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Stephanie Miller.


I've got a weakness for Stephanie Miller Stephanie Miller (born September 29 1961) is an American comedian and host of The Stephanie Miller Show, a liberal talk radio program produced in Los Angeles and syndicated nationally by Jones Radio Networks. . I happen to think .she's the best thing going in progressive talk radio Progressive talk (or Liberal talk) is a talk radio format in the United States devoted to expressing progressive/liberal viewpoints of issues. The format has become more widely implemented since the 2004 launch of Air America Radio, and now includes the Nova M Radio network, . For three hours every weekday morning, The Stephanie Miller Show provides breezy, often hilarious radio. But it's got a sharp point. It takes the air out of the pompous windbags of the right.

Miller and her executive producer, Chris Lavoie Chris Lavoie is the executive producer and co-host of The Stephanie Miller Show. Personal life
Chris was born in Southern California. He was raised in California and Virginia.
, grab the most embarrassing soundbites from Fox and play them for all to hear. "We listen, so you don't have to" is the motto of this segment, called "Rightwing World." Another sparkle is Jim Ward There are several people named Jim Ward:
  • Jim Ward (advertising executive), president of LucasArts and senior vice president of Lucasfilm
  • Jim Ward (body piercing), pioneer in the field of body piercing when he opened The Gauntlet in 1975
, an actor who does a vast array of voice impressions: Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Schwarzenegger, Bill O'Reilly Bill O'Reilly may refer to:
  • Bill O'Reilly (commentator) (born 1949), American political commentator and author
  • Bill O'Reilly (cricketer) (1905–1992), Australian cricketer and broadcaster
, Sean Hannity Sean Patrick Hannity (born December 30, 1961, in New York City, New York) is an Irish American, conservative talk radio host (The Sean Hannity Show), co-host of Fox News Channel's program Hannity & Colmes, host of the Fox News weekend program Hannity's America , and Tom Cruise, among many others. Not only is his voice spot on, but Ward manages, time after time, to parody his targets to risible ris·i·ble  
adj.
1. Relating to laughter or used in eliciting laughter.

2. Eliciting laughter; ludicrous.

3. Capable of laughing or inclined to laugh.
 effect.

Miller, forty-four, presides over all the zaniness, throwing in her own schticks, including "Stand-up stand·up or stand-up  
adj.
1. Standing erect; upright: a standup collar.

2. Taken, done, or used while standing: a standup supper; a standup bar.
 News" and frequent mentions of her "future husband list," which has recently featured Senator Russ Feingold Russell Dana "Russ" Feingold (born March 2, 1953) is an American politician from the U.S. state of Wisconsin. He has served as a Democratic member of the U.S. Senate and the junior Senator from Wisconsin since 1993. A recipient of the John F. . She and Ward and Lavoie also invent their own little game shows, such as "Republicans Eating Their Own" and "Really Bad Analogies."

Syndicated not by Air America but by the Jones Radio Networks, The Stephanie Miller Show runs on dozens of stations around the country, including in Boston, Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , Seattle, and Washington, D.C. You can find out more about it at stephaniemiller.com.

I spoke with Miller on May 19 after she and Ward did the show live at the Barrymore Theatre in Madison, Wisconsin Madison is the capital of the U.S. state of Wisconsin and the county seat of Dane County. It is also home to the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

The 2006 population estimate of Madison was 223,389, making it the second largest city in Wisconsin, after Milwaukee, and
. Though tired from the performance and the autographing afterward, Miller was gracious--and quippy as always. Here's an edited version of our conversation, which you can hear in its entirety at www.progressive.org.

Q: I understand you are the daughter of Republican Congressman William Miller William Miller or Bill Miller may refer to (items are alphabetized according to the word in boldface): Australia
  • William Miller (Australian athlete) (1847-1939)
  • Bill Miller (film producer)
  • William Miller (minister) (1815-1874)
, who was Barry Goldwater's running mate running mate
n.
1. The candidate or nominee for the lesser of two closely associated political offices.

2. A companion.

3. A horse used to set the pace in a race for another horse.
 in 1964.

Stephanie Miller: I was actually abandoned by wolves and then raised by Republicans. It's a very traumatic life story. My dad's been gone about twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 now. I still contend to this day that he and Barry Goldwater “Goldwater” redirects here. For other uses, see Goldwater (disambiguation).
Barry Morris Goldwater (January 2, 1909 – May 29, 1998) was a five-term United States Senator from Arizona (1953–1965, 1969–87) and the Republican Party's nominee for
 would just be appalled at what's happened to their party. Barry Goldwater used to talk about the undue influence of the religious right on the Republican Party back in the '80s. He was pro-choice. He was pro-gay rights. He used to say about gays in the military: "You don't have to be straight. You just have to shoot straight." I can't even imagine what they'd think today about their party.

Q: What has happened to the Republican Party since then?

