22 October 2006

Running for office?

Better run from Colbert

Most politicians are as likely to pass up free TV face time before an election as they would be to refuse a campaign check.

Then again, there's a price to be paid for looking stupid.

That's what members of Congress have learned recently about "Better Know a District," a sarcastic weekly skit that is part of The Colbert Report, a nightly half-hour on Viacom Inc.'s Comedy Central network hosted by comedian Stephen Colbert,

Politicians covet them too for their votes. So, many lawmakers initially played along with the segments in which Colbert interviews a member of the House of Representatives, with few checks and balances on his proclivity to make fools of them.

But after a couple of House members stumbled badly on the show, some incumbents decided that the dumbest thing to do with Colbert's offer of free TV exposure was to take it.

One who did appear, Rep. Lynn Westmoreland (R-Ga.), discovered the pitfalls when Colbert asked him about a bill he co-sponsored requiring that the Ten Commandments be displayed in the U.S. Capitol.

"What are the Ten Commandments?" Colbert asked matter-of-factly.

"What are all of them?" Westmoreland said, taken aback. "You want me to name them all?"

The June segment showed Westmoreland struggling to name just three.

A Bible Belt conservative, the embarrassed Westmoreland has been trying to live down his Commandments performance. No Republican has appeared since.

Negative phone calls from around the country poured in to Westmoreland's office, mostly from liberals charging hypocrisy, Robinson said. Several clips of the segment are posted on the YouTube website, and Westmoreland's Democratic opponent, Mike McGraw, put the video on his campaign website.

Los Angeles Times