Lieberman Versus Hollywood
By Paul Farhi
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 8, 2003; Page A01
First in a series of occasional articles
Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman remembers where he was (at home in Connecticut, sitting on the couch) and when (the fall of 1993) the notion first struck him: Television can be toxic, especially to young children. With his stepson, then 17, and daughter, then 5, beside him, Lieberman sat through an episode of the bawdy sitcom "Married . . . with Children" that night with a growing sense of discomfort.
At first he was surprised and embarrassed. Then he was angry. It was, he says, "the moment that got me going."
In the months and years that followed, Lieberman would become the Senate's, and arguably Washington's, leading pop-culture crusader. In news conferences and speeches, he repeatedly denounced the entertainment industry for selling "debasement," "garbage" and "cultural poison" to children. His targets quickly stretched beyond Al Bundy to the broader seep of junk media: Geraldo Rivera and "trash" TV talk shows, violent video games such as "Mortal Kombat," misogynistic "gangsta" rap music, sexually frank prime-time TV programs. "It's time," he once declared, "for a revolt of the revolted."
Today, the attack on the entertainment industry resounds in Lieberman's run for the Democratic presidential nomination. It helped define him politically and personally, as he often says in Democratic debates and other forums, as the candidate who "took on Hollywood." It enables him, he says in an interview, to make a connection to a larger theme: values. "I have a particular sense of mission about that," says Lieberman, 61. "I don't want to leave anyone with the impression that the GOP or President Bush has a monopoly on values or a sense of right or wrong. They don't."
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44110-2003Dec7.html