I wanted to know what other agengies could invade my home without a search warrant. I am fully aware of the fact that search warrants can be gained through unethical means. But this is news to me that the INS can come into my home any time they want to, without a judges consent. I am alarmed. Not postal like Imus suggest our media is (see below), but i do think that it is unconstitutional.
DON IMUS Remarks at the Radio and Television Correspondents Association Dinner. Washington, D.C., March 21, 1996 IMUS: Thank you very much. It's kind of interesting. These don't appear to be my notes. (LAUGHTER) Do you have the folder I gave you? Where did this come from? Well, nobody leaves stuff like this just laying around. (LAUGHTER) (APPLAUSE) Let me see if I can see what it says. S. McDougal called again. Says bank needs check and statement. Told her both are in mail, ha, ha, ha. (LAUGHTER) Jesus, she looks stupid in those tank tops. (LAUGHTER) Maybe I'll just hang on to these. Well, now here we go: Good evening, Mr. President, Mrs. Clinton... (LAUGHTER) ... honored guests, ladies and gentlemen, radio and TV scum. (LAUGHTER) You know, I think it would be fair to say that back when the Clintons took office, if we had placed them all in a line-up, well, not a line-up... (LAUGHTER) If we were to have speculated on which member of the First Family would be the first to be indicted... (LAUGHTER) I don't mean indicted; I meant to receive a subpoena. Everybody in this room would have picked Roger. I mean, been there, done that. (LAUGHTER) Well, in the past three years, Socks the cat has been in more jams than Roger. Roger has been a saint. The cat has peed on national treasures. Roger hasn't. (LAUGHTER) Socks has thrown up hair balls. Roger hasn't. Socks got his girlfriend pregnant and had -- Well, no, that was Roger. (LAUGHTER) And as you know, nearly every incident in the lives of the First Family has been made worse by each and every person in this room, the Radio and Television correspondents, even innocuous incidents. For example, when Cal Ripken broke Lou Gehrig's consecutive game record, the President was at Camden Yards doing play-by-play on the radio with John Miller. Bobby Bonilla hit a double. And we all heard the President, in his obvious excitement, holler ``Go, baby.'' And I remember commenting at the time, I bet that's not the first time he's said that. (LAUGHTER) Remember the Astro-Turf and the pick-up? ALL: Boo! IMUS: And my point is, there is an innocent event made sinister by some creep in the media. (LAUGHTER) Although, in some cases, the Clintons have not exactly helped themselves. Imagine if back in 1978 Mrs. Clinton had not said to Mr. Clinton, honey, Jim and Susan are here, and they've got some river front land for these great vacation homes and maybe we can make some serious money. IMUS: And he said, God, I love this Reaganomics. (LAUGHTER) Or later, she said, Bill, I talked to Webb, and he said, put down 600 hours. And he said, wow, that's a lot. She said, yes, I think 60 makes more sense. And recently somebody said, I don't know I left them on the table in the book room. (LAUGHTER) Which reminds me, in light of the controversy that surrounded publication of Mrs. Clinton's book, perhaps ``anonymous'' should have written, ``It Takes a Village.'' And then there's Senator D'Amato's book, ``It Takes a Village Idiot.'' (LAUGHTER) The Senator suggests that the Clintons hung around with unsavory characters in Little Rock. What the hell is he talking about? All of his friends have bodies in the trunks of their cars. (LAUGHTER) By the way, my candidate for primary colors is Susan Thomases, the literary agent. I think she wrote it and simply can't remember. (LAUGHTER) When I was asked to speak here tonight and was told who would be in attendance, my initial thought was, well, I've already said almost every awful thing you could say about almost everyone in the room. And then I thought, well, almost everyone. (LAUGHTER) And I recognize I'm not going to be invited to Renaissance Weekend or that bohemian deal where Newt, Rush and Dick all sit in the tee-pee naked beating on tom-toms. (LAUGHTER) I won't be having lunch with Peter Jennings and some Hollywood nitwit, so this could actually be fun. (LAUGHTER) So, let's start at the bottom with you folks in the media and work our way up. Do you remember the infamous curb-side shooting photograph from the Vietnam War. Well, I'm watching the CBS Evening News one night with Dan Rather and Connie Chung. Things are not going well. And I'm thinking, we're a couple of nights away from another hideous photograph. (LAUGHTER) I mean, everybody in this room knows Dan Rather is capable of anything including pulling a gun out on the set of the CBS Evening