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Dirty politics

  Wonkette trades blog for books
By DEIRDRE FULTON  |  January 18, 2006
For two years as Wonkette, Ana Marie Cox was best known for gleeful daily references to "ass-fucking" and political tawdriness in the blogosphere. Now, she’s moving on to different endeavors. Cox’s first novel, the satirical Dog Days, was released this month and she is beginning work on a nonfiction book about young political activists. But while she may be writing in a different voice, her work explores a lot of the same themes. "People’s lives are so messy in politics," she says on the phone one morning from her home in Washington, DC. "You can’t separate your work from your play, from your love, from your professional, from your personal. Like it’s all just kind of one thing and you use the same skills in all of them — the same kind of spin, and dealing, and compromising." BLOG BABE: "You can take the girl out of Wonkette, you can’t take the Wonkette out of the girl."

Wonkette.com, launched in January 2004, has been one of the lynchpins in Nick Denton’s blog empire, which includes Gawker, Fleshbot, and Gizmodo. Now Cox passes the Wonkette baton to David Lat (a steamy blogger in his own right, who used to write about the Supreme Court from the perspective of a gossipy young woman). She admits that while "you can take the girl out of Wonkette, you can’t take the Wonkette out of the girl." Thank God for that.

Q: What kind of political fiction is Dog Days?
A: I don’t think its a chick-lit book — it’s not Bridget Jones in DC — but I also don’t think it’s Primary Colors in a skirt. It’s a little bit unlike many political novels, in that while it has something of an arc about a newcomer to DC who is tempted by the excesses of this Babylon and then ultimately renounces it, there’s no real heroine, no one’s redeemed.

Q: Is it a cynical look at DC?
A: It’s pretty cynical, but I also would add that I don’t think that it’s unrelenting in its cynicism. I think it’s important to keep in mind that it’s something of a satire — it is taking the worst of Washington to an extreme. It’s not meant to be an incredibly realistic, nuanced portrait of these people. It’s meant to sort of draw out the most comic and absurd elements of life here.

Q: To what extent do you see your blog, and these books, as ways to get more people involved and interested in politics?
A: I’ve always been frustrated with the fact that people don’t realize how sexy — not necessarily in a sex-filled way, but sexy in a dirty, malicious, craven way — politics is. How come it is that when we see corruption and deceit on Desperate Housewives, that’s entertainment, but we refuse to see the absurdity and the entertainment value when it happens in politics? I mean, it’s terrible, and we should be offended.... But I think far from turning us off from politics, corruption should make us more interested. Not just because it’s something we need to watch out for, but it’s also something that’s fun to watch. So I think the book’s pretty cynical and everything, but I hope it shows that there’s this whole human side to politics here. And that that’s the fascinating side. Why do people get involved in politics, knowing that it’s corrupt and venal, and that there’s little chance of actually making a difference? People come here by the thousands every year. And I just want to know more about them. And I mean, you don’t walk through the door because you think you’re going to get laid. That’s not why someone joins a campaign. I mean, perhaps Howard Dean’s, I don’t know. But I think for most people, it has to do with actually believing in something. Then you get laid later.

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  Topics: This Just In , Internet, Science and Technology, Technology,  More more >
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Comments
Dirty politics
So you're saying that something can only be worthwile if it conforms exactly to your personal politics? Oh, and did you actually watch Team America? To call that movie 'fascist' is like calling Dr. Strangelove 'jingoistic'. You didn't get the joke.
By Fallingdown66 on 07/26/2007 at 8:41:56
Dirty politics
keough is on the money, as always. more!
By rain king on 07/27/2007 at 12:17:55
Dirty politics
So we should expect an article from Peter Keough on how the left has hijacked the documentary genre.
By Trent on 07/30/2007 at 9:43:56
Dirty politics
Wow, did you even watch Team America? Way to completely miss the point of the "patriotic" elements of the movie. As for Borat, the whole point of the movie was to show the underlying racism, sexism and homophobia that exists in America. That seems to have soared right over your head as well. I'm still trying to figure out why Knocked Up is a "right wing" movie. You might be reading a little much into it.
By Keith on 07/30/2007 at 12:03:34
Dirty politics
What a ridiculous article! Who said the left owned the kind of humor you are referencing to begin with? There are a lot of nonsensical points in this article, but let me focus on the most important. Now that the baby boomers, the former hippies, are old enough to have amassed power, the left IS the establishment. Please don't pretend that because George Bush is president that the left is powerless now. Please don't pretend that they don't control the media, and the slant of almost every news story. The days where democrats were rebels are long, long gone. In the Boston area in particular, how long can you go spouting 100% doctrine leftist politics (as Keough does) before anyone at all disagrees with you? A very long time. Not very edgy. Please don't pretend that hypocrisy is the exclusive province of the right. The left IS the establishment, the rich, the powerful, just as much as the right, if not more. That is why the jokesters now point their fingers at you on occasion. The South Park guys are Libertarians. That means that no, they are not the right, they are not the left, they just think things through for themselves without swallowing either major party's BS. It's about time the left was called on it's nonsense by even the young and hip. Stop whining about it! You sound like a spoiled 8-year-old girl.
By Uncle Julie on 08/16/2007 at 12:36:45
Dirty politics
If the "right wing" has hijacked raunch, it is quid pro quo for socialists calling themselves "progressive" as if the rest of us would have stayed in the caves. Mr. Keough, I grew up in Boston, and having an interest in the arts, I have read you, on occasion, since I was a kid. I have always known, since that first review, that you were a self important shill for the left (sorry, the "progressives"), but I never thought of you as obtuse until now. I am SHOCKED at the way you so painfully missed the point of Team America. Anyway, it's fun to watch you wring your hands like your parents generation did about yours. Oh- and are you not aware of how "fascist" YOU sound? Apparently not. "Meet the new boss....he's the same as the old boss." -The Who (I thought I'd use a reference you'd be comfortable with at your age. *smirk*)
By MikeyV on 08/18/2007 at 5:39:08

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