in the LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/recall/cl-et-rutten23aug23,1,7801362.column<snip>
The notion that Hollywood marches in ideological lock step — left foot always forward — has long been useful to publicity-seeking congressmen, right-wing culture warriors and moralists-on-the-make from the Legion of Decency to the Traditional Values Coalition. In fact, there was a time, not so very long ago, when the mere mention of Jane Fonda's name was so remunerative to conservative fund-raisers' direct mail campaigns that they should have put her on retainer.
Like so much in politics, it all works very nicely — until you consider the record:
Schwarzenegger is traversing a well-marked path from entertainment celebrity to elective office, and all who have preceded him have been Republicans, foremost among them Ronald Reagan. Age and Constitution permitting, he probably could have been elected to a third presidential term. There's former U.S. Sen. George Murphy and the late Rep. Sonny Bono, who came to politics through song and dance. Clint Eastwood was probably America's most famous small-town mayor.
The last time a certified Hollywood liberal had a real shot at elective office it was 1950, when one-time actress Helen Gahagan Douglas — whose husband was actor Melvyn Douglas — ran as the Democratic candidate for one of California's U.S. Senate seats. She, of course, was defeated in a bruising campaign by a young Orange County congressman named Richard M. Nixon.
<snip>
David Freeman, novelist and screenwriter, is also a shrewd chronicler of his company town.
He points out that the real Hollywood — as opposed to the imagined one — always has encompassed both ends of the ideological spectrum. "Jimmy Stewart, a deeply conservative and sincere Republican, and Gregory Peck, a very liberal and committed Democrat, were the opposing poles of their era," he said. "Louis B. Mayer thought of himself as a Republican plutocrat. Big money usually is conservative; this is not news. Over the last generation, it's certainly true that liberals have been noisier, but there always have been plenty of conservatives, though an ingrained sense of good manners made them quieter about it.
"There are vocal people on the left — Barbra Streisand, for example — but on the other side there are people like Tom Selleck, Bruce Willis, Mel Gibson and Arnold, who have made their positions known. In fact, now that conservatism is fashionable, Republicans everywhere, including Hollywood, have become louder. There's been a change in the country, and Hollywood always reflects changes in the country. It doesn't lead change; it reflects it."
Thus, said Freeman, since Sept. 11, most Hollywood Democrats — like most Americans — have adopted a more traditionally conservative approach to issues of physical security.
<snip>