Sunday, February 12, 2012

Nation & World

Critic in Chief: Tricky Dickie joins the White House

By Kenneth T. Walsh
Posted 11/30/05

Note: Commander in Chief — fact based or totally fictional? Each Wednesday, our White House correspondent will cast a critical eye at the previous night's episode of the popular new ABC drama starring Geena Davis as that very nice President Mackenzie Allen and Donald Sutherland as that not-so-nice Speaker of the House Nathan Templeton. Walsh has covered the White House for U.S. News since 1986.

Viewers might remember him from NYPD Blue, the hit cop show, when he played a tough but vulnerable young newcomer in the fantasy police precinct. Now actor Mark-Paul Gosselaar is doing the same thing for fantasy female President Mac Allen on Commander in Chief.

Peter 'Hopper' Stone -- ABC

Actually, Gosselaar's hotshot political consultant, called Richard "Dickie" McDonald on the show, seems modeled at least in part on Dick Morris, the real-life electoral guru of Bill Clinton during his first term. Morris was brought in to improve Clinton's job-approval ratings after a rocky start and to get him re-elected. Those are the same reasons Dickie has been recruited on the current show.

Viewers might find some of his advice quite cynical, but basically, Dickie is behaving just like a political consultant. At one point, he asks the president if she intends to run for her job (in case you're new to the show, she was the veep and then the president died). Allen isn't sure, but the new guy is.

No one will take her seriously, he announces, unless they think she's running, because otherwise she would be a lame duck. So when the press asks her what's up at her weekly news conference, she leaves open the possibility that she'll be a candidate.

Dickie has advice for everyone, as most high-powered political consultants do. He tells the White House press secretary she's doing a good job "vamping" the press over the election issue — cleverly deflecting reporters' questions without saying much. Not only that, but the voters dig her!

"You polled my vamping?" the press secretary asks. "I poll everything," comes the reply.

Which is exactly what Morris did in the real-life White House. He once took an opinion survey on where President Clinton should go on summer vacation. Most Americans said they thought a national park would be appropriate, and that's where Clinton went — to the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone.

Dickie is also into looks. He matter-of-factly tells the press secretary that she could use a makeover, with a sexier hairstyle and better makeup. He refers her to a salon. Next thing you know, she's a spokesbabe. It's reminiscent of Hillary Rodham Clinton's ever-changing hairdo when she was first lady, only Hillary never seemed to be going for the supermodel look.

In addition to hair, the show's writers are focusing on what lies beneath — the conscience. Geena Davis's character is always trying to balance her urge to do the right thing with the pressure to do what's popular or safe, though the crisis of conscience that the writers cooked up is a bit far-fetched. Poor President Allen couldn't decide: Should she sign off on a commission's recommendation to shut "Essex Naval Base" in her home state? True, it's obsolete. But closing it could cost 30,000 jobs. What's a kindhearted president to do? This is a classic case of television phoneus baloneus: No president would be put in such an awkward position. A president usually accepts the commission's suggestions and would not be inclined to cater to a local constituency. And that's what President Allen ultimately decides, after much exaggerated angst: "I'm not going to play favorites from this office even though it is my hometown," she tells reporters.

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