Miller: It's just amazing. It's gotten more and more and more in the pocket of the religious right. It's gotten meanspirited. All they do is fearmonger and divide people. They play to people's worst instincts. My politics just kind of developed over time as a reaction.

I remember Pat Buchanan's speech, you know how meanspirited it was. That was kind of a turning point for me.

Q: You did a TV show with Pat Buchanan's sister, Bay Buchanan, on CNBC CNBC Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (artificial intelligence)
CNBC Consumer News and Business Channel
CNBC Congress of National Black Churches, Inc.
. What was that like?

Miller: Ugh! I'm sorry, it's my own personal Vietnam flashback flash·back
n.
1. An unexpected recurrence of the effects of a hallucinogenic drug long after its original use.

2. A recurring, intensely vivid mental image of a past traumatic experience.
. I hosted Equal Time with her for a year on CNBC. And she is every bit as delightful as she seems. We shared a dressing room. And I can be the first to report that she is Pat. It is Pat Buchanan This article may be too long.
Please discuss this issue on the talk page and help summarize or split the content into subarticles of an article series.
 with a wig, and she's not fooling anybody.

Q: Bush's numbers are real low right now. What do you make of the people who are still with him at this late date?

Miller: That is the question: Who are these people? What do they think he's done a good job at? I'm trying to be fair, but what is he good at? You look at Iraq, you look at Katrina. His appointments, Michael Brown. I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 where to start. I have Bush Administration Attention Outrage Deficit Disorder.

My personal favorite poll number is the President's 2 percent approval rating among blacks. Which is within the margin of error. Which leads to all sorts of mind-boggling possibilities, scientifically:

Is it possible that more black people hate the President than are actually alive today?

Do you think black ghosts are coming back to hate him?

Do you think they can read black sonograms at this point?

Are doctors saying, "We don't know if this is a boy or a girl, but we know this baby hates George W. Bush"?

Q: Cheney's overall poll numbers are even lower than Bush's.

Miller: And that's shocking, isn't it, as cuddly as he is? He and all his mechanical parts. Cuddly, cuddly, cuddly.

Q: What do you make of the Democrats?

Miller: I like fighters. That's why I love Russ Feingold. I love Barbara Boxer. And Howard Dean and John Cowers. Democrats I talk to around the country want their leaders to come out and fight for them.

Q: Well, why aren't more Democrats coming out and fighting? Take censure, for instance. Feingold introduced the bill. Boxer is in favor. Tom Harkin is in favor. And Kerry came on board finally. But that's it! Everyone else is running away.

Miller: It's ridiculous, and frankly, censure is lite.

Q: What's your radio background?

Miller: Mama's been doing this since the Catskills. I've been in radio, God, twenty years. I started as a stand-up comedian. I wanted to be Carol Burnett when I was growing up. Radio was just kind of an accident. I did morning radio in my hometown of Buffalo, then went to Rochester, then Chicago, and then New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
.

I didn't start talk radio until '95 in L.A. The show was very successful, and they actually tried to syndicate it nationally, but I couldn't get stations. It was like, "We don't care that she's funny and she's got great ratings. She's liberal!"

Now that progressive talk is here, I've got another opportunity to do it. And frankly, there were a lot of people who were doing it very successfully locally, like Randi Rhodes and Ed Schultz. None of us really had a chance to do it nationally because there weren't enough stations to support it.

Q: How many outlets do you have for the show now?.

Miller: We're adding every week. I'm not even sure. I think we're up to fifty-sixty stations. There are only about seventy-five or eighty commercial progressive stations in the whole country, as opposed to the 600 Rush Limbaugh is on. We're still a really new format. And for as much as Bill O'Reilly can go and scream, "Oh, liberal talk isn't working," someone should ask him why Clear Channel and other huge companies are flipping a different station every week to progressive talk. Because they're making money, They're taking stations that are at almost zero ratings and getting ratings.

And listen, everybody says, "Oh, the evil Clear Channel." Let me tell you something: They will put anything on the air if it makes money. If someone pitched hippos farting for three hours, they would put it on the air if it makes money. That's what it's about. I keep trying to make that point: This is not a political movement, progressive talk. The minute we think it's a political movement--about getting Democrats elected or whatever--we're dead. It's entertainment. We've got to get ratings.

Q: Do you think a lot of progressive talk has been too medicinal?

Miller: Oh, I don't know. I'll let the Republicans eat their own. I go out of my way to say good things about other liberal radio shows. But you know Rush Limbaugh, whether you hate him or not, he's a great entertainer; he's a great broadcaster. That's what this takes. It's a business. That's what people have to understand.

Sometimes liberals get very, "Why don't you talk about this? You should be doing this." This is not some kind of a committee meeting; this is an entertainment show. And we're not going to get our message out unless we can stay in business.

Q: Plus, no one who doesn't already agree with you is going to listen to you if it's just, "Here's the party line."