News. (LAUGHTER) Dan has these utterly incomprehensible bucolic expressions that he punctuates conversations with. Several times after talking with him, he would say to me, ``Tamp them up solid.'' Having something to do, I later learned, with fortifying the sides of underground tunnels that his father dug for reasons that remain unclear. (LAUGHTER) Now, I'm hard of hearing, hearing-impaired I guess would be better, from wearing head phones for a long time. So, I thought he was saying, ``Tampons are solid.'' (LAUGHTER) And I'm thinking, why would he say that? I mean, I know he's nuts, but... (LAUGHTER) What does that mean? Anyway I would laugh and I would say, Uh- Huh, and I would hang up. Now, he's a great reporter, but he does not have all of his bait in the water. (LAUGHTER) And he's a little tense. I mean, watching Dan Rather do the news, he looks like he's making a hostage tape. (LAUGHTER) They should have guys in ski masks, you know, and AK-47s just stand off the... And yet, he is one of the three or four people most Americans get their news from, along with Tom Brokaw, of course. IMUS: By the way, nobody wants us out of Bosnia more than Tom does simply so he doesn't have to try to pronounce Slobodan Milosevic. (LAUGHTER) Or report on fighting on the outskirts of Valica Kladusa (PH). (LAUGHTER) Or describe how Slobodan Milo -- (LAUGHTER) I can say this -- how Slobodan -- no I can't say it. And we know Brian Williams is standing in front of the White House thinking I'm two Serb war criminals names away from Tom's job. (LAUGHTER) (APPLAUSE) And then there's Peter Jennings, who we are told more Americans get their news from than anyone else, and a man who freely admits that he cannot resist women. So I'm thinking -- here's Peter Jennings, sitting there each evening elegant, erudite, refined, and I'm wondering -- what's under his desk?
(LAUGHTER)
I mean besides an intern.
(LAUGHTER)
The first place the telecommunications bill should have mandated that a V-chip be placed was in Mr. Jennings' shorts.
(LAUGHTER)
My favorite moment on World News Tonight was when Peter threw it to Cokie Roberts who, we were told, was standing outside the Capitol Building. Remember that? When they chroma keyed Cokie outside the Capitol?
That happened during my friend Rick Kaplan's watch. Bill Clinton's worst media day -- when Kaplan left as executive producer of World News Tonight because he'd humped the Clinton administration harder than OJ has his video.
The only think he didn't do was a run a crawl of the Clinton defense fund's 800 number with a shot of Sally Struthers sobbing into the camera.
(LAUGHTER)
I -- by the way, I like Sally Struthers, and I think she's a sweet, harmless soul doing God's work, but...
(LAUGHTER)
... if you're going to go on television and beg for food for starving children, I mean...
(LAUGHTER)
... shouldn't you maybe like eat a little less of it yourself?
(LAUGHTER)
I mean, I don't think the plight of suffering children is amusing. I've raised, personally, millions of dollars for children with cancer and millions of dollars for parents who've lost children through Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. But what are these people thinking about when they send her to a village in Ethiopia full of starving people? I mean, they might as well send the fat guy from Wendy's.
(LAUGHTER)
And by the way, this is really awful...
(LAUGHTER)
If you're Peter Jennings and you're telling more Americans than anyone else what's going on in the world, shouldn't you have at least had a clue that your wife was over at Richard Cohen's house?
(GROANS)
She wasn't at my house.
Bernard Shaw and Peter couldn't be here tonight. He went to the movies with Alanis Morrisette.
(LAUGHTER)
Bernard Shaw and Judy Woodruff round out our network news anchors and deserve mention only to recognize that Bernie has a greater nut potential than even Dan Rather. If not for CNN, Bernard Shaw is at the post office marching somebody around at the end of a wire coat hangar and a shotgun.
And then there are the Sunday morning news programs -- This Week With David Brinkley. I love Mr. Brinkley. He's an American icon. He and I both had similar surgeries and I recognize that Mr. Brinkley is 75 years old. He's adorable.
He also, frankly, looks like ET.
(LAUGHTER)
One of these mornings, I expect him to say -- Cokie, phone home.
(LAUGHTER)
Well, he's not the only extraterrestrial on the program. There's also Sam Donaldson and George Will.
(LAUGHTER)
First Sam, the New Mexico sheep rancher...
(LAUGHTER)
You would think anyone who's taken as much money from the government in wool subsidies as he has could come up with something better to put on his head.
IMUS: I mean, what is that?
(LAUGHTER)
Something Strom Thurmond threw out?
