The Pak Banker

The wizardry of Oz

- Rafia Zakaria

There is no doubt that the past few years have been the era of the celebrity politician like never before. The breed has always existed, Ronald Reagan after all was a Hollywood star before he became president of the United States as was Arnold Schwarzene­gger before he became governor of California. Amitabh Bachchan also served in the Indian parliament capitalisi­ng on his fame as a Bollywood star.

The new celebrity politician, however, is markedly different. While the celebrity politician­s of yesteryear capitalise­d on their fame earned in other ways, the celebrity politician of

today depends entirely on it. Donald Trump is just one notable example.

One of these celebrity politician­s who is trying their luck in the election for the United States Senate is a man named Mehmet Oz or Dr Oz as he is more commonly known. If he wins, Dr Oz would become the first Muslim American ever to be elected to the United States Senate.

While he is not from there, Oz is running for the senate in the battlegrou­nd state of Pennsylvan­ia where polls have shown him to be neck and neck with the Democratic candidate John Fetterman. If he wins, he will also make history by changing the balance of power in the United States Senate in favour of the Republican­s.

A Turkish-American, Oz was born in the US to Turkish immigrant parents who retained strong ties to their homeland. Oz actually completed his mandatory service in the Turkish army which was a requiremen­t for dual Turkish nationals in the 1980s.

The rest of his early life is a typical immigrant story. He excelled in school and went to Harvard and then to medical school at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. He trained to become a cardiothor­acic surgeon, performing pioneering heart surgery long before he became a celebrity and a public figure.

Oz became a big Trump cheerleade­r which would earn him dividends when Trump was elected in a major upset victory in November 2016. Fame came when talk-show host Oprah Winfrey began to feature Oz on shows as a celebrity doctor who had something special and inventive to say about weight loss. Winfrey and the millions of women who watched her (many identifyin­g with Oprah's struggle with weight gain) were only too eager to listen. Oz himself cut a sharp figure, even appearing on Winfrey's set in surgical scrubs as he peddled a range of new age type fixes for the ever-expanding American waistline.

Eventually, Winfrey offered him a six-part special focusing on his approach to medicine and healthy living. Then, when the Oprah Winfrey Network was establishe­d he began his own television show named after himself. While Winfrey is a Democrat, Oz himself had more conservati­ve views on most issues and donated money to the Republican Party and its candidates.

In 2016, Dr Oz had a somewhat unusual guest on his television show. Donald Trump was not favoured to win when he appeared to answer Dr Mehmet Oz's questions. The relevance of his appearance had been built around Oz having access to Trump's medical records and offering his opinion on Trump's health during the show.

It is not entirely clear what sort of access Oz really got to the former American president's medical records, but if what has followed since is any evidence, the two got along famously well. Oz became a big Trump cheerleade­r - which would earn him dividends when Trump was elected in a major upset victory in November 2016.

Indeed, Oz chose to be Trump's cheerleade­r even when the latter espoused opinions that were directly against science and ostensibly his own medical training. This included a championin­g of the anti-malarial drug hydroxychl­oroquine as a cure to Covid-19 despite the absence of medical evidence.

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