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Politics

Loving Hating Breitbart

A powerful post-partisan message from a documentary about an infamous right-winger

Nick Gillespie | From the February 2013 issue

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The late online impresario Andrew Breitbart (1969–2012) was firmly on the right side of the political spectrum. But a new documentary about his life, Hating Breitbart, transcends his politics and instead captures the tectonic shift he helped bring about from the legacy media to newer forms of distributed news-gathering and opinion-making. 

This move from conventional gatekeepers and authorities (think The New York Times, official spokespeople, and established broadcast and cable news channels) to endlessly proliferating tastemakers and outlets (think Instapundit, Gawker, and Breitbart's own suite of "Big" sites) doesn't break along conventional ideological lines. It's more attitudinal, more punk in the best sense of the word. When faced with a world that didn't cater to them and their aesthetics, the punks of the late 1970s and early 1980s famously made their own clothes, hairdos, and music. If they learned how to play their instruments at all, they did it on the job. Disaffected and unsatisfied people stopped simply choking down mass culture. Instead, they seasoned off-the-shelf meals to their own tastes, tossed in whatever other ingredients they wanted (or could steal), and stirred the pot until the dish was OK by them.

Breitbart pulled off something similar during his truncated life. The guy who once worked as Matt Drudge's "bitch" (his term!) and who helped create The Huffington Post came into his own by striking out on his own, first with the aggregator sites Breitbart.com and Breitbart.tv and then with Big Hollywood (born in 2008), Big Government (2009), and all the rest. Like many on the right, he burned with resentment that the mainstream media disdained not just his perspective but his preferred ways of expressing it. As he notes in Hating Breitbart, he had only two modes: jocularity and righteous indignation. But Breitbart didn't just stew in his anger. He realized that it keeps getting  easier for individuals and groups at every level of society and at every spot on the ideological spectrum to enter into conversations about everything under the sun.

Reputation still matters, arguably more than ever. But there's no question that it has never been so easy to make a name for yourself by bringing something new to the table. Ask Hot Air's conservative commentator Ed Morrissey, who not so long ago was managing a Minnesota-based call center, or New York Times stats maven Nate Silver, who made his bones as a baseball stats nerd and whose first forays into political handicapping were done anonymously. Also key is the notion of independence, which Breitbart showed repeatedly, especially in high-profile fights with Glenn Beck and with the organizers of "the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) over their exclusion of gay groups.

There's a strange and jagged line that runs from the explosion in unlicensed pamphlets in 17th century England through the anonymous publication of The Federalist Papers through the creation of that first great alt-weekly The Village Voice through WikiLeaks and beyond. That line runs through Breitbart just as surely as it does through Mad magazine, the Whole Earth Catalog, Salon.com, and Arianna Huffington. The best alternative media doesn't simply replicate what the old guard is doing; it does something different that is plugged into the technological possibilities and cultural shifts of the moment.

Directed by Andrew Marcus, Hating Breitbart hits all the highlights of its subject's best-known scoops. The film recounts how Breitbart's Big Government site rolled out video compiled by James O'Keefe that ultimately led to the congression­al defunding of the activist group ACORN. It ends with a short, punchy postscript involving disgraced pol Anthony Weiner's Twitter scandal. In both cases, the Breitbartian flourish of dribbling out the news helped squeeze extra mileage out of the stories. Both ACORN and Weiner responded to initial reports with quick, emphatic declarations that there were no more revelations or skeletons still in the closet—and then were promptly undermined by subsequent releases.

A highlight of the documentary is the section dealing with the racially charged atmosphere around the 2010 vote on health care reform. Rep. Andre Carson (D-Ind.) claimed that demonstrators called him and other black members of Congress "nigger" more than a dozen times when they were walking into their office building. Despite a large crowd including various journalists and police officers, Carson's account was never corroborated by video or audio from the scene (though several of his companions, including the highly regarded Georgia Rep. John Lewis, backed Carson's claims). Breitbart eventually offered $100,000 to anyone producing recorded evidence that supported Carson's charge and he also compiled a number of phone and flip-cam vids that undercut Carson's version of events. The specifics of the episode are less interesting than the use Breit­bart made of distributed snippets of video and information to challenge especially loaded charges.

At more than one point in the movie, Breitbart asks members of audiences he's addressing to hold
up their iPhones, pocket cams, and other recording devices and to turn them on. You, he says, are the media. That gesture is the essential takeaway of Andrew Breitbart's work, and of Hating Breitbart too.

There's no question that all the old sources of power and privilege still wield enormous, perhaps even ultimate, ability to shape conversations both large and small. Witness the constipated flow of information about White House knowledge regarding the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi—and a thousand other stories you, I, and our crazy uncles think are getting short shrift in the old media. Internet-empowered journalism isn't a cure-all. But it does allow a lot more people to speak up.

"Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one," The New Yorker's A.J. Liebling mused back in the dark ages (1960). Andrew Breitbart understood that it's easier than ever to own a press, and that despite the vast, incomprehensible increase in chatter, the demand for even more is still infinite. You may have hated or loved what Breitbart stood for, but Hating Breitbart makes it clear that we'll all be living in the world he called home for a long time to come. And that it's filled with far livelier and more inclusive conversations than it would have been if he'd never been born. 