(LAUGHTER)
A cheap doily he swiped at Arianna Huffington's house?
(LAUGHTER)
And then there's George Will, and they call Steve Forbes a geek. Anyone that buttoned up I guarantee you is spending part of his weekend wearing clothes that make him feel pretty. The things he picked up, we now know, at Victoria's Secret over in Georgetown.
MEET THE PRESS with the utterly charming, gregarious Tim Russert, has brought a new sense of adventure and enthusiasm to Sunday morning television. Mr. Russert's unique probing and interrogation of guests is widely scene as bold and refreshing. Sign off Bob Kerrey's wooden leg was a special moment.
(LAUGHTER)
Good-natured, however, and patient to a fault, Tim is to be admired for enduring frequently insipid observations and questions from contributing correspondents who for some inexplicable reason include the coma-inducing William Safire, the terminally tedious David Broder, and Elton John look-alike Mary McGrory.
(LAUGHTER)
Where did she get those glasses?
By the way, Russert, as many of you know, came to television from the world of politics, having once worked for New York's Senator Moynihan and Governor Cuomo. He was a fine aid whose duties included hiding the bottles for Pat and the bodies for Mario.
(LAUGHTER)
Some of you may have noticed Mike Wallace wondering around here tonight. For some insane reason I agreed to be interviewed by Mr. Wallace. It's a good thing, actually, because, frankly, time is up over there at 60 MINUTES. I mean they've gone from biographical essays of Martin Luther King, Mother Theresa, Stephen Hawkings, to profiles of loud-mouthed morons on the radio. I mean, have they no standards?
And if they're going to fold up like a two-dollar suitcase every time some blood-sucking weasel in a Brooks Brothers suit threatens to haul him into court, then off-load the entire cast in an ambulance and ship them off to the drug (OFF-MIKE).
I mean, I hate to be harsh, here, but where are the days when Mike Wallace used to stick a camera in some poor sap's face and beat him like a rented mule?
Where are the sobbing confessions? And they've been doing this for 100 years. It is over.
(LAUGHTER)
Except, perhaps, for Steve Kroft, and he's hoping he can go over to NBC and blow up trucks. And Ed Bradley, rethink the earring thing, Ed, you're a newsman, not a pirate.
(LAUGHTER)
Molly Ivins is going to be a commentator. Why not just go ahead and get Florence King? I told Nina Tottenberg plagiarism jokes weren't funny.
Speaking of people whose place on the planet is a waste of space, the White House Press Corps. I mean, no wonder the President doesn't want to hold any news conferences. Who needs to be assaulted by a pack of rodents whose idea of a question is to confront the President with an insulting observation designed only to impress their equally rude and arrogant colleagues?
Mr. President, Rita Braver, CBS News, we all know you're a pot- smoking weasel, that you once ate an apple fritter the size of a baby's head, and that you actually run a 12-minute mile. Could you therefore tell the American people why that thing on your lip looks like a milk dud? And if it is a milk dud, then I'd like a follow-up?
Sir, Brit Hume, NBC News. Sir, everybody knows the closest you ever came to standing in chow line was a cheeseburger window of McDonald's.
IMUS: So, tell me and the American people, is that where you came up with, buy one, get one free?
The President gets treated better by Rush Limbaugh. Rush may not, as Al Franken suggests, be a ``big, fat idiot,'' but I'm sick of him. The radio show, the television show, the stupid books and now men's ties -- bold, vibrant, colorful -- and all designed to look great with a brown shirt.
(LAUGHTER)
What a surprise that Rush is selling something that goes around a person's neck. And Rush didn't date in High School, you're kidding?
(LAUGHTER)
You mean, the varsity cheerleaders weren't falling all over a fat, pig-eyed shmoo who looks like a cross between Red Dog and one of those Budweiser frogs?
(LAUGHTER)
He should be on a beach somewhere in a pair of Bermuda shorts, Hawaiian shirt, white socks, sandals, holding a metal detector.
(LAUGHTER)
He couldn't get a date in High School? Maybe they should have had his senior prom at Sea World.
(LAUGHTER)
Remember the old joke, what's got a hundred feet and four teeth; you know, the front row at a Willie Nelson concert?
(LAUGHTER)
Well, of course, now it's a Rush room. How appropriate that these ditto dorks all get together and eat and listen to lard butt. And then there's Newt.
