Liberal couple broadcasts nationwide

He could be anywhere. In
front of you in the HyVee checkout line, or maybe behind. Go to church?
Careful, now: The man known as Driftglass is an usher. The church’s
name, like Driftglass’s true identity, is best kept confidential. He
claims, even swears, that he does not take money from the collection
plate.
This is what
it’s like for a diehard liberal who’s spent the past decade podcasting
from Springfield in a blue version of Rush Limbaugh, pointing out the
foibles of Republicans, CNN, Fox News and other GOP enablers in the
media. He has a job, he pays taxes, but he occasionally encounters
Republicans in his professional life, and so Driftglass is not
necessarily eager to go on Front Street, even though he and his wife,
Frances Langum, aka Blue Gal, produce a weekly podcast that is available
to anyone with internet access.
“I
don’t want my politics to get in the room before I do,” explains
Driftglass of his insistence on anonymity. His moniker comes from a
collection of science fiction short stories authored by Samuel Delany.
“It means industrial waste glass that has been pounded into something
that looks beautiful.”
After
more than 400 episodes, Langum and her husband have this down pat. With
themselves as bosses, butter-smooth voices made for radio and no
commercials to squeeze in, their podcast lasts about an hour, and if it
runs a few minutes over or under, no biggie. It sounds remarkably
professional as the couple sprints from one topic to the next, with nary
an “er” or “ah” or “um” marking time as they consider what they should
say next.
They do their homework, making notes throughout the week so that
they can discuss such nearly forgotten Republicans as Jacob Javits
(worthy of respect) alongside more familiar names such as Newt Gingrich
(boo, hiss) with aplomb.
They
don’t flinch from f-bombs, and the media isn’t spared. Fox News? “It
helps to understand it as a puppet show,” Driftglass says. Donald
Trump’s least-favorite network is no better. “CNN puts red ants and
black ants in a jar, shakes them up and passes it off as debate and
drama,” Langum asserts. How about public radio? “Nice, polite
Republicans – that’s what NPR stands for among liberals,” she says. The
couple rejects notions that both the right and left are up to the same
tricks in a never-ending battle for hearts and minds.
“We
give our listeners a vocabulary to understand the world that we live
in,” Driftglass says. “When you turn on CNN, you see this nonsense.
Every time you hear someone in the media say, reflexively, ‘It’s both
sides, it’s both sides, it’s both sides,’ that’s an enabling mechanism
for conservatives.”
The couple’s fans are nationwide, as became apparent when the New York Times recently
ran a story on Pod Save America, a podcast produced by refugees from
the Obama administration who have a reported 1.5 million listeners.
Langum and Driftglass, who call their show The Professional Left, have
considerably fewer, but a handful jumped in on the comment section
accompanying the Times story, praising the Springfield couple.
Graphics on their website, which features a cornfield and The Cornfield
Resistance as a tagline, are top notch and came courtesy of a listener
in Texas. Austin, naturally.
Listeners can’t call in, but being a couple helps the show, they say.
“It’s
a conversation between two people who really care about each other,”
Langum says. “We are also two married people who are raising kids who
are in the public school system. I’m making sure my son, who has autism,
has health insurance. That’s how people connect. These are real people,
really talking to people about their problems.”
They confess they were surprised by Trump’s election.
“Hillary
Clinton had a 92-percent chance of winning,” Langum says. “That’s why
she lost. We got soft. We believed America was too good to vote for
Donald Trump and elect him.”
The
day after the election, Driftglass told listeners that he and his wife
were better positioned to explain Trump’s victory than talking heads on
cable television. They didn’t draw a pretty picture.
“We
live in the middle of middle America,” he said a year ago. “We have
been saying, as liberals, ‘This is a divided country.’ There are two
Americas out there. You’d better get it through your head: One of them
wants to kick the shit out of the other one just to wipe the smug look
off our face. They don’t care about policy. They don’t care about the
environment. They care about making liberals cry.”
Have
they made a difference? “We certainly have formed a community, which is
what successful podcasts do,” Langum says. “We’re here to provide
solace and remind people that it’s possible to hold two ideas in your
head at the same time.”
Listen to The Professional Left at http// professionalleft.blogspot.com.
Contact Bruce Rushton at [email protected].