SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (49590)3/3/2012 2:52:47 AM
From: calgal3 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 71588
 
Perhaps the greatest professional tribute I can pay to Andrew Breitbart is that upon hearing condolences from friends online about the passing of my friend "Andrew," and trying to figure out who they were talking about, is that I immediately pointed my browser to the Drudge Report to find out the details of what person named Andrew was no longer with us.

But Andrew deserves more than just a professional nod this week for he was more than a culture warrior for one political side, he was a decent guy, a great dad and especially a good and loyal friend who took great pleasure out of selflessly helping his friends.



Related Video

Conservative commentator Andrew Breitbart dead at 43

Publisher's website reports death from natural causes. Jonah Goldberg remembers his friend.

Related Video

Tucker Carlson: Andrew Breitbart was a 'great guy'

Daily Caller editor remembers his friend as funny and compelling

Related Stories Conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart dies in LA Farewell to Andrew Breitbart -- the most fearless person I've ever known Conservative commentator Andrew Breitbart is dead at 43
[iframe id=ifr-qu_story_2 height=243 border=0 frameBorder=0 width=156 scrolling=no][/iframe]

What he also deserves is for his enemies to set aside their hatred for him, and for at least a day, to remember our common humanity. For, whatever they may think of his work he was still a man with a beautiful wife, four lovely kids and lots of friends.

I came to know Andrew before he became Andrew Breitbart, during a time he seemed to bask in his anonymity.

We first met at a party a decade or so ago thrown by Bill Maher and he seemed perfectly contented to be Matt Drudge's loyal and anonymous sidekick.

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about Andrew was watching him shed that cherished anonymity a few years back and not only launch his series of websites but become a forceful and very public advocate for what he believed in.

To watch the transformation of Andrew from anonymous blogger to outspoken activist was sort of like watching Dr. Bruce Banner or Clark Kent transitioning into "The Incredible Hulk" or Superman: I felt as though I was watching Andrew become who he was destined to be, but perhaps had resisted becoming.

But there was a private and very spiritual side of Andrew that few knew about.

He was a spiritual seeker and we had many conversations about God and the meaning of life.

Once we even went together to hear Billy Graham speak at his final L.A. crusade at the Rose Bowl with his mother-in-law; and imprinted on my mind forever was the time we spent a couple of hours at a cafe in Venice debating God, agnosticism and the meaning of life.

There were many things about contemporary Christianity that troubled him, but he later famously described himself to CBN's David Brody as a "Judeo-Christian."

If I could think of two words to describe Andrew Breitbart the man, they are these: loyal and selfless.

He was fiercely loyal to his friends and especially to the man who brought him to The Show, Matt Drudge. When Andrew left Drudge for a time to help launch the Huffington Post, he did so with some hesitation, concerned that it would damage his relationship with his mentor.

It didn't.

Drudge was bigger than that.

There were plenty of opportunities for him to dish on the famously press-shy Drudge to the press, but he never did.

He was also selfless because he made key introductions for people, often launching their careers, yet never asked for anything in return. Greg Gutfeld was a magazine editor in London before Breitbart added him to the Huffington Post lineup and a little movie called "Facing the Giants" was headed for obscurity until Andrew added a link to a story that the film had been rated PG for excessive religious content.

Today Gutfeld is a star on Fox News Channel and the filmmakers behind "Giants" went on to box office glory and two subsequent hit movies and none of that would have happened in the way it did without Andrew Breitbart.

Here's a story I want to share that I believe best illustrates who Andrew Breitbart was: We had once spoken at a media conference together and a student from that conference later contacted me saying that he and a group of protesters were marching against human trafficking on the beach when Andrew came out to the balcony of a restaurant he was eating at, and gave the group the middle finger and told them to get lost.

Puzzled, I asked Andrew what had happened.

He then wrote the student personally, profusely apologizing, explaining that he had thought the group was protesting the Iraq war.

Classic Andrew.

I was a recipient of his largesse when he brought me in to be a contributor at the Huffington Post at its launch in 2005.

This week he was on my mental list of people to call. I just never got around to it.

I wish I had.

Although it's customary to wish that those who have departed will "rest in peace," that just doesn't seem appropriate or relevant in the case of one of the greatest rabble-rousers of our time. In fact, he might very well have considered it an insult.

A few years back, Andrew and I sat down for an interview that gives a good overview of his life. It's posted here.

The literal meaning of adieu is "To God" while "Au Revoir" means "until re-seeing."

