In
Defense of Fuddy-Duddies
by
Brian Dunaway
Being
a leading critical observer of American popular culture necessitated
my watching at least one episode of the television phenom The
Osbournes. For those still living deep in the caves of Tora
Bora, The Osbournes is the latest adventure in reality television
depicting the family life of aging rocker Ozzy Osbourne.
This
is the first time I've sat down to watch anything on MTV, which
I understand is one long commercial. And yes, as I was nearly universally
assured, The Osbournes was rather funny. That is, the idea
is inherently funny.
How
can it not be? A man who is filthy rich via his role as principal
echo-chamber of the most sensationally nihilistic elements of our
so-called culture seems to have the same problems that virtually
every middle class father has he can't hook up the DVD player,
his kids won't listen to him, his pets are sick, etc.
But
I get the joke. I've seen it once, and I predict that will be just
about it for me.
Hearing
bleeped-out expletives every other word ceases to be entertaining
rather quickly, even in spite of the rich tapestry of personalities
that comprise The Osbournes.
Don't
get me wrong there is far, far worse television programming than
The Osbournes; and I don't think that Ozzy Osbourne's Birmingham
"working class values" could stomach most of what's currently served
on television. I can imagine him scrunching up his face when approached
with any number of the repulsive scenarios that are common fare
on network television sitcoms, just as he does when he's served
what he apparently considers the next alien course of the fancy
dinner to which he is obviously unaccustomed.
But
in many ways it typifies television programming, whose exact purpose
is to celebrate mediocrity in the face of the culture of self-esteem.
Why read a serious book with exceptional protagonists and complicated
moral decisions when you can turn on the tube for reassurance: we're
really all the same, aren't we?
But,
if Viacom wants to pay the Osbournes twenty million dollars for
two more years of this, and if their marketing wizards want to capitalize
on it, and if there are enough Western Minds who want to watch it,
they can all knock their lights out.
But
surely our lofty leaders in the press and government are different
right? Exhibit A is an invitation for Ozzy Osbourne to attend
the 2002 White House Correspondents' Association Dinner as the guest
of the great legal mind Greta Van Susteren.
At
what might be called "Mr. Osbourne Goes to Washington," Jennifer
Harper of The Washington Times noted:
He
was rude. He was endearing. He swore, he mumbled, he stood on
his chair. Mr. Osbourne inspired huge amounts of appreciative
prose in the aftermath from journalists giddy over pomp, circumstance
and studied misbehavior.
Not
all were enthralled:
Mrs.
Cheney was "embarrassed" over the fact that Washington's power
elite rose on its hind legs to laud Mr. Osbourne, now the focal
point of a bizarre but engaging cable TV show, and still a working
musician.
"He's
hardly someone to be applauding not a role model," Mrs. Cheney
was heard saying, at least according to Mr. Drudge, who also attended
the soiree.
It
is truly mystifying how grown people, especially the ostensible
elite of the free world, can treat a man like Ozzy Osbourne as Elvis
Presley. But then again, I don't understand grown people treating
Elvis like Elvis, either.
And
to be sure, watching the program is one thing, but acting like bobby-soxers
is another.
But
I'm just as mystified at Mrs. Cheney's response. She thinks Washington
parasites are good role models?
And
why wouldn't they celebrate a television icon as their own? Aside
from perhaps relating their own mediocre skills to Mr. Osbourne's,
why would they not celebrate the true god of leftist ideology, Mediocrity,
with its cosmology that none can be happy until all are equally
ignorant, equally base, and equally decadent?
But
surely poor Mr. Osbourne was way out of his league no one can
out-Goth the Gothic Ghouls inside the Beltway.
Main
Street America was not as thrilled as the attendees, but I don't
believe in this case the president should be faulted for being polite:
Reaction
to Mr. Osbourne's Washington debut was darker on talk radio, with
some listeners expressing their disappointment in President Bush's
recognition of Mr. Osbourne from the podium.
To
be honest, Mr. Bush was just being friendly. If someone thought
inviting Mr. Osbourne was in good taste, what's Mr. Bush to do?
