2012 Feb 9 |
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http://www.theatlanticright.com/2009/10/08/andrew-breitbart-only-just-got-started/
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Posted by Michael van der Galien   |   12 comments

andrew breitbart Clarification added at the bottom.

Andrew Breitbart is arguably the most prominent conservative media personality in the States – and even in the world – today. He is a regular guest at major TV shows such as Fox News’ “Hannity,” with Sean Hannity.

Breitbart is also the man who broke the ACORN scandal, the SEIU scandal, who took on Hollywood a year ago by creating a groupblog Big Hollywood, and who created another successful group blog called Big Government earlier this year.

The first of the two group blogs, Big Hollywood, went into the top 100 on Technorati within a matter of weeks, even though it, Breitbart said in an interview conducted Wednesday, was “created from my basement.”

How did this happen? Simple: Breitbart knows the Internet, the blogosphere and the media. He, not Arianna Huffington, is the one who came up with the idea for the Huffington Post and the one who executed it.

After launching this, ironically, far-left website, Breitbart helped Matt Drudge run his Drudge Report. Drudge, the story goes, taught Breitbart everything he knows – without Drudge, there would not have been Andrew Breitbart, New Media entrepreneur.

Although he was a big player before this summer already, Breitbart truly became the right’s leading new media personality after his newly created Big Government website published videos of ACORN-employees advising undercover journalists Hannah Giles and James O’Keefe how to smuggle underaged hookers into the U.S. and how to set up an illegal brothel.

Breitbart’s exposé of ACORN turned him into a hero of the right, but it didn’t take long before left-wing journalists and news outlets went after him. One such attack angered Breitbart so much that he decided to answer his detractors publicly.

Of course, Breitbart wrote in his public response to a negative article published at The Daily Beast, he knew that the left would go after him and question his motives, but couldn’t they at least take the time to ask him why he did what he did and how he did it? “I’m VERY reachable,” Breitbart wrote.

In an interview conducted Wednesday, Breitbart told PoliGazette that while he may have been angry, he was also “goofing around a bit.”

Even when he fights dishonest critics, the right’s New Media leader is of good cheer.

Those who thought the attacks discouraged him, would better think again. He has a lot more up his sleeve, he said. “We’re creating more sites. We will be creating Big Education, Big Tolerance, Big Jerusalem, Big Climate, Big Journalism,” Big EU and more.

The mission is simple yet devastating for the Left: “I’m creating a series of group blogs, just like Big Government and Big Hollywood, each one is an attack on the left’s dominance in certain areas and saying ‘your behavior is no longer going to go unnoticed and we are going to start defending ourselves, and we’re going to start taking you on’.”

There are three important battlefields in the grand culture war, Breitbart passionately explains. “It was important to launch the Hollywood one [i.e. Big Hollywood] because the culture front is the most important front. It has been long ignored by the northeastern conservative elite, who think that politics is the most important front.

“No, our culture is the most important front. And the three most important pillars of that culture are Hollywood and pop culture, along with education and the media. Those three are absolutely controlled by the left.”

It reminds the careful observer of the great Friedrich A. Hayek’s call on conservatives to influence the “second-hand dealers in ideas.” “The reason why a center-right nation like the United States could veer, over the last forty years, to the left, is because of the left’s fundamental understanding of the importance of the cultural role in our society and how pop culture and culture are upstream from politics.”

And that’s where Breitbart and his websites come in. To him, there is little or no use in trying to reform existing news outlets from within. The MSM is heavily biased. It won’t cover anything that may hurt the left if it isn’t forced to. Despite its tremendous success, Big Hollywood is and remains ignored by the MSM.

So, there’s only thing conservatives can and should do: create their own news organizations and do their own reporting, opining and analyzing. Instead of complaining about how the ‘cultural elites’ aren’t treating them fairly, Breitbart’s message to conservatives seems to be, do something about it.

Perhaps it is this attitude – this pragmatism – that truly makes Breitbart different than other conservatives and that helped him become a national figure. He, unlike most, doesn’t merely understand what the problem is, but he actually tries to solve it.

All eyes are on him now; let’s see what he comes up with next. We may not know what his next major project will be exactly, but we do know this: it will force the left to play defense.

Also read this article published at the Financial Times yesterday.

