Chicago Sun-Times

RANTINGS & RATINGS

Trump relentless in trashing the media that made him

- GENE LYONS Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co- author of “The Hunting of the President.” Email: eugenelyon­s2@yahoo.com

As reality TV programs go, the Trump administra­tion is a badly scripted muddle. How much longer will loyal viewers stick around? Just the other day, the president reached out to the influentia­l imaginary- American community. He dashed out a tweet thanking one Nicole Mincey, supposedly a conservati­ve black woman enthusiast­ically posting praise of Trump himself.

Except, uh- oh, the photogenic Mincey appeared not to exist. Pictures of her wearing Trump parapherna­lia turned out to be photoshopp­ed screen- grabs of African- American fashion models. Twitter suspended the @ProTrump45 account after concluding that it was a phony, perhaps originatin­g ( where else?) in Russia.

Since then, a real Nicole Mincy ( note alternate spelling), has emerged, claiming that she’s a victim of identity theft.

Twitter estimates that slightly more than half of Trump’s approximat­ely 30 million followers are “bots,” i. e. fraudulent accounts, many ( again) Russian.

Almost simultaneo­usly, Trump lashed out at his favorite whipping boy, the so- called “mainstream media:” “Hard to believe that with 24/ 7 # FAKE News on CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, NYTIMES & WAPO, the Trump base is getting stronger!”

Is it even necessary to point out that the president’s approval rating in opinion polls has sunk to record lows?

But polls come and go. What’s really alarming are Trump’s efforts to depict the news media as united in a near- treasonous conspiracy against him and his supporters. Or it would be if they weren’t so clearly born of desperatio­n.

He repeatedly lashes out at the “failing NY Times,” another falsehood.

In fact, while the newspaper business in general has suffered of late, a few big national imprints are doing well. The Times’ public relations people counter- tweeted: “That is incorrect. NYT’s business is thriving. Most ever paid subs: 3.3 million; and growing profit, income and revenues.”

Almost needless to say, it won’t be long before Trump sits down with The Times’ Maggie Haberman for an unscripted interview. A New Yorker, he craves the establishm­ent’s imprimatur.

Posturing before a cheering crowd at a campaign- style rally in West Virginia, however, the president took it to the next level. He called special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election a “witch hunt,” and any potential charges a “total fabricatio­n.” He accused Democrats of seeking “an excuse for the greatest loss in the history of American politics.” Then he went there: “They can’t beat us at the voting booths,” Trump charged, “so they’re trying to cheat you out of the future and the future that you want. They’re trying to cheat you out of the leadership you want with a fake story that is demeaning to all of us, and most importantl­y, demeaning to our country and demeaning to our Constituti­on.”

The good news, I think, is that Trump hasn’t got the courage of his fabricatio­ns. Nor have his most enthusiast­ic supporters. That West Virginia audience was basically a pro- wrestling crowd, easily titillated and vastly entertaine­d by the president’s antics.

There’s a big opening here for that very funny wrestler working the Appalachia­n small town circuit who styles himself “The Progressiv­e Liberal”— the guy with photos of Hillary Clinton on his shirt. “I understand now why you all identify with country music,” Dan Richards tells audiences. “It’s slow and it’s simple and it’s boring, just like each and every one of you.”

If only the dude had wrestling moves commensura­te with his wit.

But I digress. As shocking as it may have been to hear accusation­s of treason out of the president’s mouth, along with calls to have his 2016 Democratic rival jailed (“Lock her up!”), Vladimir Putin he ain’t.

“I can call spirits from the vasty deep,” boasts Owen Glendower in Shakespear­e’s “King Henry IV, Part I.”

“Why, so can I, or so can any man,” Hotspur responds. “But will they come when you do call for them?”

In Trump’s case, no. This president hasn’t got the self- discipline to lead a coup, and the great majority of his followers are far too comfortabl­e watching the televised spectacle in their recliner chairs to take to the streets. Only a steadily shrinking minority believes the president’s “witch hunt” rhetoric, and not very strongly. As I say, it’s poorly scripted melodrama.

As for the dreaded “mainstream media,” it’s tempting to observe that as the cable news networks — CNN and MSNBC particular­ly — made Trump, it’s only fitting that they play a role in unmaking him. Some with long memories can even remember “Hardball’s” Chris Matthews audibly panting as Gennifer Flowers told him about the Clintons’ many imaginary murders.

The New York Times played FBI Director James Comey’s ill- advised letter temporaril­y reopening the Hillary Clinton email probe last November like the landfall of Superstorm Sandy. Basically, they all did. Meanwhile, under the pressure of Trump’s shameless, incessant lying, his trademark “Fake News” slogan has turned itself inside out. What once signified “make- believe” has basically come to mean, “Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes?”

It’s tempting to observe that as the cable news networks made Trump, it’s only fitting that they play a role in unmaking him.

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