Michael Savage Poses No Risk to British Security So Why Won't MPs
Say So?
by Boris Johnson
About 10 years
ago my brother-in-law was giving me a lift through the early morning
Washington traffic when he suddenly gave a whoop of joy. "It's
Howie!" yelled Ivo, turning up the radio. "We gotta listen
to Howie!" And it was with mounting disbelief that I listened
to the next 20 minutes of the Howard Stern show, a shameless and
cynical attempt to scandalise the ear.
That morning
Howard was appealing to his listeners to ring in with the most tear-jerking
hard-luck story. In return he was offering a nude massage at the
hands of an attractive nude masseuse. In a display of Oprah Winfreyesque
exhibitionism, the audience was competing for that massage. We heard
of divorces, and bereavements, and embarrassing disfigurements.
But the winner (I advise sensitive readers to faint now) was a man
who rang in to say that he had just been diagnosed with cancer,
and might lose his gonads, but had not yet had the courage to tell
his girlfriend.
Howard Stern
pounced. "What's her number?" he said. With lightning
efficiency his producers patched the caller through to his girlfriend,
and soon she was being told live on air that there
was good news and bad news.
The bad news
was that her boyfriend had cancer, and the good news was that he
was the winner of a nude massage. The poor woman gasped and sobbed.
I sat there in exactly the state desired by the producers of the
Howard Stern show appalled, disgusted, but also thrilled
by the horror of what was apparently (and I stress apparently) taking
place on the radio.
We just don't
have shows like this in Britain, I said to Ivo. That's right, he
said, and he told me about the shock jocks. He explained the tactics
of men such as Stern and Rush Limbaugh, how they shamelessly chased
after ratings by causing outrage, how they goosed the secret prejudices
of their listeners. Some people tuned in because they actually agreed
with what was being said. Most people just enjoyed the theatre,
the vehemence, the provocation.
These shock
jocks were national institutions, with millions of weekly listeners.
They were a new and important part of the American constitution,
and that is my first objection to the utterly demented decision
by Jacqui Smith's Home Office to announce that Michael Savage, America's
third most popular radio show host, is banned from entering this
country. It just makes us look so infantile, so pathetic.
Every day the
American airwaves are churned by the paranoid rantings of Michael
Savage and his kind. Has this stuff warped America, or deformed
its political psyche? On the contrary, the Americans have just had
the good sense to elect a supremely gifted and eloquent black man
when the prospect of a black British prime minister still
seems some way off. What are we, some sort of kindergarten that
needs to be protected against these dangerous American radio shows?
Does Jacqui Smith think we are all dimwits, who can't tell when
a man like Savage is talking rubbish? Why can America take it, and
we can't?
Read
the rest of the article
May
13, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 The Telegraph
|