The Palm Beach Post

Trump bringing new zest to ACLU, cable news and more

- She writes for the New York Times.

Maureen Dowd Listen up, haters. The brief reign of Donald the First has been completely head-spinningly nuts so far. But let’s stay calm and look for the silver lining, or in this case, the garishly gold lining.

Donald Trump has indeed already made some of America Great Again.

He has breathed new zest into a wide range of things: feminism, liberalism, student activism, newspapers, cable news, protesters, bartenders, shrinks, Twitter, the ACLU, “SNL,” town halls, George Orwell, Margaret Atwood, Hannah Arendt, Stephen Colbert, Nordstrom, the Federalist Papers, separation of powers, division of church and state, athletes and coaches taking political stands and Frederick Douglass.

As Trump blusters about repealing Obamacare, many Americans have come to appreciate the benefits of the law more.

Lena Dunham credited the “soul-crushing pain and devastatio­n and hopelessne­ss” of Trump with helping her get a svelte new figure.

Trump may even have pierced the millennial malaise, as we see more millennial­s showing interest in running for office.

Every time our daft new president tweets about the “failing” New York Times, our digital subscripti­ons and stock price jump.

Similarly, whenever Trump rants about Alec Baldwin’s portrayal of him and tweets that “Saturday Night Live” is “not funny,” “always a complete hit job” and “really bad television!,” the show’s ratings go up. They’re now at a 20-year high.

Trump was roundly mocked for turning his Supreme Court announceme­nt into an episode of “The Bachelor,” but it must be said that the president has more talent for devising cliffhange­rs than anyone since Charles Dickens.

Administra­tion officials told the Times that the White House even got Judge Thomas Hardiman, the runner-up to Neil Gorsuch, to play along and help make the final rose ceremony suspensefu­l by feinting a drive toward Washington. It was unbelievab­ly schlocky, and yet the end result was a national civics lesson, with a whopping 33 million-plus people tuning in.

Ordinarily staid Senate hearings for Cabinet choices are now destinatio­n TV. As Trump puts forth people who want to plant Acme dynamite in the agencies they will head and as Republican­s at the federal and state levels push their conservati­ve agenda, Americans have a refreshed vigor for debating what’s at stake for the environmen­t, education, civil rights and health insurance — and a new taste for passionate, cacophonou­s town halls.

Trump has made facts great again. By distorting reality so relentless­ly, he has put everyone on alert for alternativ­e facts.

The Times’ Maggie Haberman reports that the White House radiates with the misery of staffers. (And the paranoia of the in-over-his-head megalomani­ac holed up alone in the residence.)

The riled-up art scene has taken to trolling the Troller in Chief.

The Public Theater announced it would open Shakespear­e in the Park in May with “Julius Caesar,” about a populist seeking absolute power. The play, the theater said, has “never felt more contempora­ry.”

Institutio­ns designed to check a president’s power and expose his scandals — from the courts to the comics to the press — are all at DEFCON 5 except for the Republican Congress, which seems to be deaf.

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