"You only see the President twice a week. I don't understand why everybody's so upset. Like: What's going to happen? If you liked Obama: Did he call you in the last eight years?"
--Bill Burr, On Donald Trump's election in 2016
George Carlin famously advised people to not vote. It doesn't make any difference. He shared Burr's belief that you have only a meaningless choice between greedy old men.
I think Carlin and Burr, two of my favorite public intellectuals, are wrong on this point, but there is wisdom in this argument. Most people--not all by any means, but a preponderance--do not care about anything that does not affect them personally. Freedom of speech? Hey, if I can say what I want in the bar to my buddies, I'm fine. I don't care if I can't go on CBS and crack wise about Donald Trump.
Turning away from coal and oil to wind and solar power? Hey, as long as my home tank gets filled and it's affordable, I'm fine. Climate change? Maybe, maybe not, but what're you gonna do about it? Like the man says, "Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it."
Burr's appeal is Archie Bunker's appeal. You laugh, even if you're thinking, on some level, "Well, hey, that's not right."
But enough of what he says is right, you get carried along:
1. "The speaker on Oprah says being a mom is the most difficult job on the planet. I question whether that's true, comparing it to dangerous professions like Ice Road Trucking, where people died. Jobs like catching lobster traps seem harder than looking after children, who can be put to bed at any time. Any job done in pajamas is not difficult."
Imagine guys sitting in a bar in Boston, or Damariscotta, Maine, who go out on lobster boats, or fishing boats hearing somebody say being a mom is the most difficult job on the planet. Of course, motherhood is ladened with difficulty, but comparing being a trad wife to being a lobsterman, a fisherman, an astronaut, a surgeon, an electric high wire power man, an airplane pilot--well, we know there's a wink in the eye--and the point is, people don't realize how hard being a mother is and so this is hyperbole--but when you are talking about what people do for a living, and guys who really work hard hear that someone else is working harder, at home, driving to the grocery store, and doing all the things mothers have to do, it establishes in their minds that the speaker does not appreciate how hard their own lives are.
2. "I got a dog recently. I went down to the pound and got one of those free dogs. Yeah, that's how I say it. I don't say I rescued a dog. I hate when people say that. It's a complete exaggeration. Did you pull her out of a burning building? Did you jump in a river with your clothes still on?"
What he is getting at is that beyond annoying tendency of people who live soft lives trying to dramatize and make heroic what is not, which really makes people who really do dangerous or demanding work snort and snarl. A fireman rescues people. Surgeons rescue people. Sometimes even police rescue people. And they all do that at risk to themselves, under pressure and they sometimes fail, but when they succeed they know the true satisfaction of putting yourself on the line for someone else.
3. "The way I was brought up is like, you can make it to heaven, but some of your family members possibly couldn't, or some of your friends. Doesn't make sense. Like, how am I supposed to enjoy heaven if that's the deal? Just sitting here waiting for my friends to show up: 'Jesus Christ, where the hell are they? It's been 150 years!...Then one day, it settles in that they didn't make it. Then what? Jesus comes walking over: 'Hey, how is it going? Isn't this great' 'Yeah, dude, it'd be even better if all my family and friends weren't burning for fucking ever. Kind of hard to enjoy heaven when you just keep thinking of that there.'"
For some reason, as soon as Burr said this, an image of Stacey Affleck in "Manchester by the Sea," flashed through my mind. Not because that movie is the saddest, truest, most wrenching movie I've ever seen--which it is--but because you see in that movie, almost as a parenthesis, the centrality of friends and family to the workaday stiffs who populate this film are. They don't have college friends, or tennis friends, or friends from the kids' PTA. They have guys they grew up playing baseball on sandlots (or nowadays in little league), playing hockey on the pond with, who have lived in the same town their whole lives.
One summer, an electrician who came by to fix the refrigerator in the house we had rented on Kezar Lake, Maine, noticed the baseball gloves belonging to me and my kids and he asked if I played and when I said yes, he invited me to a game that afternoon at a nearby field. It didn't take long for me to realize everyone on that diamond had played in these games for their entire lives. They laughed at all the jokes two sentences before the punch lines, because they knew them all. These were thirty, forty something men who had grown up together and none of them had ever moved away.
It made me think of what that must mean--to be frozen in time and place like that.
Where I grew up, everyone knew that at age 18 we were all gone--every one of my friends would leave our suburban town outside Washington, D.C. and likely we'd never move back. We'd go to college--the most prestigious, expensive colleges we could manage--pursue careers in glamor cities and likely, we'd never move back, unless we got elected to Congress. Some kids knew each other from age zero to 18, but most of us had moved in and out of WDC as our fathers got different jobs which brought them to and fro. My best friends, I had known from age 9 to 18, which is a significant part of life, but I did not expect to know them my entire life.
For these guys, their friends were part of their souls. They knew each other, suffered slings and arrows together. The longest they spent away from town was maybe two years in the military, and most of them had not done that.
They would have seen small town friendships depicted in "The Deer Hunter" and understood exactly why Robert DeNiro had to return to Viet Nam and rescue Christopher Walken, because that's what lifelong friends do.
So, how does a national politician, even one as real and tested as Obama appeal to these guys?
They see politicians as rich greedy guys, a class apart, people driven by ambition not friendship, loyalty or love.
4. "You know what I'm afraid of? Robots. I saw one get interviewed on 60 Minutes and he's sitting there, not nervous at all, just rattling off all the fucking answers. Not smoking, not leaking oil or whatever you would do as a nervous robot. And the reporter's asking him questions. In the end, he goes, 'So, tell us, what are your goals?' I'm alone in a hotel room, and I literally lean toward the TV. I'm like, "Do these fucking things have goals?' But the reporter just blows by it. He's like, 'Okay, and what's your favorite color?' Meanwhile, I'm standing on my bed, yelling at the TV, like, 'Dude, unplug that fucking thing! Take the batteries out! How many sci-fi movies do you have to see before you realize where this is going?"
So, the brilliance here is that he's talking about what constitutes sentient life. This is what David Brooks and all the public intellectuals will spend hours discussing in The New Yorker, the Atlantic and on PBS. But for Burr, all you need to do is watch "Battle Star Galactica" and you know all you need to know about cyborgs and machines achieving sentience. This is what the guys at the diner or in the bar talk about.
And they don't need no friggin' college boys to tell them about it.
They are right out of "Good Will Hunting," and they know it.
The problem is, the folks at the Democratic National Committee and the New Hampshire state Democratic Party do not.




