(LAUGHTER)
Who names a child ``Newt?'' I mean, only slightly better than a boy named ``Sue.'' Well, he came into the world from the right side of town. Georgia boy, who was big and round, dreaming one day he'd wield power absolute. He was a guy who spends a lot of time in the fridge and it's no wonder he wants to bring back the orphanage. You would too if you're parents named you Newt.
(LAUGHTER)
Now, all you atheists had better beware because school children's head will be bowed in prayer, beseeching the Lord to get rid of the poor and the queers. Remember, Newt and his conservative protegees are going to fix this country in a hundred days and he was so proud he was on the verge of tears.
But now the ethics folks are snooping for cash and his cheesy book was less than a smash and the polls all report he's held in disrepute. His sister's a thespian and appeared on ``Friends.''
(LAUGHTER)
And his poor old mom's still trying to make amends. I'll tell you, life ain't easy for a boy named Newt.
(LAUGHTER)
And it was Newt, remember, who wanted to give every kid mired in the poverty of urban America, a laptop computer. Not nearly as popular as Phil Gramm's plan to give every white male in the country a lap dancer.
(LAUGHTER)
My friend, Kinky Freedman (ph), who headed ``Gay Texans for Gramm...''
(LAUGHTER)
... told me early on that the Senator was not going to be President. And, now, of course, we all know that. I was in Las Vegas when the news broke that Senator Gramm had financed a porno movie. It was better than having Ed McMahon hand me a check for $10 million.
(LAUGHTER)
The only better news would have been had Senator Gramm actually appeared in a movie. I mean, how great would that have been?
(LAUGHTER)
I could -- like one of those ``Farmer's Daughter'' deals, I could see Phil in the role of the traveling salesman, Lamar Alexander like as the farmer, Pat Buchanan, the weird ranch hand, and one of John Kerry's old dates, right off the bale of hay on ``Hee-Haw.''
And by the way, what was the deal with the wagon -- pull the wagon, push a wagon, get in the wagon and get out of the wagon. What wagon? Where did he think he was, the Ponderosa?
(LAUGHTER) Senator Gramm was fond of saying he was too ugly to be President. Well, that was not his problem. I know he has a Ph.D in economics. But you can't sound like you just walked out of the woods in ``Deliverance'' and not scare people.
(LAUGHTER)
You got a real purty mouth on you, there, Bubba.
(LAUGHTER)
Not happening. Bob Dole. What else does Bob Dole want?
IMUS: Willard Scott's already wished Bob Dole ``happy birthday.''
(LAUGHTER)
Twice.
(LAUGHTER)
Bob Dole should be pleased. Bob Dole says, tell Willard Scott to stop lying about Bob Dole's age.
(LAUGHTER)
And I agree with Ted Koppel. Pat Buchanan has a certain inherent charm. However, if he gets elected President, two weeks later somebody's knocking on your door at 3:00 in the morning. ``Just checking...
(LAUGHTER)
``... what kind of a name is `Imus?'''
(LAUGHTER)
Although, all this stuff about Pat being anti-Semitic, I don't know about that. A lot of people are unaware that he lost a relative in a concentration camp; his uncle fell out of a guard tower.
(LAUGHTER)
Mort Sahl made the original observation that people who talk most about family values are all on their second and third wives. And I would point out that they all have families you could rope off and charge admission to view.
(LAUGHTER)
You throw up a tent: put Pat Buchanan, his brother Bay, Newt, mom Candace and Hugh Rodham in it, and you're looking at a theme park.
(LAUGHTER)
Now, I love Ronald Reagan as do most Americans, regardless of politics. But, man, what a weird family. Nancy staring at him like a glass-eyed Moonie on mushrooms, checking with this nut-log out on the West Coast who's charting the course of the country on a Ouija board. I mean, what was that all about?
(LAUGHTER)
And the kid, Ron, prancing around in his underwear on ''Saturday Night Live'' and Patti's naked in Playboy. And they all, each of them had these ``Mommy Dearest'' book deals. And, of course, they all still hate Michael.
Weird families are not confined to Republicans, of course. Remember the Carters?
(LAUGHTER)
Ham Jordan, Willie Nelson are smoking dope on the roof of the White House and Billy's out in the middle of an airport hosing down the runway, while Jimmy's flailing away at a killer-bunny with a canoe paddle, asking Amy to weigh in on America's role in the nuclear age.
(LAUGHTER)
And while President Clinton's cabinet is not technically a family, they are the single, oddest looking group of people ever assembled.
(LAUGHTER)
Like the bar scene out of ``Star Wars.''