Clarification: TDB’s Friedersdorf emailed me requesting a correction because I gave readers the impression he went after Breitbart while defending the NYT (of all newspapers) because Breitbart broke the ACORN scandal. That is not the case as such; he criticized the way Breitbart operates, how he runs his websites, how his websites approach the news, and Breitbart’s relentless criticism of the MSM. Of course, the ACORN scandal was a direct result of Breitbart’s vision on the media and politics, which is why I issue a clarification instead of a correction. Friedersdorf also requested I’d take out my description of him as left-wing, saying he wrote for right-of-center outlets and that he has been called a “reform conservative” and libertarian. That’s great, but I’m afraid we won’t play that game. Those who call him a “libertarian” should pick up a dictionary and read some Hayek, and a “reform conservative” is, of course, a contradictio in terminis.

  1. Michael Merritt Maybe I'm missing something, but Israel has never struck me as an area of policy where the left has been particularly strong. The U.S. has long strongly favored that country, quite to the chagrin of the left.
  2. Posted by Jeb
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103481
    Jeb
    “The reason why a center-right nation like the United States could veer, over the last forty years, to the left, is because...
    But I keep hearing that we are a center right nation now. How does a center right nation veer to the left for forty years and remain a center right nation?
  3. Posted by Patrick
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103482
    Patrick
    Jeb :
    “The reason why a center-right nation like the United States could veer, over the last forty years, to the left, is because…
    But I keep hearing that we are a center right nation now. How does a center right nation veer to the left for forty years and remain a center right nation?
    Key phrase here is "I keep hearing". It really validates Breitbart's stance. I keep hearing we are a well-educated nation, but one look at the average cable line-up totally debunks that theory. We hear what the people talking want us to hear. The difference between most conservative political pundits and Breitbart is the same difference between scientists and engineers. Scientists theorize and discuss something, engineers DO it.
  4. Posted by Interested
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103485
    Interested the GOP needs one solid theme - and the Dim's hand it to them every single day. Deficit, deficit, Deficit. On a graph with the Great Mistake included - Bush looks damn fiscally Conservative. 2nd graph with outlays towards social programs.
  5. Pingback | Link #103487
    If Conservatives Want Media That Doesn’t Attack Them, They’re Going to Have to Listen [...] van der Galien got the opportunity to interview Andrew Breitbart who is, without a doubt, the top media mogul on the internet right now. Breitbart helped Matt [...]
  6. Posted by Snertly
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103489
    Snertly @Jeb By having been oh so far to the right to begin with? Or perhaps it was the sort of progression that made glaciers look snappy, so that while it's been reportedly moving that way for forty years, it still hasn't gotten that far. But who would believe that the political average of the nation has been moving in any one direction for forty years? And in any event, I'm disinclined to think that "the right" today means the same thing as "the right" forty years ago. After all, didn't the neoconservatives come on the scene as being to the right of "the right"? Changing definitions is a classic method for reframing an argument.
  7. Posted by Interested
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103493
    Interested neoconservatives tend to resemble liberals more than conservatives. The changing definitions have come from the left during the Bush Administration
  8. Michael Merritt
    Interested :

    neoconservatives tend to resemble liberals more than conservatives.

    The changing definitions have come from the left during the Bush Administration

    Not just resemble. Neo-conservatives first arose as a faction of the left. As for changing definitions, I think positions on defense bring up a weakness of a one-axis political spectrum. Heck, they bring up a weakness of a two-axis spectrum.
  9. Posted by Jeb
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103545
    Jeb
    neoconservatives tend to resemble liberals more than conservatives.
    How so? What neoconservative policy prescriptions are really liberal policy prescriptions? They are best known for their foreign policy preferences. Are those more liberal than conservative as well? If you place Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld on the left where on earth do you think the center and the right are?
    The changing definitions have come from the left during the Bush Administration
    Really? The administration that hired Frank Luntz didn't do some of their own definition switching?
  10. Posted by Jay_C
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103675
    Jay_C Cool stuff, "Big Climate" I like that... speaking of that, what's with the BBC's apparent recent 180 on climate change? Is the liberal media starting to see they can't keep this charade going forever? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8299079.stm
  11. Posted by Jay_C
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103676
    Jay_C I especially like this line at the end... "One thing is for sure. It seems the debate about what is causing global warming is far from over. Indeed some would say it is hotting up. "
  12. Posted by Interested
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #103776
    Interested
    Jeb :
    neoconservatives tend to resemble liberals more than conservatives.
    How so? What neoconservative policy prescriptions are really liberal policy prescriptions? They are best known for their foreign policy preferences. Are those more liberal than conservative as well? If you place Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld on the left where on earth do you think the center and the right are?
    The changing definitions have come from the left during the Bush Administration
    Really? The administration that hired Frank Luntz didn’t do some of their own definition switching?
    Read the definition of a NeoConservative and write back.