And
so The Governor’s Wife crashes
and burns, but in a weird way it can serve as a metaphor for the politics
that its male lead, Prisoner #03128-095,
inflicted upon Louisiana. And the gift keeps on giving.
Known
outside the prison walls as former Gov. Edwin
Edwards, this reality television series sought to chronicle the trials and
tribulations that the octogenarian faced with a wife some five decades his
junior, both thrice married and twice divorced, as they blended families and
sought to become parents. After a sustainable draw of over a million viewers at
its debut, viewership appeared to drop off rapidly and led to the network
showing it to offload the remaining episodes quickly and throwing its reruns
onto a sister network.
But
the drive-by-slowly-to-rubberneck-an-accident quality to it, which leading
trade publication Variety called “creepy,”
overlay a much darker aspect to it all that no doubt turned off potential
viewers and sent others who actually laid eyes on it reaching for their
remotes. It was exploitative, of its most prominent victim willingly on his
part, and on others not so willingly.
No one can read the minds of those involved in affairs of the heart, but let’s put it this way: there are enough guys in their late seventies who led upstanding and quiet lives who didn’t go to jail for trying to broker corrupt deals and didn’t have a sycophant write a book about them, but they seem not to have interested the now Trina Edwards enough to engage her affections. Had she not corralled Edwin’s attention, would even a hundred people who know she is?
And
Edwin being Edwin, why wouldn’t he submit to the blandishments of a nubile
blonde? After all, his desire to exercise power and privilege for decades was predicated
on his ability to win the adulation of the masses. What many people don’t
realize about politicians is that while many are attracted by the power and
privilege connected to their office-holding, as much if not more they crave the
crowd’s affection, by the votes and campaign funds its members hand over, by
the supplications they make, and by the reification they emanate. It’s a huge
ego trip, and Edwin has spent a lifetime hooting it as if it were crack. Yet
perhaps, given his age and relative position in life at the time, the biggest
speedball he ever consumed was having this blonde fall all over him.
Which
left the door wide open to his exploitation. Willing it is, yes, but what guy
in his right mind, once called derisively “The Silver Zipper” for his
preternatural abilities with the ladies, would admit on TV the plan to have
offspring precludes his performing for his wife and relies instead upon seed
from the past? Only one who’s an attention whore, even if you reveal you didn’t
exactly have fun in the process of participating in this means of
revelation.
Just
so. You can take the geezer out of politics, but not the politician out of the
geezer. As long as it keeps him in the spotlight, as long as it has people
treating him as
if he has any relevance and can command their bonhomie, no matter what is asked of him by a wife just as
driven in her pursuit of celebrity, Edwin is all in – regardless of the fact
that in doing this, he has managed to do something that political opponents had
wished could have happened during his era of genuine political relevance: he’s become
a cartoon character.
In
a way, that’s actually too bad, because he has some worthwhile
perspectives to bring on current issues of the day that deserve serious
scrutiny. Instead, he has become a farcical object, useful and used only because
of his history. Let’s face it: would even a cable access station have bought a
series on this basis if the old dude in question was Joe Schmo?
And
this serves as a metaphor for his career at the top of state government. Just
as his notoriety now is exploited for the gain of others, so too did he exploit
the state. Any dishonesty aside, his policies retarded economic growth through
confiscatory taxation and gimmickry in revenue raising, wealth transfer to
discourage economic activity, poor spending choices designed primarily to
benefit a set of elites, and encouragement of a culture to spend now,
consequences aside. These put the state in a posture that will take decades to
overcome, in no small part due to the reinforcement of a populist political
culture only now being challenged and changed. All to achieve power and
privilege, and the fealty of a good portion of the masses to fuel his egotism.
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