Despite the fact that right-wingers regularly lecture their followers to ignore celebrities talking about politics, Christian Toto gave a platform to one in his Nov. 11 Media Research Center column:
No one held Gavin Newsom’s feet to the fire quite like Adam Carolla did a decade ago.
The podcaster grilled the future governor repeatedly during their 2013 exchange, turning every Newsom comment on its head in real time.
And no one will ever repeat the feat. Why?
Gov. Newsom knows better than to sit behind “The Adam Carolla Show” microphones again. He’d rather wear a red MAGA hat and play 18 holes with the 45th president.
Plus, no mainstream reporter will do what Carolla did. The news media supports both Newsom and his fellow Democrats.
None of that stopped Carolla from slamming Newsom for his revisionist history over the recent pandemic.
Carolla stopped by “The Megyn Kelly Show” for a fiery hour-plus conversation. The two explored Hamas’ defenders, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ BootGate and more.
Toto didn’t mention that the interview — done when Newsom was lieutenant governor of California and was promoting a new book — also included Carolla going on a racially tinged tirade arguing that there was somenthing “flawed” about blacks and Latinos because many don’t have checking accounts or ATM access, going on to blame the problem on the usual right-wing shibboleth of single-parent households. Instead, Toto touted how Carolla pushed old right-wing grievances about pandemic lockdowns, cheering that Carolla called Newsom “a sociopathic, tyrannical dictator and no one should listen to a God-d*** word this idiot says.”
This isn’t the first time Toto has given Carolla a platform to spout his right-wing views; his Sept. 2 column cheered how Carolla “blew the whistle on pandemic hysteria from the jump” and joined with Dr. Drew — a prolific COVID misinformer and anti-vaxxer — to manufacture a conspiracy theory that climate change will be promoted the same way. Toto further huffed, “The only remaining question for the pair? Why does the public follow along, sheep-like, while the government and media corrupt the culture?”
But even a celebrity repeating right-wing talking points gets attacked if there’s not total and absolute fealty to the narrative. In his Nov. 25 column, Toto praised actress Juliana Marguiles for speaking out against anti-Semitism in a USA Today op-ed, yet attacked her anyway because she also said “I jump at the chance to march in Black Lives Matter protests”:
Full stop.
Let’s set aside how the “mostly peaceful” BLM protests caused billions in property damage.
Does Margulies realize how some Black Lives Matter groups responded to the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks?
[…]Can’t Margulies and one of the largest newspapers in the country see why name-checking BLM in this article is a profoundly bad idea?
Another explanation? Neither Margulies nor the USA Today editors knew about BLM’s ghastly affection for Hamas. The BLM Chicago image generated some media attention, but a Google News search for those key words show most mainstream news organizations ignored the shocking news story.
It’s inexcusable either way.
Toto seems not to understand that there’s no overarching Black Lives Matter organization — it’s a decentralized movement — that issues unified messaging, let alone one that ordered protesters cause property damage, as he appears to insinuate; indeed, he offers no evidence that any person convicted of property damage was acting on BLM orders.
Toto is simply repeating lazy right-wing talking points instead of doing any sort of research to see if they have any basis in fact. One might call that inexcusable.
Toto did find a celebrity who was fully on message the following week, however, devoting his Dec. 2 column to cheering actress Mayim Bialik for criticizing women’s organizations for being siient on alleged atrocities being committed in the war between Israel and Hamas.
What any of this has to do with Toto’s supposed main job of reviewing movies is anyone’s guess, other than him desperately trying to parlay that arguably lightweight endeavor into becoming a right-wing pundit.