Radio commentator Rush Limbaugh set off a firestorm last week when he took a
swipe at "The Dark Knight Rises" and its main villain, Bane -- a name which he
said Democrats were relating to Bain Capital, the company whose record has
been used by Democrats to attack Republican presidential candidate Mitt
Romney.
"Do you think it is accidental that the name of the really vicious,
fire-breathing, four-eyed, whatever-it-is villain in this movie is named
Bane?" Mr. Limbaugh asked, even while admitting that the movie has been in the
works for years before its Friday release date.
However, he did not mention that Bane first appeared in DC Comics'
"Batman: Vengeance of Bane No. 1" in 1993, nor did he say that the character has
been seen on film previously, played by the late pro wrestler Robert Swenson
in 1997's "Batman & Robin."
Yet Mr. Limbaugh went on: "So this evil villain in the new Batman movie
is named Bane. And there's discussion out there as to whether or not this was
purposeful and whether or not it will influence voters. [The movie's] going to
have a lot of people. The audience is going to be huge. A lot of people are
going to see the movie. And it's a lot of brain-dead people, entertainment,
the pop culture crowd, and they're going to hear Bane in the movie and they're
going to associate Bain.
"And the thought is that when they're going to start paying attention to
the campaign later in the year, and Obama and the Democrats keep talking about
Bain, not Bain Capital but Romney and Bain, that these people will start
thinking back to the Batman movies, 'Oh yeah, I know who that is!' "
The Washington Post reported that Mr. Limbaugh clarified his earlier
statement on Wednesday. "More people are concerned about whatever I might have
said or didn't say about a Batman villain than they are about their own jobs,"
the Post quoted Mr. Limbaugh as saying.
The radio talker denied implying that filmmaker Christopher Nolan and his
writer-brother Jonathan Nolan were in any way in cahoots with the Obama 2012
campaign, The Associated Press said. Mr. Limbaugh said the point was: "Batman
is Romney. The good guy is Romney."
Perhaps because he has not seen the movie he was commenting on, he did
not point out that fictional character Batman also is fictional billionaire
Bruce Wayne (yes, we "entertainment, pop culture" types know the difference)
and SPOILER ALERT! how Wayne's business acumen is portrayed in "The Dark
Knight Rises." It is Catwoman who gives voice to the 99 percenters when she
says, "You're all going to wonder how you could live so large and leave so
little for the rest of us."
Perhaps Mr. Limbaugh should be worried about her.
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News Column
Rush Limbaugh and the Bane Conspiracy
July 23, 2012
Sharon Eberson
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Source: (c)2012 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Distributed by MCT Information Services
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