So to my friend Andrew I say: adieu and au revoir.

Mark Joseph is a producer, author and publisher of Bullypulpit.com.



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/03/02/adieu-au-revoir-andrew-breitbart/#ixzz1o2Oy95YM



To: calgal who wrote (49590)3/3/2012 10:28:20 PM
From: greatplains_guy  Respond to of 71588
 
Farewell to a Friend: Andrew Breitbart (1969-2012)
Matt Welch
March 1, 2012

It was always funny to many of his friends that Andrew Breitbart, after he became famous, was probably most famous for being a 100 percent polarizing political lightning rod. The reason that was funny was two-fold: He didn't actually have strong philosophical/policy beliefs - at all - and he was always perfectly comfortable and perfectly welcome in ideologically and culturally diverse settings. Like my L.A. backyard (pictured), dozens of times.

That doesn't mean the guy stumbled accidentally into politcal conflict. He lived for it. He was genuinely, convincingly, overwhelmingly outraged at the workaday biases of liberal media, academia, and entertainment, and always positioned himself smack dab in the center of it. He'd be in the middle of some hilarious story about trying to do unspeakable things at some Irvine Meadows concert in the 1980s, and then if the conversation got steered toward the media, his eyes would narrow and redden, his face would go purplish, and Breitbart-Hulk would take over. Here's how I described one such face-reddening moment in a 2004 Reason column:


"Every day I wake up in the battle about media bias," he says. "The best analogy I can give to you is this: Have you ever gone to like the Santa Monica Pier, and seen one of those holograms on the wall, and you're supposed to stare at it for a while, and there's supposed to be, like, a magical castle in it? Well you look and you look and you can't see that castle and you can't see that castle, but eventually your eyes focus in such a way that the castle comes up. And then you can't not see the castle. That's how media bias comes to you from the conservative angle." [...]

"Because you ignored us," Breitbart says, "because you ignored Rush and Drudge and God knows who else, we decided to go out and create our media. And I think that what we're doing is building up something that may be bigger and better."

Before talking about that "go out and create our media" part, which will be Breitbart's true legacy, I would like to stress here that Andrew's broader point about media bias, while always hyperbolic, was also based on something broadly true. Here, let's look at something I read this very morning in The New Yorker, by Hendrik Hertzberg. In a piece that listed first among the Republican base's "basest biases" its "fierce hatred of the mainstream media," Hertzberg, the lead political commentator in the country's most journalistically respected magazine, describes the GOP core like this:


an excitable, overlapping assortment of Fox News friends, Limbaugh dittoheads, Tea Party animals, war whoopers, nativists, Christianist fundamentalists, à la carte Catholics (anti-abortion, yes; anti-torture, no), anti-Rooseveltians (Franklin and Theodore), global-warming denialists, post-Confederate white Southrons, creationists, birthers, market idolaters, Europe demonizers, and gun fetishists

I was a "media columnist" when I met Andrew, and I will probably always disagree with the conservative/Breitbartian conflation of "bias" with "agenda," but he certainly sensitized me more to the friction that non-liberals feel when swimming against the current of Acceptable Opinion. For which he deserves a posthumous thanks.

But as Nick Gillespie mentioned this morning, Breitbart's real accomplishment was his innovative, hyper-kinetic 21st-century media creation. Who else could say they helped make both The Drudge Report and The Huffington Post what they are today? Operating with budgets the fraction of daily newspapers you will never hear of, Breitbart consistently and gleefully produced about the highest impact-per-dollar political muckraking in the mediasphere.

The circus could make even his friends wince sometimes (especially following his insanely combative and hilarious Twitter feed), but it was almost always at least interesting and frequently funny. I understand that some of his antagonists are pouring acid on his grave today, or at least bitching about the lack of James O'Keefe forensics in various obituary notices, and all I can say is: 1) He (and I, for that matter) wouldn't have it any other way, and 2) The next Breitbart-hater to match his entrepreneurial esprit-de-corps will be the first. To get a sense of that, and the man himself, I recommend this 2010 Slate profile by Christopher Beam.

I don't want to end on that inevitably polarizing note, because that's not what I valued in Andrew Breitbart. He was a funny, warm, gregarious person who typically peaked at about 2 AM near a large outdoor fire. A totally doting husband and father of four, and typing those words is kind of devastating me right now. RIP, Andrew, and my heart goes out to Susie and the kids.

reason.com