The Ticker: Andrew Sullivan applauds Obama for stepping up efforts to pass health care reform, even if it's more centrist
The Atlantic 50
The Most Influential Opinion makers

Most Clicked

1 Transcript Breakdown: Sarah Palin Backs Limbaugh's Use of Word 'Retards' Benjamin F. Carlson, The Atlantic Wire
2 The Political Fallout of John Murtha's Death Benjamin F. Carlson, The Atlantic Wire
3 The New Yorker Discovers Twitter, Scoffs Max Fisher, The Atlantic Wire
4 Morning Vid: Stephen Colbert Teaches Sarah Palin Satire Jake Simpson, The Atlantic Wire
5 Nanny State Fears Nag First Lady's Anti-Obesity Push Heather Horn, The Atlantic Wire

Time for Gore Vidal to Step Off the Stage?

Gore Vidal, eccentric public intellectual extraordinaire, has long been a darling of the left, though often surrounded by controversy. In recent years, prompted by increasingly bizarre on-screen appearances, some have wondered: Is the aging man of letters is getting a little too wacky even for his fans? If response to a recent Vidal interview at the Atlantic is anything to go by, the answer is yes.

Vidal opined on a number of subjects, but what got the blogging world fired up were his remarks on Roman Polanski. Asked what he thought of the case, he responded: "I really don't give a fuck. Look, am I going to sit and weep every time a young hooker feels as though she's been taken advantage of?" In the uproar that followed, some bloggers predicted that Vidal's "ultra-leftist" political views would insulate him from attack. But as responses come in across the political spectrum, the message is clear: enough is enough. Vidal may be a wit and a friend of the Kennedys, but pundits now think it's time for him to retire.
  • 'Provocateur'? "The Atlantic," writes John Nolte at Big Hollywood "describes Gore Vidal as 'a sharp provocateur, as irascible and irreverent as ever.'" Nolte thinks this too kind: "I'm assuming that's some kind of internal Atlantic-code for 'twisted old has-been degenerate desperate for attention.'" Nolte suggests Vidal is "innoculated," however, and "will face no real ... consequence," being a "Leftist."
  • This Goes Beyond the Usual, says Newsbusters' Collean Raezler. "Plenty of celebrities issued crazy statements in their efforts to defend director and rapist Roman Polanski but none went as far as ... Vidal did when he labeled Polanski's victim a 'young hooker.'"
  • Reminder: The Man's a 'Truther' The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg, accused by a reader of "picking on" Gore Vidal for his antisemitism rather than his actual argument, responded with a reference to Vidal's conspiracy-theory mongering about September 11: "I was picking on Gore Vidal because he blamed the victim in a case of proven child-rape. The main reason I find him vile, though is that he is a 9/11 'truther.' Which I think is a good reason not to like someone."
  • Someone Save this Senior Over at the Huffington Post, Ryan Davis is aghast: "Doesn't someone have power of attorney? Isn't there anyone concerned with this guy's vanishing legacy?" Davis says he stayed silent through Vidal's litany of "stupid things about Obama" because "[h]e's old and prone to saying anything that will get his name in print." But calling Vidal "completely inconsistent" during the presidential primaries, Davis chronicles the titan's fall from intellectual coherence:
What's even worse is that since Sept. 11, 2001, Vidal has been a leading "intellectual" of the 9/11 Truth movement, giving countless interviews to lunatic fringe correspondents like Alex Jones. He'll tell anyone who will listen about how George Bush personally planned 9/11. Seriously, Google has 140,000 pages on Vidal's paranoia.

So please, legit reporters--stop asking this demented man questions. It's over.

The Debate

More on Society

Projecting Onto David Brooks's Brain

Five different bloggers draw five widely different conclusions from a David Brooks column on neuroscience

October 14, 2009
Are Cheap People Better People?

Americans have rediscovered frugality. But is cheapness a moral virtue or a hereditary trait? Two interesting takes.

September 29, 2009
Why Is America Polarized?

The proverbial "post-partisan" era seems to have vanished in a wave of extremism. Three pundits search for an explanation.

September 24, 2009
The Fall of Annie Leibovitz

As she teeters on the brink of bankruptcy, columnists try to understand how the renowned photographer lost it all.

August 19, 2009
Gilded Days Are Here Again

Step aside, roaring 20s. Will record-high levels of inequality cause a revival of debate?

August 14, 2009