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And The Award for Best Voiceover of The Political Season Goes to...

October 31, 2008 - 1:18pm


It may be just that your blogger has a weakness for films such as Jackie Brown and Pulp Fiction, and has long suggested that the entire South Bay region of Los Angeles be known widely as "Tarantino-land." But I've not heard a better, more striking voiceover than the one to this No on Prop 8 ad. The voice belongs to actor Samuel L. Jackson, and no one else could quite deliver the following line in the same way: "That was a sorry time in our history."

One caveat: the message -- linking the fight for gay marriage to previous fights against racial and ethnic discrimination -- is a risky one. In interviews I did for pieces in the Washington Post, I was struck by the anger about churchgoers about this particular sort of argument. To them, it sounds as though their faith is being called racist. 

Prop. 8 and California's miscegenation laws

I saw this ad several times in the San Francisco Bay Area and noticed Jackson's voice over. I can see why some voters wouldn't like the comparison to the state's earlier miscegenation laws. But it wasn't as if challenges to those laws were received tolerantly at the time. At least one state senator, Jack Tenney, loudly construed those challenges as a Communist plot. I turned up a great example of this in my research on Carey McWilliams, though the transcript of his appearance before the Committee on Un-American Activity in California (a.k.a. the Tenney Committee) still hasn't been made public.

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