Bill Maher has come in for tons of criticism since he opted to have dinner with President Donald Trump, but none of it was as biting as a recent takedown by "Seinfeld" creator Larry David.
In an essay for the New York Times called "My Dinner With Adolf," David took Maher to task for attempting to soften the image of a fascist strongman. While David never mentions the "Real Time" host by name, the timing of the piece and its main character's need to hear out all sides past the point of ludicrousness make the target clear.
David's fictional meeting with Adolf Hitler echoes many of the points that Maher has made in the days since he dined with Trump. Maher, a crochety liberal-leaning comic who has grown more crochety and less liberal as societal norms have passed him by, marvelled at the fact that he could make the commander-in-chief laugh.
"I’ve never seen him laugh in public. But he does, including at himself. And it’s not fake," Maher said of Trump. "Believe me, as a comedian of 40 years, I know a fake laugh when I hear it."
Standing in front of the führer, David's narrator has a similar epiphany.
“Here I was, prepared to meet Hitler, the one I’d seen and heard—the public Hitler,” David wrote. “But this private Hitler was a completely different animal. And oddly enough, this one seemed more authentic, like this was the real Hitler. The whole thing had my head spinning.”
David ends the piece with the clueless narrator missing the fact that he's been played. While he still thinks of himself as a critic of history's greatest monster, he snaps a smart salute to Hitler all the same.
”'I must say, mein Führer, I’m so thankful I came. Although we disagree on many issues, it doesn’t mean that we have to hate each other,'" he says before Sieg Heil-ing in the Berlin night.
ElderPimpx on April 22nd, 2025 at 05:54 UTC »
Larry David: My Dinner With Adolf
RyloKloon on April 22nd, 2025 at 04:49 UTC »
I find it so strange that some people could ever be hoodwinked by Trump in any context. I've never needed someone to sit down and explain exactly why he's a bad person, he just exudes it from every pore. It's not like my only frame of reference is his political speeches or policy. I watched the Joe Rogan interview. I watched all these streams where he's being nice.
Even when he's not being outwardly aggressive, he is still completely and utterly insufferable. He can't even tell you about knickknacks on the wall without sounding like a sleazy used car salesman. He's a grifter and a liar and a braggart and a liar again. It's just who he is in his soul and I've never seen him behave in a way that suggests he's an actual human being. He's like an empty vessel being puppeted by demons.
I'm certain I couldn't stand in a room with him for five minutes. He just has no redeeming qualities.
ffwshi on April 22nd, 2025 at 03:25 UTC »
Pretty, pretty, pretty good. Hope angry little old man Bill Maher reads it..