Two Different Lessons

Daniel GussOP-EDLeave a Comment

Kathy Griffin, center, and attorney Lisa Bloom, right

@The Guss Report –Kathy Griffin, the embroiled Primetime Emmy- and Grammy-winning comedienne learned an important lesson about the First Amendment last week.

With few exceptions, like yelling “fire” in a crowded room, one thing it gives us is freedom of speech. But it neither affords freedom from the perfectly legal consequences of exercising it, nor do those consequences apply evenly to everyone.

A few days ago, the zany button-pusher, whose television credits include memorable appearances on Seinfeld, made an ill-advised career decision by doing a grotesque stunt with a decapitated image of President Trump. The backlash was swift, hard and condemned by many, even on the left, including Chelsea Clinton, Sen. Al Franken (a former comedian, himself), Ms. Griffin’s longtime New Year’s Eve co-host Anderson Cooper, and their employer, CNN, which promptly ended its relationship with Ms. Griffin, as did other sponsors of hers. Remaining dates on her stand-up tour have been canceled.

Somewhere therein, Ms. Griffin almost immediately did the right thing by offering a curt but direct and unequivocal apology. No make-up, no veneer, no kidding around. Had she stuck with that, and disappeared for a while, she may have been fine.

But just a few hours later in front of a media scrum in the office of a law firm infamous for exploitiveness, Ms. Griffin made a worse decision by doubling-down on the mistake and blaming her troubles on the triple-play of ageism, racism and sexism, suggesting that she is in a war against “old white men,” and not just Mr. Trump, but studio and network executives, too. Her troubles were caused by them, not her, she suggested.

 

She Pulls a Miracle

What Ms. Griffin actually accomplished was the nearly impossible. She made one of the world’s least sympathetic people, President Trump, a boor by most reasonable standards, seem worthy of sympathy, at least for a moment. Then she blamed him for her world collapsing.

Ah, victimhood!

 

The real reason for Ms. Griffin’s troubles is that she forgot that the First Amendment isn’t a pure and absolute concept. She forgot context, circumstances, degree and judgement.

Making a bad situation worse for Ms. Griffin, her attorney Lisa Bloom, the daughter of attorney Gloria Allred, attempted to justify Ms. Griffin’s actions by prattling all of President Trump’s offenses and vulgarities going back 18 months and beyond.

 

Ms. Bloom also talked of other famous men who had graphic and disturbing performances, but didn’t apologize for them like her client did for hers. In doing so, Ms. Bloom erased the good that Ms. Griffin accomplished by apologizing from the get-go.

Though Ms. Bloom’s timing and excuses were ill-advised, she made a good point. A few hours after the press conference, comedian Bill Maher referred to himself as a “house n_ _ _ _ r” on his HBO show, “Real Time with Bill Maher.”

 

He was responding to his guest, Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse who innocently inviting Mr. Maher to help do some work “out in the field.”

Mr. Maher apologized. He may or may not pay as heavy a price, if he pays any, as Ms. Griffin.

But the reason why Mr. Maher may sidestep the same severe consequences that hit Ms. Griffin is that his was a knuckleheaded comment made off-the-cuff.

 

Ms. Griffin’s was completely staged.

Plus, Mr. Maher, whose humor may be generally seen as more urbane than Ms. Griffin’s – at least prior to last week – is at the prime of his career, while Ms. Griffin is long-past hers.

Mr. Maher is also a controversy survivor who may provide a roadmap to recovery for Ms. Griffin.

Just days after the 9/11 attacks, Mr. Maher stated on an earlier incarnation of his HBO show (then known as “Politically Incorrect” on ABC) that the terrorist hijackers were “not cowards” because they died in the jets they crashed into the World Trade Center in New York, while the U.S. military was cowardly because they “lobbed cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away.”

 

Advertisers immediately pulled out and Mr. Maher’s show was canceled. But he survived and reincarnated himself on his now long-running HBO show.

Ms. Griffin, at her press conference, vowed to double-down on making fun of President Trump. She said nobody is going to stop her from doing so, though she didn’t show how anyone has tried to do that. Market forces appear to be the cause of her sudden dearth of work. Ironically, her IMDB page says Griffin “has a strict no-apology policy.”

Journalist Dan Rather and actor Michael Richards are two others who lost everything when they took the First Amendment for granted. They are both still around, but only on the periphery of the fame, money and influence they each once had. Where Kathy Griffin and Bill Maher wind up a year or a decade from now remains to be seen.

Mr. Guss, MBA, is a member of the Los Angeles Press Club, and has contributed to www.CityWatchla.con

as well as KFI AM-640, Huffington Post, Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Daily News, Los Angeles Magazine, Movieline Magazine, Emmy Magazine, Los Angeles Business Journal and elsewhere. Follow him on Twitter@TheGussReport. Verifiable tips and story ideas can be sent to him at TheGussReport@gmail.com.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *