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ennis
Miller is best known as the fast-talking acerbic comedian and current
color commentator for Monday Night Football. In some of his
monologues he calls them rants he refers to
his old high school.
Mr. Miller
graduated from a public high school in suburban Pittsburgh in 1971.
Despite a tony-sounding name Keystone Oaks and a brand-new
building with acres of brightly colored lockers and its own planetarium,
the school was innocent of any serious educational purpose. I know,
because Mr. Miller and I were classmates.
Like most schools,
Keystone Oaks reflected the cultural outlook of the surrounding
community, only in this case, three small towns that had pooled
their resources to create one large, mediocre school. Town A, the
smallest of the three, was a post-war suburb, a mix of young professionals
and middle managers. The parents I knew in Town A included an orthodontist,
an engineer at a nuclear power plant, and a CPA. Town B was an old
streetcar suburb that had last prospered in the 1920s. The parents
I knew in B included a prison guard, the owner of a pizza-box factory,
and the proprietor of a Baskin-Robbins. Town C's history went back
to the 18th-century immigration of Scotch-Irish farmers to western
Pennsylvania, but in its more recent past, C had been a coal-mining
town. The parents I knew in C included a carpenter, a bus driver,
and a steelworker.
The high school
that emerged from this ménage-à-trois was a lumpy
mixture. Town A contributed smugness, ambition, and disappointment;
B stirred in resignation, envy, and petty crime; and C added some
hard-scrabble determination and an element of brutality. No doubt
this is over-simplified and unfair, but it is how I remember it
and probably why I find Mr. Miller's comic persona the last
reasonable man swearing a blue streak, the intellectual articulately
dispensing high-brow cultural allusions while arguing blue-collar
common sense so compelling.
Mr. Miller
has published four collections of his rants. The newest, The
Rant Zone, comprises 49 rants, mostly from his HBO show,
each ending with Mr. Miller's patented disclaimer, "That's
just my opinion. I could be wrong."
Sometimes he
is, but a comedian walks a tightrope of public opinion. Wrong too
often about how to rant or what to rant about and Mr. Miller would
plunge back into the cultural abyss of Keystone Oaks and the other
netherworlds he explored before hitting the big time as the news
commentator on Saturday Night Live in the mid-eighties. I
say back into the abyss because he speaks as the guy who
has climbed out of nowhere and remembers what it was like. He is
caustic about America's materialistic emptiness but knows too much
to knock his own success:
while
show business from the outside may seem like a nonstop whirlwind
of gorgeous people, fabulous clothes, sparkling parties, and spectacular
homes, the reality is
exactly that. Sorry folks. I wish I
had some balm to soothe you, but I don't. It's f***ing awesome.
The f-expletive
is one of Mr. Miller's leitmotifs. It functions in his rants as
a kind of assurance of his blue-collar, angry-man-at-the-local-bar
roots, despite his expensively tailored wardrobe and cultural references
that would mean nothing to the average boilermaker. He delights
in the incongruity:
I have upon
occasion been labeled the E. B. White of the word f***, but you
have to admit I went through an entire football season without
saying it. Take it from a connoisseur, it should be used sparingly,
like saffron in a f***ing paella.
But, in fact,
obscenity is the bane of his monologues. Many of them are well-crafted
crescendos of irony. But where a shrewder talent would end with
a finer thrust of the needle, a deeper laugh, or a quieter irony,
Mr. Miller almost always drops into high-school locker room vulgarity.
Too bad, for
Mr. Miller is often perceptive about the hypocrisies of American
life:
It baffles
me that the same people who blast away at President Bush's selection
of a religious conservative for attorney general won't give George
W. any kudos for his other cabinet choices, which include blacks,
Jews, Asians, Hispanics, and women. Does a fundamentalist Christian
not also represent a valued strand in our collective fabric?
He balances
this with an appropriate jab at Bob Jones University, but on the
whole Mr. Miller comes across as a right-of-center populist. He
thinks big corporations take advantage of the little guy; he disdains
the insurance industry; and expresses a hatred of big government
that sounds like a hyperventilated version of "The Contract
with America." He is easily tolerant of all kinds of ethnic
differences, but draws the line at fringe groups that "demand
our approval." He is pro death penalty:
Some anti-death
penalty advocates say that McVeigh's execution didn't bring closure
to the survivors of the bombing. Maybe not, but it did bring closure
to McVeigh's eyes and, frankly, that's all I wanted.
And derisory
toward "eco-zealots":
I say we
don't touch the oil reserves and just invent a car that runs on
endangered species, okay?
The basic human
motivations in Mr. Miller's world are sex and greed. He thinks we
should accommodate human nature, but he is merciless to those who
don't control their appetites.
And perhaps
for that reason, Mr. Miller is an entertainment industry rarity,
a Clinton-hater:
like
an infestation of cockroaches, a drunken party guest, or a super-virulent
strain of antibiotic-resistant clap, the Clintons are proving
almost impossible to get rid of.
Best of all,
Mr. Miller derides the self-pampering psychological pieties of our
age:
Americans
couldn't be any more self-absorbed if they were made of equal
parts water and paper towel.
He rightly
names fellow comic Woody Allen for helping to "popularize the
idea that going to a shrink is normal and healthy."
Just look
what it's done for him and his family. You know, he and his daughter-slash-wife
have never been happier.
He opines against
contemporary Americans anxiously trying to rid themselves of anxiety,
and even has a few good words to say in favor of old-fashioned guilt:
guilt
is what keeps our society from completely unraveling. Yet our
culture is rife with politically correct apologists telling us
to let go of the shame that binds us and to treat our mistakes
as learning experiences that we have to "heal" from
and "put behind us" as quickly as we can. That's just
b*****. If you do something wrong, you should feel guilty
about it.
Mr. Miller's
success in making comedy out of these essentially conservative views
is an excellent index of the nation's cultural health. He is providing
pungent satire aimed at our real weaknesses a Juvenal in
the age of Jay Leno and he's one of a very few comics who
doesn't forgive us our trespasses.
Moreover, there
is hope for a better, wiser, and funnier Mr. Miller. He no longer
presents himself as a smart-alecky adolescent. He is calmer now
and his wit is drier, the result perhaps of his learning to work
within the restrictions of Monday Night Football. In "the
longest uninterrupted nice paragraph in the history of the rants,"
he thanks the fans who stuck with him during his first, rocky season
on the show. Forced to do without the obscenities, he hones his
comic conceits to a sharpness that his uncensored monologues never
achieve.
I don't think
Mr. Miller has entirely taken in this irony yet that something
as anodyne as Monday Night Football has improved his comic
sensibility. His HBO monologues are still wincingly full of the
F-word and other vulgarities. They simply fence him off from the
larger mainstream audience he deserves and that is within his reach
if he could give up the one part of his vocabulary he does owe to
Keystone Oaks.
Of course,
it isn't necessarily easy to weigh anchor and sail out of the coal-seamed
hills of suburban Pittsburgh. Nor is it so clear how to quit a cultural
nullity when it is seamed with your own experience. Mr. Miller faces
this when he jests about his own precocity with language:
I've always
loved the flirtatious tango of consonants and vowels, the sturdy
dependability of nouns and capricious whimsy of verbs, the strutting
pageantry of the adjective and the flitting evanescence of the
adverb, all kept safe and orderly by those reliable little policemen,
punctuation marks. Wow! Think I got my ass kicked in high school?
Yes, I think
he did.
This fall was
our high-school class's 30th reunion. Dennis didn't show up
but then, neither did I.
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