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South Park Conservatives: The Revolt Against Liberal Media Bias Hardcover – March 1, 2005

3.4 out of 5 stars 50 ratings

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For the better part of 30 years, liberal bias has dominated mainstream media. But author and political journalist Brian Anderson reveals in his new book that the era of liberal dominance is going the way of the dodo bird.
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Editorial Reviews

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"Brian Anderson tells the communications saga of the last twenty years with verve, intelligence, and flair." -- Michael Novak, winner of the Templeton Prize 1994

From the Inside Flap

That s what Brian C. Anderson shows in South Park Conservatives: The Revolt against Liberal Media Bias. It s a behind-the-scenes look at how conservatives and even iconoclasts who don t consider themselves conservative are overthrowing the liberal media and political correctness. From the bloggers who demolished Dan Rather, to the Swift Boat veterans who sank John Kerry, to the gleeful anti political correctness of such comedic send-ups as South Park and Team America, the American media landscape has suffered an earthquake. Conservatives who have fretted about liberal media bias and losing the culture war should take heart, because a new generation of "South Park Conservatives" is changing everything. In South Park Conservatives, you ll learn:

> How media bias in the 2004 Kerry/Bush race was so overwhelming as to make a mockery of "journalistic ethics"

> How liberal Hollywood has tried and failed to read conservatives out of the industry

> How right-of-center students are turning the tables on their left-wing profs at campuses across the nation

> How the liberal monopoly has been broken beyond all repair by Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Ann Coulter, FOX News, and the blogosphere

> How hysterical liberal accusations of conservative "bigotry" and "hate" have boomeranged against the Left

> How media and academic liberals seeing their monopoly on information and communication disappearing have embraced extremism and conspiracy-mongering As Brian C. Anderson demonstrates, the New York Times, the big networks, and the rest of the elite liberal media can no longer set the terms of the nation s political and cultural debate. The liberal media s monolithic power has cracked and broken and freedom and conservative ideas are breaking out all over. So sit back, pour yourself a drink, and savor South Park Conservatives. The liberal media has never looked so likely to head for the ash heap of history as now. South Park Conservatives: The Revolt against Liberal Media Bias is an inside peek at how conservatives and the politically incorrect "anti-liberals" are starting to win the culture war and are having fun doing it.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Regnery Publishing
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 1, 2005
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 191 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0895260190
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0895260192
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 12.8 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.4 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.4 out of 5 stars 50 ratings

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Brian C. Anderson
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I'm the senior editor of City Journal, a political and cultural quarterly published by the Manhattan Institute: www.city-journal.org. In addition to my recent book South Park Conservatives, I've written for the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the Dallas News, the New York Post, National Review, Commentary, First Things, the Claremont Review of Books, and, of course, City Journal.

I'm interested in media, new and old, Catholicism, political philosophy, science fiction, basketball, all sorts of different kinds of music, and lots more. And I love my wife and kids...

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2005
    The idea that one possesses social views that diverge from the average conservative has caused many of us on the right to use "libertarian" as a means of self-description. Yet, there may be a better term for those devoted to the free market, the nation's defense, and who consider pornography...slightly less than offensive. Andrew Sullivan was the first to describe such a subclass with words, "South Park Republicans." The notion of cross-cultural rightists has since been expounded upon by numerous pundits. Brian Anderson first addressed the subject in 2003 through an essay in City Journal, a magazine he edits, called "We're Not Losing the Culture Wars Anymore." Mr. Anderson now celebrates this ultramodern breed of anti-perfectionists in his South Park Conservatives: The Revolt Against Liberal Media Bias.

    What is so provocative about the work is the notion of "South Park Conservative." What one immediately must ask is whether or not such people even exist. The reviewer can answer the question affirmatively because he has had the pleasure to meet many of them. It is undeniable that political correctness and the smugness of liberals has generated a hybrid breed of conservative; one who possesses earthy cultural trappings but can no longer tolerate the self-righteousness and mock seriousness inherent to the emotion fueled left. If the existence of the South Parker surprises traditional conservatives, imagine how unnerving it must be for your average liberal to discover that the guy who sat next to him during Phish's last concert had the Opinion Journal delivered to his Inbox every morning.

    Like the brilliant cartoon itself, the book offers both reality and joy. An early review mentioned how funny these pages are, and the observation is certainly correct. Many episodes from the wildly creative and irreverent South Park are referenced and quoted. Dennis Miller's comedy, along with the reasons for his departure from the left, are discussed in detail. His metaphors ["stop me before I subreference again"] are precious, and the same can be said of the way in which he inflames the sensitivity police. Anderson's discussion of lesser known comics like Pete Correale, Julia Gorin, and Nick Di Paolo are inspiring as a conservative counter-presence in American entertainment is greatly needed even if it only slightly mitigates the damage the left has done via its years of transcendence. Colin Quinn's Tough Crowd is a bleeped out television version of Arts & Letters when compared to the PC pap offered to viewers each night by the networks.