Miller: That's the dirty little secret. It's not only progressives who listen to progressive radio. Rush Limbaugh wouldn't have his ratings if it was just conservatives listening to him. I don't know how many times a phone call or e-mail starts with, "I don't agree with anything you say but you're funny as hell so I listen to your show, I love your show."

You don't have to think exactly like me. When people go, "I don't agree with everything you say," you know what, if you agree with everything anyone says, you're an idiot.

Q: How did you decide on the format of the show?

Miller: This show is kind of a conglomeration con·glom·er·a·tion  
n.
1.
a. The act or process of conglomerating.

b. The state of being conglomerated.

2. An accumulation of miscellaneous things.
 of a lot of the shows I've done before. Comedy, some politics, though we talk less about politics than any other show in the format. Because I do think on either side that gets tiresome. You can't be twenty-four hours of just Bush-bashing.

Q: I'm sure there are people out there--it may crush your feelings--who have never heard your show.

Miller: Oh, Lord, God!

Q: Could you describe some of the bits, like "Rightwing World."

Miller: A lot of these features just sort of develop naturally. "Rightwing World" is obviously clips from Fox and others. It's amazing. You get what the Republican talking points are for the day because they are endlessly repeated in a million different forms. O'Reilly says it. Hannity says it. Savage says it. We do "Rightwing World" mostly for comedy. It's really just a forum to mock them mercilessly. But it's also instructive to people: This is the propaganda you're getting. And this is why what they're saying is not true. There's "Stand-up News," top stories of the day, and that's when Jim will do some impressions that we imply are soundbites.

Q: How did you get Jim Ward on the show?

Miller: He was my voice guy on my last show for the ABC Radio Network.

Q: So you guys have been together for a while?

Miller: Oh, we've been friends for years. Jim and Chris and I. One change we made from the last show was he wasn't in the studio. We prerecorded pre·re·cord  
tr.v. pre·re·cord·ed, pre·re·cord·ing, pre·re·cords
To record (a television program, for example) at an earlier time for later presentation or use.

Adj. 1.
 some bits. He wasn't there live with me. With this show, I decided I wanted him there live, and I love the way it's come out. I love him being there. It's great to have someone to bounce off of. We end up ad-libbing so much stuff.

Q: How many impressions does he do?

Miller: He does everything. It helps that he's schizophrenic and very heavily medicated medicated /med·i·cat·ed/ (med´i-kat?id) imbued with a medicinal substance.

medicated

contains a medicinal substance.
. We also do "Tinsel tin·sel  
n.
1. Very thin sheets, strips, or threads of a glittering material used as a decoration.

2. Something sparkling or showy but basically valueless: the tinsel of parties and promotional events.
 Talk," which is Hollywood news, and Jim will do more impressions. Jim is the most committed actor. When he does Bob Dole, he actually picks up the pencil. He scrunches his glasses up when he does Rumsfeld. I say, Jim, we're on radio. He's done a fair amount of television and film. He normally gets killed in the first ten minutes of every movie he's in. He was the doctor who got killed in Spider-Man.

Q: You mentioned Chris, that's Chris Lavoie, your executive producer. Either he or you must spend an inordinate amount of time watching Fox News. Who gets that chore?

Miller: We both do, but Chris is the technical person on the show, so he's got to TiVo it and pull the soundbites. But I watch it too, and I'll sometimes call him and ask, "Did you see this, this, and this?" Or I'll say, "Did you see O'Reilly said this?"

Q: Do you have a sense as to why O'Reilly is so popular?

Miller: Probably because crazy is kind of fun to watch. You're thinking, "Is he really that megalomaniacal meg·a·lo·ma·ni·a  
n.
1. A psychopathological condition characterized by delusional fantasies of wealth, power, or omnipotence.

2. An obsession with grandiose or extravagant things or actions.
? Or is it schtick schtick  
n.
Variant of shtick.

Noun 1. schtick - (Yiddish) a little; a piece; "give him a shtik cake"; "he's a shtik crazy"; "he played a shtik Beethoven"
schtik, shtick, shtik
?" Does he really not get that the guy caught in a phone sex scandal can't lecture people on parenting and family values?

Q: Some people on the left say we need our own Fox. Do you agree?

Miller: Fox succeeds because it's entertaining. It's like a rightwing freak show. If we could do something entertaining--it's why The Daily Show works--yeah, I think we could do it. But could you do a liberal propaganda tool that would bore the bejesus be·je·sus  
n. Slang
Used as an intensive: The bear scared the bejesus out of us.



[Alteration of by Jesus.]
 out of people? No.

Matthew Rothschild is the editor of The Progressive.
COPYRIGHT 2006 The Progressive, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:changes in political parties
Author:Rothschild, Matthew
Publication:The Progressive
Article Type:Interview
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2006
Words:2070
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