That Time Bernie Sanders Interviewed Some Punk-Rock Kids in a Mall
Friday A/V Club: Back in the '80s, Bernie Sanders had a public-access TV show. The archives are now online.
Bernie Sanders had his own TV program from 1986 to 1988, back when the socialist senator was mayor of Burlington, Vermont. The show was called Bernie Speaks, it aired on public access TV, and Politico just had the full run digitized. As Sanders makes his second bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, those digitized episodes have now been posted on the cable access channel's website, where anyone with an internet connection can explore them.
"Over the past few weeks, I watched them all," Holly Otterbein writes in Politico. "The production values are so low that they're sometimes hard to hear and see, which makes them feel more valuable, like an archive of lost secrets." The show's topics, she reports, "include Plato, Ronald Reagan, Jesse Jackson's 1988 presidential campaign, the 'immorality' of the war in Nicaragua, the 'stupid' property tax, the effects of the looming nuclear apocalypse on children, Burlington's waterfront, Burlington's trash dump, Burlington's snowplow operation, the 'incredible increase' in crime, the close-fisted state Legislature, the rich getting richer, the poor getting poorer and the reasons that punk rockers wear black."
Unlike Otterbein, I haven't watched them all. But I did check out that last one. The episode originally aired in March 1988, and it mostly consists of Sanders playing roving reporter at the Burlington Square Mall. About halfway through the program, he starts talking with a couple of friendly punk-rock kids. He asks them what they don't like about society. They reply with a collection of complaints, some vague and some highly specific, that—speaking as someone who in March of 1988 was 17 and listening to punk rock and sometimes hanging out in malls—is as good a condensation as you're ever likely to find of a particular teenage worldview in that particular historical moment. "People are not open-minded enough," one says. "They think that in order to be stable in society you have to have money, you have to live in a suburb, you have to do the 'set' things, such as have so many people over for dinner…a week, or you're not socially acceptable. You've got to dress a certain way to be socially acceptable. And I don't believe in having to belong to anything to be a person. I can do basically what I want with my appearance, with my attitude, and it doesn't matter."
They both identify themselves as anarchists, as 1980s mall-punks were prone to do. But most people's politics are a mish-mosh, and that's true here too. One of them says he'd be happy in a communist society with "no freedom of enterprise" as long as there's still freedom of speech. The other says she's "kind of an anarchist too, but I don't believe in total anarchy, because then we're just gonna kill ourselves." Sanders plays his Phil Donahue role with aplomb, holding the mic and nodding his head encouragingly.
No doubt there's more newsworthy stuff in this archive. Mayor Sanders had things to say about everything from the Sandinistas to socialized medicine, from local taxes to housing policy. Historians, journalists, Bernie fans, oppo researchers—there's something in here for all of them. But in these Friday A/V Club posts we like to zero in on weirdly illuminating little cultural artifacts, and what could be more weirdly illuminating than a future presidential candidate wandering around a shopping center with a microphone? Besides, the mall punks are making me nostalgic. To see them for yourselves, start at the 14:21 mark:
(For past editions of the Friday A/V Club, go here.)
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'Aggressive' vagrants are vandalizing Johnny Rotten's LA house
https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/celebrity/aggressive-vagrants-are-vandalizing-johnny-rottens-la-house/ar-BBWm6yT
That's pretty rotten. But at least they aren't Marines.
Oh, the irony.
Rotten and Sanders would get along just fine. After all, they EARNED *their* money through hard work and being better than their competitors, not like everyone else who just inherited it.
The Breitbart take on this incident says:
The 63-year-old lives in Venice Beach where there has been a surge of homeless vagrants that have vandalized his multi-million dollar home and spoiled the beaches with “poo” and “needles.”
“A couple of weeks ago I had a problem,” he said. “They came over the gate and put their tent inside, right in front of the front door. It’s like . . . the audacity. And if you complain, what are you? Oh, one of the establishment elite? No, I’m a bloke that’s worked hard for his money and I expect to be able to use my own front door.”
I think the actions of these homeless people are fair given the situation. Are they supposed to hold in their poo until LA deregulates home construction? No one made the land. Private real estate ownership is the idea, but after a certain point, people should expect opponents of land-use regulation to object more aggressively. Granted, vandalism is an extreme step and everyone must respect the right of a building owner and his guests and renters to enter and exit the building, but rock on homeless people, rock on.
More from the Breitbart report:
“The vagrants moved in en masse . . . [in] tent cities. They’re all young; they’re all like 24,” he said, adding that, “They’re aggressive, and because there’s an awful lot of them together they’re gang-y.”
You know what other band of young men moved in tents to avoid harassment from government agents?
The other says she's "kind of an anarchist too, but I don't believe in total anarchy, because then we're just gonna kill ourselves."
Hobbesian then...
Punk teenagers say the wisest things.
The production values are so low that they're sometimes hard to hear and see
Sort of like a TASS broadcast from the same era.
It's kind of ironic...
When living in a commune, Bernie stands around all day talking politics with residents, and he gets kicked out for being lazy.
When mayor of Burlington, Bernie stands around all day talking politics with residents, and he gets elected to the U.S. Senate.
In related news, Vermont got desperate enough to start paying people to move there and spend the work day generating internet content.
With the exception of one guy who says he wants military cuts, everything in it is calls for bigger government and higher debt through bonding. But my favorite is the guy near the beginning who says he's opposed to the condos that had been built, and then says there needs to be more affordable housing. He seems to realize that he's contradicting himself, but doesn't know how to back out of it.
If anarchism rises in Vermont, does it make a sound?
Headline isn't a sentence. Didn't read.
Wasn't this the lead in show for Wayne's World?
the reasons that punk rockers wear black.
I thought that was an old school Haredi thing about rejecting mainstream culture and flashy materialism.
They both identify themselves as anarchists,
In other words, they don't put their trust in princes.
Yeah, that's what happens when your daughter dates a guy from South Burlington, VT.
Those punk rock kids are nearing their 50's now. The girl probably looks like Susan Sarandon.
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Another relevant and useful report by Jesse, thanks. Gary Johnson in Austin ran a Live and Let Live public access show for years. Here's hoping that exemplary libertarian production makes it online as a complete collection soon.