Besides, when
Osbourne managed to get Bush's attention by yelling to him "You
should wear your hair like mine!", I thought the president's reply
was pretty funny: "Second term, Ozzy!"
If
one wants to fault Mr. Bush for lack of propriety, how about when
he was Texas governor, in 1997 he honored ZZ Top by naming 15 May
"ZZ Top Day in Texas." Yes, I know I'm impossibly old-fashioned,
but I just think it's not quite right for the governor of Texas
to honor a band whose greatest hits include "Tube Snake Boogie"
and "Pearl Necklace." And to be sure, ZZ Top highlighted the "The
Best Little Ball in D.C." on inauguration day.
It
doesnt make the president particularly wicked, it's just a sad
sign of the times.
"Oh,
the Republicans need to lighten up and follow their leader and
realize that entertainment is entertainment," said conservative
activist David Horowitz, also by phone. "Any kid who has good
core family values can listen to Ozzy Osbourne and just be amused."
Of
course, there is a kernel of truth to this. The first rock album
I ever bought was by Black Sabbath, and I seem to have turned out
alright. (Or did I?)
But
one would think that Mr. Horowitz of the Center for the Study of
the Popular Culture would have a different view. He has spent much
time and effort railing against the depraved Clinton.
Well,
specifically because of what our children "learned" about oral sex
from the president, and from the generally cavalier approach to
the "scandal" from the popular culture, there is an epidemic of
oral sex even among very young teenagers who have about as much
respect for themselves as Monica Lewinski. But wait, isn't Monica
Lewinski a successful spokesperson now?
And
who was talking about "kids" anyway? The staggering aspect of this
story is that it was not kids who were behaving like kids
but the "elite" who attempt to control our minds and lives!
For
a little perspective, they might listen to Mr. Osbourne: "I'm not
proud of taking drugs
biting the heads off rodents
I'm just
an ordinary guy."
Well,
let's just say not extraordinary. And who would have thought
otherwise? Apparently, quite a few folks in Washington with perhaps
the exception of Mrs. Cheney, whom commentator Bill Press said was
the "fuddy-duddy" contingent.
But
alas, Mrs. Cheney didn't stick to her guns, lest she be seen as
"morose and authoritative":
Reports
of Mrs. Cheney's offense are greatly exaggerated, however.
"This
is all untrue," said a spokeswoman from Mrs. Cheney's office yesterday.
"I don't know where this report came from. She never made any
comments about Mr. Osbourne at all."
Mr.
Drudge remains adamant.
Who
can blame her? Certainly anyone, that is, anyone, who acknowledges
the concept of propriety in any context is a prig. Even if the prig
in question is widely observed to be correct, they're nevertheless
a prig for saying it, even in good humor. (I will no doubt be called
a prig for writing this column.)
And
we wonder why simple manners, much less "core values," are not being
passed down from one generation to the next?
How
does this happen? In this exchange from The
Republic, Socrates and Plato recognize a social inversion:
...
the father grows accustomed to descend to the level of his sons
and to fear them, and the son is on a level with his father, he
having no respect nor reverence for either of his parents; and
this is his freedom, and the metic is equal with the citizen and
the citizen with the metic, and the stranger is quite as good
as either.
...
And these are not the only evils ... there are several lesser
ones: In such a state of society the master fears and flatters
his scholars, and the scholars despise their masters and tutors;
young and old are all alike; and the young man is on a level with
the old, and is ready to compete with him in word or deed; and
old men condescend to the young and are full of pleasantry and
gaiety; they are loath to be thought morose and authoritative,
and therefore they adopt the manners of the young.
This
pretty much sums up the predominant cultural, intellectual, and
political environment in The West.
Why?
There
are those who have better manners, but are afraid to speak, perhaps
because they don't know who they are. But if they do know, and still
say nothing, their sins are far greater than those of the young
and ignorant to whom they pander, and of whom they are so afraid.
May
10, 2001
Brian
Dunaway [send him
mail] is a chemical engineer and a native Texan.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
Brian
Dunaway Archives
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