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The group blog of The American Prospect

RICHARD COHEN THINKS HIS JOB IS BORING.

Look, I should probably stop reading Richard Cohen. But I happened to bring a copy of the Post with me to lunch today, and I just can't figure out for the life of me why he's still writing. Today's column, is among other things, about how health care is too boring for him to bother figuring it out:

In truth, I did not seek an exclusive interview with the president of the United States not only because I wanted to write something that would be noticed but also -- actually mainly -- because I feared that if I did get an exclusive interview I would be expected to ask him something about health-care reform, about which I know next to nothing. What was worse, despite reading six newspapers a day, watching cable news shows, network news shows, the "NewsHour" and being online all the livelong day, I could not fathom what the president wants to do with health care. I suppose this is all my fault since, I learn from reading my e-mails, almost everything is.
How could it possibly be Cohen's own fault that he's too lazy to be informed about issues he's writing about? That's absurd! I would bring out my tiny violin, but I just smashed it across the table after reading that last paragraph. I'm always astounded by "journalists" (including opinion columnists) who complain that their job is too boring for them to do--if that's the case, find a new job. There are plenty of hardworking journalists out of work right now who would be perfectly willing to do yours if you aren't.

Indeed, most Americans agree with Cohen that health care is hard to follow. But they also think it's important, and they're looking to people like him to help explain it. Cohen, however, has better things to do, like catch reruns of daytime TV (just wait).

This last sentence however, takes the cake and tosses it into moving traffic:

I checked my records and diaries and discovered that I had been offered many opportunities to exclusively interview the president, but only after he had been exclusively interviewed by all the other columnists and bloggers and, of course, the anchors of all the networks, including cable -- basic as well as premium. A review of the record showed that the president usually said nothing or nearly so, and indeed things have gotten to the point that when I see Obama on TV, I hurry on to another channel, even one with a Maury Povich rerun. I recently came across Anderson Cooper, who was interviewing Obama in Africa or some such place, and after noticing how they were both so trim, I quickly channel-surfed my way to Animal Planet. I knew I had not missed anything important.

"Or some such place." I can't quite figure out what he meant by that, but my eyeball is twitching.

The first black president of the United States visiting the Western Coast of Africa, where most of the slaves black Americans are descended from were kidnapped and thrust into servitude? How could that possibly be interesting?

Maybe the Animal Planet channel has an opening, or maybe Cohen could intern for Maury. Maybe then the WaPo op-ed page could find a columnist who happens to actually be interested in writing about public affairs other than to complain about how boring they are.

-- A. Serwer



COMMENTS

Not that I want to defend Richard Cohen, AT ALL, but he's not entirely wrong when he says the president has been less than specific about the details of "his" health care plan. In fact, it seems as if the president has been purposely vague about all but a few broad principles. Some of us want to know aspects of health care reform--or is it now "health insurance" reform?--the prez is willing to fight for and whether he's committed to a strong public option.

Well, I'd agree that the job Richard Cohen actually does is boring. And uninformative.

"Maybe then the WaPo op-ed page could find a columnist who happens to actually be interested in writing about public affairs."
Are you ok?

Africa, or some such place. Richard Cohen doesn't trust continents, they all look alike to him.

I've not visited the Post's site since the day they published Palin's column. I used to be a daily visitor, but halfway through decoding Sarah I had an epiphany about the WaPo itself.

M. LeBlanc from Bitch, PhD drew my attention to this, because it confirms my only half-joking statement that the media is trying to kill health care reform because they think it's boring.

Um, you folks do understand that Cohen was kidding, right? I know that he's a standard left-wing whipping boy, but the column you refer to is an attempt at satire.

A satire of what? I don't buy it. This is Andy Rooney cranky-old-man stuff. Exit stage right Mr. Cohen.

Sam:

A satire of what? I'd genuinely be interested in your take. Because the best I can come up with is that it is a satire of a lazy, self-satisfied opinion columnist, which I would find funny if Cohen weren't exactly that. If David Leonhardt, because he is always substantive, or Josh Marshall, because he is always ragging on the media, wrote that exact same column, I'd be in stitches.

Anyone who thinks this column is satire has clearly never read any of Richard Cohen's other columns. This is just his standard drivel.

But it's good that you recognize that that it should be satire.

Hey Sam, wanna play poker?

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