    The strongest part of the book is the chapter "Illiberal Liberalism" where the notion of "liberating tolerance" is addressed and refuted. For the uninitiated, this is a counterfeit byproduct of the 1960s that was originally fabricated by Herbert Marcuse for use in making conservative points of view outside the pale of civilized discourse. The author quite appropriately blames it for much of the incivility infecting our contemporary political discussions. The way that this is practiced is through leftists appealing to tolerance after people disagree with them while simultaneously condemning whatever is mouthed by the right as racist, homophobic, sexist, elitist, and/or mean-spirited. The attacks on those diverging from politically correct dogma are severe and integral to the "toleration" and "diversity" endemic to anti-liberals. The famous quote by Nat Henthoff, "free speech for me-but not for thee," is cited and resonates loudly. This double-standard and lust for censorship is perhaps what is most repulsive about the American left.

    What may astonish baby boomer and Generation X conservatives, however, is the panic attacks that the monolithic campus left has suffered due to the recent emergence of Republican student organizations. In the chapter, "Campus Conservatives Rising," Anderson explores the arrogance of the moveon.org professors. Anyone who has ever read The Shadow University will be well-familiar with the totalitarian efforts of our pseudo-scholars to squelch difference if they happen to encounter it on the way to their teach-ins. Imagine what hard working, tuition paying, fortune squandering, parents think when they see that their freshman daughter's syllabus for English contains, as its goal, to explore the hidden "homosexuality, pederasty, and incest" facets of the great works of western civilization.

    The recent attempt to pass an Academic Bill of Rights has proved that the champagne socialists possess bubbly but no clothes. Anderson recounts a legislative hearing concerning the bill's passage, when a philosophy department chair walked up to a student and jammed him in the chest saying, "I will sue your f--king a-- if this bill passes." Yet, amid such bleakness, South Park Conservatives finds hope as the author documents the exponential growth of the right in the academy- even within the leftist redoubts of the Ivy League.

    Even if conservadom reached the same amount of people as the mainstream media and Hollywood, reason never competes with the flushed Night Train buzz of emotion in the minds of youth. Such minute points aside, Brian Anderson has powerfully introduced the larger world to the reality of a growing, and occasionally breeding, block of conservatives that clusterbomb liberal orthodoxies. Allow me to speak on the behalf of Kyle, Stan, Cartman and Dennis Miller when I iconoclastically thank him for his efforts.
    23 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2015
    As a big fan of South Park and a big fan of emerging media's role in allowing all viewpoints to be expressed, I really thought I'd like this. However, it really didn't do it for me. The section on South Park and conservative comedy was pretty good, but the rest of it didn't really do it for me. It's only 160 pages long, so it's a very quick read. At the same time, though, it feels like there could have been a lot more here.

    There are some points about this book that I liked. First, I believe Anderson is correct when he writes about the left's dominance of media before the late 1980's and early 1990's. He is also right to celebrate to emergence of conservative talk radio, blogs, and cable news broadcasts. Rush Limbaugh, Matt Drudge, and Bill O'Reilly have all been very important to provide a counterpart to the existing left-leaning media. Free speech should be embraced; America needs to be a society where all voices can be heard. Also, the chapter about South Park and anti-liberal comedy was funny. Finally, I really liked that he attacked over-PC liberalism on college campuses, an even worse problem now in 2015.

    However, I have many criticisms. This would have been a lot better with a more complete analysis of South Park's politics. He basically makes this logical fallacy: South Park attacks liberals, so Matt Stone and Trey Parker must be more sympathetic to the "traditional" conservative point of view. If Stone and Parker can be classified as anything, it's libertarian. Libertarian ideals are very different from the pro-interventionist, pro-life, anti-gay marriage Republican conservatism that Anderson is peddling. I also struggled to make it through the parts where Anderson tries to say that conservative media like Fox News is actually more fair and balanced than left-leaning media. MSNBC is terribly biased, no doubt about it. The network news broadcasts and CNN certainly slant left, as well. But it's hilarious to see someone assert that Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity are any less biased than what's out there on the left.

    I'd love to see someone develop this idea more completely and accurately. South Park is a brilliant show and serves as a representation for the beliefs of a subsection of a new generation of voters. Libertarianism is gaining a stronghold among young voters, and that is the worldview that South Park most strongly supports. What Anderson tried to do here was take an extremely popular show that attacks liberals and force it into symbiosis with his own "traditional" conservative views.
    3 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • alexandre steiner
    2.0 out of 5 stars the biggest farce i've ever read!
    Reviewed in France on June 10, 2014
    if I do particularly agree with the fact that liberal media must be blamed for manipulating the audience (as well as the conservative ones), here, Anderson suggest an angelic view of the conservative media. it turns to a farce when the author writes that the conservatives as well as republicans in general are poor victims of the devilish liberal media establishment. such victimization is not to recall the liberals' victimization process of the minorities that those same conservatives attack.