(LAUGHTER)
I mean, watching them file in for the State of the Union reminded me of seeing all those clowns crawl out of the Volkswagen; it's a circus.
(LAUGHTER)
And speaking of Congress, while Al D'Amato, Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond are mildly amusing as the chairmen of various committees, I miss the Democrats who were in charge. Especially Joe Biden. And Joe Biden's head. Tracking the progress of his plug job was like watching time-lapse photography of a Chiapet.
(LAUGHTER)
He was most entertaining, however, as a committee chairman conducting hearings because Senator Biden always looked to me like he was coming on to the witnesses.
(LAUGHTER)
Usually women. ``So, Anita, when this is all over, you want to have a drink?''
(LAUGHTER)
And, although he's disappeared, he hasn't, as have 13 of his colleagues, actually quit.
IMUS: Of course, there are those Democrats who are not only insane, but are doing so with renewed vigor and enthusiasm. Mostly by becoming Republicans.
(LAUGHTER)
With several noble exceptions, John Kerry of Massachusetts among them; which now gives me the opportunity to express my regret at having referred to my friend, Senator Kerry, upon his marriage to Theresa Heinz, as the Larry Fortensky of the United States Senate.
(LAUGHTER)
Which reminds me of poor old John Warner. The Senator marries Elizabeth Taylor, one of the most beautiful women in the world. Three weeks later, he comes home. She's sitting in the kitchen playing Deal-a-Meal with Richard Simmons.
(LAUGHTER)
I mean, how do you get that fat that fast and not live in a trailer?
(LAUGHTER)
And then he has to choose between Chuck Robb and Oliver North. I mean, what's the deal with his karma? But back to Senator Kerry. I also now recognize that it was irresponsible to suggest that he was a suspect in his own wife's unfortunate mugging. If the authorities thought it made sense that a Senator from Massachusetts would be in Puerto Rico on a fundraising mission during the time of family crisis, it should have made sense to me as well.
However, when I initially thought about it, it only seemed slightly more plausible than chipping golf balls at 10:00 at night. But the Senator and I are past that, in fact, it has drawn us closer.
(LAUGHTER)
And, yes, some unanticipated good for other Democrats came out of the Republicans' gaining control of Congress. Senator Kennedy, for example, was forced to focus and take a bride, leaving Chris Dodd the opportunity to get his bearings and realize, ``Hey, I'm a United States Senator. Maybe I shouldn't be crawling around on the floor of this restaurant.''
In fact, as you know, Senator Dodd has recovered sufficiently to become the General Chairman of the Democratic National Committee and will play a pivotal role in the President's reelection effort. In fact, he has a couple of bumper sticker ideas.
``Clinton-Gore, please raise your right hand.'' Or, perhaps, ''Clinton-Gore, four more, or five to ten.''
(LAUGHTER)
Now, we're not sure what role James Carville or his dog will play in all this. But isn't it just like a Democratic consultant to come along and make a mess and then expect somebody else to clean it up.
While I am not one of, obviously, Bill Clinton's advisers, and it's not that I think Al Gore has done a horrible job. However, if I were the President and I wanted to make sure I won in November, I'd ask Colin Powell to run with me. Stick Dole with that dork from Michigan.
(LAUGHTER)
However, it appears it will be Bill Clinton and the albatross Al Gore for the Democrats and Bob Dole and someone slightly less cranky for the Republicans.
(LAUGHTER)
Add the jug-eared little Martian from Texas for laughs.
(LAUGHTER)
One of the things, it seems to me, that the media ought to think about in the coming months, particularly in this election year, consumed by the chaos of the campaign, is the sensibilities of the people who you cover, the way you cover them and your treatment of them as individuals.
For, if nothing else, they are all good and decent people who, for whatever reasons, have chosen to devote the bulk of their adult lives to public service; people who possess a passion for ideas and ideals to which they have committed extraordinary energy.
It is almost always irrelevant and shortsighted to seize only on the unfortunate human imperfections of people who, frankly, have demonstrated an often-puzzling willingness to endure great sacrifice, both personally and professionally for what they see as a noble summons to serve the greater good.
IMUS: More often than not, however, that is exactly the case. You folks focus on each misstep, every misspoken word, each testy outburst.
Do they not deserve some degree of our respect, to be treated with the dignity that at least acknowledges the mission of altruism they believe they're conducting? Shouldn't we be willing to give them some benefit of the doubt?
I don't think so.
(LAUGHTER)
Thank you all very much.
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