New York Daily News | - |
President
Obama will reprise the role of comic-in-chief for the final time
Saturday night at the White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington.
begin quote from:
Barack Obama, Comedian in Chief
The president’s unique approach to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner will surely be missed.
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No U.S. President has been a better comedian than Barack Obama. It’s really that simple.
Now
that doesn’t mean that some modern-day presidents couldn’t tell a joke.
John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton excelled at it. But
Obama has transformed the way presidents use comedy—not just engaging in
self-deprecation or playfully teasing his rivals, but turning his
barbed wit on his opponents.
He puts that approach on
display every year at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. This
annual tradition, which began in 1921 when 50 journalists (all men)
gathered in Washington D.C., has become a showcase for each president’s
comedy chops. Some presidents have been bad, some have been good. Obama
has been the best. He’s truly the killer comedian in chief.
Presidents typically play it safe at the
dinner. You can never go wrong with self-deprecating jokes; they make
you more likable. But Obama rejected this approach. Instead, he has used
the chance to filet his rivals. It’s like a comedic version of Game of
Thrones, but instead of gouging out people’s eyes, Obama kills with
punchlines.
And it’s not just the material. Obama has a
comedian’s understanding of timing. Last year, I had the chance to tell
him so in person. He paused just long enough, and then responded: “I
know.”
To
appreciate Obama’s performance, it helps to look back at how some of
his predecessors have fared at the dinner. In 1988, Ronald Reagan delivered a joke
that epitomizes the way past presidents used comedy. The 77-year-old
president said that his staff told him “preparing me for a press
conference was like reinventing the wheel. Not true. I was around when
the wheel was invented, and it was easier.”
Bill Clinton
gave us a parade of these types of jokes over the years. For example,
in 1994, with his approval ratings dropping, he shared
what he jokingly claimed were letters he had recently received offering
him support: “Here's one from my pollster, Stan Greenberg: ‘I don't
have a clue what people want from you. Trust your instincts, but send
the check anyway.’”
And at his final Correspondents’ Dinner in 2000, with the Monica Lewinsky scandal still lurking, Clinton joked, “In just eight years I have given you enough material for 20 years.”
Then
there was George W. Bush, a man who should be in the comedy hall of
fame for all the material he gave comedians. Bush seemed to relish in
telling jokes at his own expense, even poking fun at his struggle to
pronounce multisyllabic words. At the 2005 Correspondents’ Dinner he
opened by saying, “I look forward to these dinners where I’m supposed to be funny...intentionally.”
So
into this kinder, gentler world of presidential comedy stepped Obama.
His preferred jokes were of the type made popular by Jon Stewart on The Daily Show.
Obama’s comedy, like that of Stewart, HBO’s John Oliver, and the Comedy
Central host Larry Wilmore—who is hosting this year’s Correspondents’
Dinner—has a bite to it. In fact, Obama’s jokes have been criticized as “caustic” or “cruel.”
Over
the years Obama has slammed everyone from his GOP rivals to
billionaires like Sheldon Adelson to actors like Matt Damon who once
supported him but then publicly turned on him. One of my favorite Obama
jokes came in 2013 when he brought the house down with this biting line:
“Some folks still don’t think I spend enough time with Congress. ‘Why
don’t you get a drink with Mitch McConnell?’ they ask. Really? Why don’t
you get a drink with Mitch McConnell?!”
In 2014 Obama went after the media, but not playfully like past presidents. He cut to the bone with jokes
like this: “MSNBC is here. They’re a little overwhelmed. They’ve never
seen an audience this big before.” He then pivoted to take on his media
nemesis on the right: “Let’s face it, Fox, you’ll miss me when I’m gone.
It will be harder to convince the American people that Hillary was born
in Kenya.”
And in 2015 Obama really let loose—hitting
everyone from Dick Cheney to Ted Cruz to Benjamin Netanyahu. One of the
jokes that stands out as something you never would’ve heard a past
president tell was his needling
of John Boehner for unilaterally inviting Netanyahu to address
Congress: “People keep pointing out how the presidency has aged me. I
look so old John Boehner’s already invited Benjamin Netanyahu to speak
at my funeral.”
Obama then moved on to the 2016
presidential race, taking on Ted Cruz, who had a short time before
compared himself to Galileo: “Galileo believed the Earth revolves around
the sun. Ted Cruz believes the Earth revolves around Ted Cruz”
Now,
other presidents have taken isolated shots at rivals at the
Correspondents’ Dinner. And Obama has mixed self-deprecating material in
among his barbs. But no one before has used comedy as a weapon to prod
and taunt his rivals to the same extent as Obama.
So
what will Obama offer at his final Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday
night? I’d predict a parade of jokes mocking the 2016 Republican
presidential field and especially one Donald J. Trump. Back in 2011,
when Trump was considering running for president and sitting in the
audience, Obama ripped into him—not just with one joke but with a series
of barbs mocking Trump on various issues from his flashy style to his
fixation with Obama’s birth certificate.
The best of the lot,
which remains relevant today, ridiculed Trump for his lack of
experience to serve as commander in chief: “We all know about your
credentials and breadth of experience. For example...in an episode of
Celebrity Apprentice... the men’s cooking team cooking did not impress
the judges...And there was a lot of blame to go around. But you, Mr.
Trump, recognized that the real problem was a lack of leadership. And so
ultimately, you didn’t blame Lil’ Jon or Meatloaf. You fired Gary
Busey. And these are the kind of decisions that would keep me up at
night.”
Saturday night will be a bittersweet
Correspondents’ Dinner. Sure, there will be laughs. But for fans of
political comedy, there will be a sense of loss, as a killer comedian in
chief exits the stage.
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