Subject: FC: The Year 1.9K problem -- or, political humor and Y2K
from national journal's hotline
VICE PRESIDENT HOBART DEAD! New York Times' Berke reports, VP Garret Augustus Hobart died earlier today, "apparently from the stress and nervous exhaustion caused by his increasingly frustrated efforts to solve what has been termed 'the Y1.9K problem.' Sources inside the McKinley Administration say Hobart had become flustered from harsh media and Democratic Party criticism over his inability to deal with the implications of complete technological failure forecast to occur at midnight December 31, 1899 (7/29/1899). CBS's Pelley: "Hobart was widely recognized as the techno- guru of this administration, but he seemingly lost his cool, almost stoic, facade over the impending disaster. Experts had predicted massive outages of electricity, telegraphs, railroads, mills, and other advanced services. CBS has obtained the first 300 pages of a report Hobart was planning to deliver to Congress on the state of preparations for the Year 1.9K Problem" (CBS Evening Telegraph, 7/29/99). WH press sec. Mike McCurry: "No telegraph or electricity to broadcast my witticisms across the country? I hope things work out for the president. I'm outta here!" Focus on the Dobson's James Family: "Me too." Longtime Hobart media consultant Bob Squier: "The vice president was a stiff, but he was my meal ticket. So I can tell you Gus Hobart had a rapier wit. He was lots of fun." Dick Morris: "Hobart the technocrat was devoured by the Y1.9K problem, while the issue he should have been talking about was the environment. Now Teddy Roosevelt, the next VP, will get to run with it." Wm. Tecumseh Sherman: "If the turn of the century means all things dated in the year 01 will mean 1801, does that mean I never marched through Georgia?" Huey Long: "If it turns out that the Louisiana Purchase hasn't happened yet, am I French? Will I be known as the roihomard?" Samuel Tilden: "Does it mean I get a recount?" Elizabeth Katie Stanton: "If we can never turn the century, how can I ever get the vote?" Lanny Davis: "All I'm asking is, if you can't prove the president was born, how can you prove he committed perjury?" ELEGY FOR A FALLEN TECHNOCRAT CBS' Dan Rather: "We've all been assuming that the damage from the 1.9K problem would become manifest on January 1, 1900. But today we learn that this disaster has already claimed its first victim." MSNBC's Keith Olbermann: "The problem we thought was about machinery is now about our own mortal selves, the one thing we cannot alter no matter how much scientific progress we make." More Olbermann: "Makes me want to quit this show" ("The Century In Crisis," 7/29/99). YOU KNOW EVERYONE HERE George F. Will: "The death of the vice president is, I fear, a microcosm of worse things to come. Continued pursuit of technological advancement without regard for its human toll can only lead in the coming decades to unsinkable ships that plummet to the bottom of the ocean, wars to end all wars that only lead to more wars that kill millions, and an even larger problem a century hence, when everything will be automated." Sam Donaldson: "So who's responsible for Hobart's death, technology or the media hype about 1900?" Cokie Roberts: "Our collective pursuit of material comforts, our conspicuous consumption. A whole nation is guilty of murdering its second-in-command." George Stephanopolous: "I wouldn't put it past the Republicans to try to politicize this tragedy. They'll blame the Democrats if they think it will help them in the polls." Bill Kristol: "George, you must not think much of the average voter. They're smart enough not to listen to a former Democratic hack's warnings about partisanship!" Stephanopolous: "Hey, I'm a pundit now! I've got a huge paycheck from ABC to prove it!" Roberts: "We'll continue with this spirited debate right after these messages from ADM, general store to the world" ("This Week With Sam and Cokie," 7/28/1899). GOP REAX Lamar Alexander: "Without Hobart at the helm, 100 years from now we'll probably be wearing these same rudimentary plaid shirts." Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA): "The Democrats have been trying to hang this problem on Vice President Hobart because they have no legitimate challenger to the McKinley-Hobart ticket in 1900. Well, now we see what they have wrought. I hope they've learned their lesson." Rev. Jerry Falwell: "Throughout the gay '90s I was never alone with a man without my dog in the room." Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS): "They say one out of ten is a kleptomaniac." NY Gov. Teddy Roosevelt, from atop San Juan Hill: "A man. A plan. A canal. Panama." McKinley: "If you can say that backwards, I'll make you the next VP." DEM REAX Rep. Dick Gephardt (D-MO): "Of course, we all mourn the loss of Vice President Hobart, a great statesman who died trying to solve our country's most vexing problem. But that does not absolve the Republican Party of its responsibility to fix this glitch soon!" Sen. Paul Wellstone: "All those rich Republicans and their fancy gadgets ... serves them right!" Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA): "No sound bite for The Hotline. It'll just be riddled with tYpo'z/." Rev. Jesse Jackson: "Remember the Maine. Go back to Spain." PLEASE, TELEGRAPH PEOPLE, TELL US WHAT IT MEANS MSNBC News Chat Question of the Day: "Hobart's Passing -- Natural Cause or Moment For Pause?" John Gibson: "No electricity? Luckily, I still have my pocket watch. 20 seconds -- that's it!" USA Today's Larry King: "Think the widow Hobart would be open to courtship from a non-Viagra dependent scribe? ... I just love the way steamboat smoke billows up into the clouds ... Question: Whatever happened to the B&O Railroad? ... I looked up war horse in the dictionary, and there was a picture of Teddy Roosevelt ... With the impending technological failure, I wonder if they'll have to distribute my column through Pony Express ... Do you think suspenders will stay in fashion?" NBC's Tim Russert: "McKinley must clarify his Y1.9K policy in the next 48 to 72 hours, or he should get out of town." Don Imus: "Hobart was a nasty tempered weasel who couldn't muster the mustard to make our trains run on time. Why are we honoring this moron?" CNN's April Oliver: "I stand by our story that Hobart is still alive." Steve Brill: "I'd publish a critique of this press onslaught. Too bad Brill's Content has already folded." Manchester Union-Leader editorial: "The Democrats who tried to make Hobart a scapegoat for this so-called 'Year 1900 Problem' have proven themselves to be murderous barbarians no different than the thugs who sunk the Maine. The Democrats may wear foppish top-hats rather than eye patches, they may enjoy the honorific of 'sir' rather than 'matey,' but underneath it all they're as stinking rotten as day-old fish laying on a shipdeck in the blazing sun." CNBC's Chris Matthews: "The list of those responsible for this fiasco includes a lot of fat pig Republicans, absolute money guys who have no more morality than anybody on the left, who basically will defend this guy Hobart to the last inch" ("Fluffball," 7/30/99). William Jennings Bryan: "You shall not crucify the Democrats upon a cross of gold" ("InterNight," 7/30/99). Jerry Rivers: "This won't slow down the invention of liposuction, will it?" ("Rivers Live"). Irish Times correspondent James Joyce: [unintelligible, but named best sound bite of the century]. |