      3  
      Dana Milbank tried to claim to be without sin because of this very reason when he appeared with Nico Pitney over the weekend. He claimed that he had attacked the Bush Admin and so couldn't be challenged. But that's not the way it works. Just because he did good things on occasion does not make him invincible or immune from criticism.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by temphandle afflict14sawdust (June 29, 2009 4:47 pm ET)
         
      I'm not sure we should care what BooMan has to say about anybody.

      His own condescension for former Clinton supporters skews his thinking.

      Carolyn Kay
      MakeThemAccountable.com
      Report Abuse
      • Author by LuvLuLu (June 30, 2009 12:04 pm ET)
        1  
        Like I said above, just because someone has done lots of good things in the past, that doesn't make them immune from criticism. And just because someone has done bad things (or things you disagree with) in the past, it doesn't mean that they can't make a good point on occasion.

        It's not the messenger that's important. It's the message.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by thebewilderness (June 29, 2009 9:46 pm ET)
      1  
      I'm a little shaky on why anyone would take political gossip columnists like Dana Milbank seriously. Isn't giving these people too much attention in 1998 how the corporate news media turned into the political gossip mongers speculation extravaganza it is today?
      Report Abuse
      • Author by thebewilderness (June 29, 2009 9:47 pm ET)
        1  
        For the sake of clarity, I mean us out here in teevee land, and not you there in MM land.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by mescal (June 30, 2009 4:08 am ET)
      1  
      That headline should have been "Dana Milbank In A Wingnut Shell".
      Report Abuse

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