<![CDATA[Gawker: defamer, dennis haysbert]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: defamer, dennis haysbert]]> http://gawker.com/tag/defamer/dennishaysbert http://gawker.com/tag/defamer/dennishaysbert <![CDATA[Obama And The Gay Wedding Industry Owe TV A Gift Basket]]> When Bertolt Brecht said, "Art is not a mirror held up to reality but a hammer with which to shape it," well, he was just being an egomaniacal auteur. But it's quite possible that he was right — if you're willing to classify network television as art, that is. Consider the case of two recent seemingly unthinkable societal shifts — Barack Obama's presidential nomination and the recent decision to legalize gay marriage in California starting today. Both were the plots of popular television shows before they actually happened. Could the paranoid social conservatives be right? Does what people see on TV actually change their opinions? Do Kiefer Sutherland's powers of persuasion extend beyond Defamer? Consider the evidence after the jump.

In 2001, 24 debuted. Its premiere episode was nearly pulled because it featured a plane getting shot out of the sky in a scenario eerily similar to the events of September 11th. But viewers who found the terrorists-are-out-to-get-us premise all too believable could relax because Jack Bauer was assigned to protect an African-American presidential candidate. There was no way that was realistic; there weren't even any Black senators. But a funny thing happened. Palmer won the election. We've spent the past six years watching an African-American president. We've seen him handle one ridiculous crisis after another — and he seemed to be doing a better job than the president we actually had. Palmer even had some of Obama's annoying qualities. He always wanted to take the high road, even when the situation merited a Jack Bauer style ass-kicking. He was too trusting of his unscrupulous associates.

The Obama/Palmer connection has been observed throughout the blogosphere and by the actor who played Palmer himself, Dennis Haysbert. Who knows. Maybe Hilary's real problem was that TV's female president is relegated to basic cable on Battlestar Galactica.

The gay marriage-television link is equally strong. While gay weddings were occasional plot points dating back to the Seinfeld episode where Elaine attends a gay wedding, this past season they were parts of the season finales of two of ABC's hits. Moreover, they were presented as ordinary events, no different than heterosexual marriage ceremonies. Brothers and Sisters ended with Kevin and Scotty's wedding, which was attended by a Republican senator.

On Desperate Housewives, conservative, gun toting Republican Bree, who once abandoned her gay son, catered the wedding of Wisteria Lane gays, Bob and Lee. None of the heterosexuals on the block raised an eye brow.

Mere weeks later, the California Supreme Court legalized gay marriage. Coincidence? Probably. But the muted opposition outside of Kern County could be because people are already used to seeing gay weddings on TV.

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<![CDATA[Angry Writers, Sympathetic Actors, And Clever Babies Taunt Rupert Murdoch At Fox Rally]]>
Because we know that it's probably been at least ten minutes since you've tried to kill some time at your strike-stalled place of business by looking at images of thousands of picket-sign toting, red-shirt-clad writers chatting up their new celebrity best friends, we're happy to pass along these photos generously sent in by some readers who were part of today's WGA-sponsored Striking Man event at Fox Plaza. Among the famous faces awaiting you after the jump: Tom Arnold! The Reno 911 guys! A fictional president and a onetime presidential candidate! (Make sure you scroll all the way to the bottom to see some bonus pictures sent in by shadowy strike correspondent "Nick Counter," who was reminded of another historic day by the sight of some Fox employees taking refuge on a rooftop high above the throng.)

[Note: We were asked to remove the celebrity photos. (There are some other ones here if you're disappointed.) But we still have striking babies and the fall of Saigon!]

Writes "Nick Counter," who submitted these last three photos: "I'll have my revenge you hacks! Next time we'll launch arrows and pour hot lead! Curse you WGA!!!!"
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