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NEXT: The Neoliberal Revolution

Nick Gillespie is an editor at large at Reason and host of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.

PoliticsCulturePolicyAndrew BreitbartMoviesNew MediaFree PressSocial MediaTechnology
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   12 years ago

    He definitely seemed to have the Drudge spirit, doing whatever to push against the mindless herd that is mainstream journalism. I wonder if sheep hate the border collie in the same way.

    1. T o n y   12 years ago

      He pushed against it by creating his very own mindless herd, only more mindless and more herd-like.

      1. Jeff   12 years ago

        HAHAHAHA. Oh, man. The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

      2. Cool Story, Bro   12 years ago

        Jesus Christ, dude....all you can muster is derp? Way to go, shitball.

      3. dinkster   12 years ago

        I think I just had a stroke. Is that pancakes?

      4. Milton Devotee   12 years ago

        While not as complex as 'if a tree falls'. I wonder if Tony 'gets off' when we swear at him?

      5. C. S. P. Schofield   12 years ago

        Tony,

        Go paint yourself purple and moo.

  2. iggy   12 years ago

    I didn't like how abrasive Breitbart could be, but anyone who royally pisses off progressives like he did is on the side of angels. I read some left wing blogs shortly after he died, and they were beside themselves with glee that someone who disagreed with them was dead.

    Breitbart brought that angry, spiteful, violent side out of the left every time they had to talk about him. He showed the left for what they really are behind all of their pseudo-intellectual trappings, and I'll always respect him for that.

    1. sarcasmic   12 years ago

      Those lefties were only showing how tolerant they are by not tolerating intolerance. The more intolerant of intolerance you are, the more tolerant you are. Intolerance of course being any idea that does not conform to the liberal agenda.

    2. carol   12 years ago

      The abrasiveness was exactly what I liked so much about Breitbart. He didn't sit around weighing his words and wringing his hands. He understood the Left better than anyone and he flipped their inanity right back at them. And he did it with such joy. Everything about him was fun.

    3. Mike M.   12 years ago

      Breitbart brought that angry, spiteful, violent side out of the left every time they had to talk about him.

      You aren't kidding, bro. They freaking murdered him by cyandide poisoning, and then bumped off the guy who did his autopsy the same way just for good measure! There's no depths the vile, evil American left won't sink to now.

    4. Stormy Dragon   12 years ago

      but anyone who royally pisses off progressives like he did is on the side of angels

      This is "the ends justifies the means" mentality that's turned political conservatism into a philosophically empty shell. There's no longer any difference in principles between the right and the left, just which team you're using underhanded tactics on behalf of.

      1. Kyfho Myoba   12 years ago

        What a fucking retarded post. You, Stormy, are an idjit.

      2. C. S. P. Schofield   12 years ago

        The political Right has a long way to go before they will even BEGIN to reach the levels of dishonesty, arrogance, stupidity, and vitriol routinely achieved by the (self anointed) Intellectual Left. The principle differences between the Westboro Baptist Church (which I don't count as Left OR Right) and the Intellectual Left is that the soi-disant Intellectuals are marginally smoother and the mainstream media will mostly cover for them.

  3. Anonymous Coward   12 years ago

    "Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one," The New Yorker's A.J. Liebling mused back in the dark ages (1960)

    Heresy! It's well-known that the press, at the authors of the Constitution intended it, was for a protected class of writers who would excuse and fellate the government at every possible turn.

    1. Doctor Whom   12 years ago

      Exactly. Only a Rethuglican teabagger would expect journalists to engage in journalism, except to uncover new aspects of the ruling class's awesomeness.

    2. flye   12 years ago

      Yes, this is why we need credentialing of journalists! Only those properly trained at anointed j-schools can be trusted to tell the public what to think.

      1. Kyfho Myoba   12 years ago

        Got it coming in the EU.

      2. C. S. P. Schofield   12 years ago

        "Yes, this is why we need credentialing of journalists! Only those properly trained at anointed j-schools can be trusted to get ALL the way to the governmental scrotum."

  4. Raston Bot   12 years ago

    the refutation of the 'spit/n-bomb' claim was his best work.

    1. Loki   12 years ago

      Agreed. Just imagine if that had happened 20 years ago before cell phone cameras were everywhere and events such as the Obamacare protests could be covered from multiple angles and then uploaded to the internet for the entire world to see for themselves. They would have been able to get away with painting any and all opposition as RACIST!!11! and use that to shut down and dismiss any further dissent, which is of course exactly what they were trying to do.

  5. ygsrf   12 years ago

    NFL,NBA,2013 Fashion kickoff for u

  6. SandraBridals   12 years ago

    very nice post about Maggie Sottero Chardonnay!thank you!I like it

  7. alaamiah   11 years ago

    Thank you very much

  8. /restoration   10 years ago

    1970s and early 1980s famously made their own clothes

  9. rfgegds   10 years ago

    best sense of the word. When faced with a world that didn't

  10. mapsalaamiah   10 years ago

    970s and early 1980s famously made their own clothes

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