I mean, the values here are superb, and there’s this review in Salon.com of this movie that slams Secretariat as a Tea Party fantasy. I mean, here’s a movie about standard good old-fashioned ‘you can do it if you put your mind to it’ values and it gets slammed. When you first read this review you think it’s a satire. As you keep going you find out that this guy is dead serious. ‘In its totality ‘Secretariat’ is a work of creepy, half-hilarious master-race propaganda almost worthy of Leni Riefenstahl –‘ which was Hitler’s videographer, ‘– and all the more effective because it presents as a family-friendly yarn about a nice lady and her horse.’ Nothing in the movie is not true, and this is said to be a half-hilarious master-race propaganda, almost worthy of Leni Riefenstahl. ”Secretariat’ actually goes much further, presenting a honey-dipped fantasy vision of the American past as the Tea Party would like to imagine it, loaded with uplift and glory and scrubbed clean of multiculturalism and social discord.’
Nothing could be further from the truth. It’s 1973. Her own kids are hippies. They’re going to Woodstock. They’re blowing weed. They’re having doobies. The woman’s out there trying to save her father’s horse farm, happens to be she wins a coin toss and gets the foal that produces Secretariat and the rest is history. It really is fascinating. I tell people that here we are in 2010, and the media always hated Ronald Reagan, the media hated Richard Nixon, we’ve always had a partisan political divide, but the abject hatred that is aimed at decent, middle of the road Americans by the mainstream cultural left is something like I’ve never seen before. There is nothing in this movie to hate. There’s nothing in this movie to dislike. It’s a harmless movie. In fact it’s uplifting. Even I, ladies and gentlemen, El Rushbo, and Kathryn, we’re watching it together, I got a little misty-eyed at the end of this movie. I wouldn’t normally admit that to you people. I’m supposed to be Mr. Tough and gruff and so forth. I got misty-eyed. When I start crying I actually suppress it, try not to, so I clear my throat. I was stunned.
But, regardless, to say this thing is milquetoast and pure fantasy and hunky-dory, so sweet that you could get an insulin shot from it is ridiculous. What’s this guy’s name? Andrew O’Hehir, probably pronounced O’Hare, and the guy obviously feels threatened by the movie. It opened this weekend. I have no idea how it did. This is from the review: ‘The year Secretariat won the Triple Crown was the year the Vietnam War ended and the Watergate hearings began. You could hardly pick a period in post-Civil War American history more plagued by chaos and division and general insanity (well, OK — you could pick right now). Wallace references that social context in the most glancing and dismissive manner possible — Penny’s eldest daughter is depicted as a teen antiwar activist … but our heroine’s double life as a Denver housewife and Virginia horse-farm owner proceeds pretty much as if the 1950s had gone on forever. (The words ‘Vietnam’ and ‘Nixon’ are never uttered.)’
Well, I don’t know what Nixon and Vietnam had to do with Secretariat. I don’t know that Secretariat ever knew ’em. Secretariat was a horse. Sports — you have to call horse racing a sport — sports has always been an escape from the daily humdrum. Sports has always been Fantasy Island for people. It’s what most of us wish we could do, wish we had the talent to do, wish we had the ability. That’s the beauty of spectator sports. It’s the one thing I always say in which you can totally invest passion without consequence. You can’t do that in any other area of life. You’re always guarded, your team, you’ll give them everything you got. The only thing they’ll do, they’ll disappoint you and lose. Of course, my team did kick me out of the stadium once, but normally that doesn’t happen. It happened to me, but I was able to take it, rebounded well from it as is evidenced by the fact that I’m still here.
I was 22. I was on the pathway to stardom. I was totally absorbed in me. I didn’t know the backstory here. So this was a wonderful — it’s two hours and two minutes, and Kathryn and I didn’t start watching ’til ten o’clock on Friday night. We had other things to do and then watched the movie, did some other things after that, it’s a great way to spend a Friday night. (interruption) No, we’re not gonna watch The Bachelorette. The Bachelorette’s not on, Snerdley. The season has ended. What’s on is Dancing with the Stars. No, we’re going to be watching the Minnesota Vikings and the New York Jets tonight. That’s what we’re going to be doing.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: You know, if the owner of the horse Secretariat had married the horse at the end of the movie perhaps the left and the reviewer at Salon.com might have seen fit to enjoy the movie. Really, folks, that’s the last I’m going to say about it, but it’s absurd to see anything in this. What really strikes me is, I guess, the struggle and the problem the country has. There nothing in Secretariat that’s nothing but just wholesome decency, and for people to be threatened by that, to want to take comfort in the fact that that no longer is what defines America, that’s a problem to me. That’s an indication of where we find ourselves, not just politically, but culturally as well.