NP Rank:
Obama-backer Oprah says no Sarah Palin on her TV show
The 44-year-old Palin is the first female nominee on a Republican presidential ticket in the party's 164-year history, though she is little-known outside Alaska, where she was elected a reform governor in 2006.
Palin, a former high school basketball star and beauty pageant contestant, is the mother of five, an outdoorswoman and part owner in her husband Todd's commercial fishing business.
This past year Oprah endorsed Barack Obama for president. It was the first time she became publicly involved in politics.
Oprah emceed numerous rallies for the freshman Democrat senator in key caucus and primary states, drawing large crowds, donations, media coverage and many new volunteers. She also hosted a lucrative fundraiser at one of her homes, near Santa Barbara. But she has so many we can't count 'em.
Oprah's political involvement, as noted previously by...
...The Ticket, hurt her in TV ratings, though she remains clearly the most-watched such show.
Many commentors on Ticket items expressed resentment that Winfrey, who made her fortune off appealing to women, would desert the first serious female candidate to vie for her party's nomination, Hillary Clinton, another Democrat, in favor of a male candidate, Obama. She also did not have Clinton on her program during the campaign.
TMZ, the widely-read celebrity website, asked Winfrey about having Palin on her program to describe her life and views to other American women.
In a post earlier today, TMZ said Winfrey replied, "There has been absolutely no discussion about having Sarah Palin on my show."
According to TMZ, Winfrey also said: "At the beginning of this presidential campaign when I decided that I was going to take my first public stance in support of a candidate, I made the decision not to use my show as a platform for any of the candidates."
Winfrey also said she would "love" to have the Republican candidate on her show, but only after the Nov. 4 election, which pits the Illinois Democrat Obama against Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain.
Winfrey has had Obama on her program two previous times, in January 2005 and again in the fall of 2006 shortly before he announced his presidential candidacy.
What do Ticket readers think? Is this fair? Would you watch an Oprah show with Palin and/or Obama? Do you still watch Oprah's program in the first place?
September 6, 2008 at 04:56 am by politisite, 493 views, 13 comments
Crowd Power
-
politisite
Columbia, South Carolina, United States



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (13)
at 05:20 on September 6th, 2008
I'm not really surprised, since her show is 100% opinion and she's been an Obama supporter from day one. She's probably the most powerful person in television, and saw her opportunity to use it.
at 15:21 on September 6th, 2008
Not any more she's the most powerful person in TV land. Audiences can be very fickle, and they don't like it when someone says "live and act this way, ya'll"--and then they violate their own dictum.
at 07:18 on September 10th, 2008
at 07:20 on September 10th, 2008
Thanks
at 07:18 on September 10th, 2008
Thanks
- reply
Rick F in FL (not verified)at 15:12 on September 6th, 2008
Oprah has shown her true colors! She has made her fortune from adoring female fans and now she disses them all.
Oprah said: " I agree that Sarah Palin would be a fantastic interview, and I would love to have her on after the campaign is over."
I think Sarah will be a little too busy with her new VP responsibilities to make an appearance on the Oprah show.
I hope women all over the country see this lie for what it is, a blatant attempt to only support Obama and not give any air time to a McCain ticket.
Bad form Oprah, let's see how the women of America react to your racism.
at 15:19 on September 6th, 2008
Yea, she's had Obama on twice. And now she says that she won't let her TV show be "used" for political purposes--and, of course, putting Obama on, and putting the name "Oprah" behind Obama isn't using her name, TV show, or empire. At least not according to her. Add me to the many who have bailed on Oprah.
at 15:37 on September 6th, 2008
[chuckle]
made her fortune from adoring female fans and now she disses them all.
Well, if you want an idea about how the GOP really feels about women candidates, watch this.
Watch the video and then see if you think the above GOP ranting makes any sense. Sad, so many are soooo uncomfortable defending McCain and his record that all they can do is attack, even Oprah.
[chuckle]
at 15:35 on September 6th, 2008
it's her show, she has the right to use it in whatever manner she chooses!
That's the wonderful thing about America that the republicans seem to forget.
at 15:41 on September 6th, 2008
You mean the GOP who says it's your right to do as you wish with your show, but only if it pleases them?
Or do you mean the Republicans who did away with the Fairness Doctrine, requiring a conscious effort to present all sides of an issue?
Or would this be the Republicans so disappointed in the presidential candidate they got stuck with that they cannot in good conscience defend his record and all that is left is vitriol for all?
at 07:22 on September 10th, 2008
I would say the same would be the case is the tables were turned
at 07:21 on September 10th, 2008
our right. it is not a news program
- reply
independant black male (not verified)at 08:51 on September 8th, 2008
You mean the GOP who says it's your right to do as you wish with your show, but only if it pleases them?
Or do you mean the Republicans who did away with the Fairness Doctrine, requiring a conscious effort to present all sides of an issue?
Or would this be the Republicans so disappointed in the presidential candidate they got stuck with that they cannot in good conscience defend his record and all that is left is vitriol for all?
You're so right, we need Jimmy Carter back to fix all these terrible things! Or maybe if we could get a democrat controlled congress they would fix it? OH- I forgot, we do have a democrat controlled congress and they haven't done squat! Never cared for Oprah and her reverse racism much either.