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Glenn Beck chided First Lady Michelle Obama for her recent oil spill outfit on Thursday’s “The O’Reilly Factor.” FLOTUS wore a white top with black splotches on it and white capris, which was, according to Beck, “the most Marie Antoinette of anything with Michelle Obama….Who pulls this dress out of the closet and is like, ‘you know, I think I’m going to do a tour of the oil spill?’” We didn’t think much of it because that type of print is incidentally in this season and for fall, but Beck, a budding fashionista, called Michelle’s outfit an “outrage.”

Thanks to Daily Intel!

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I’ve been living in a fool’s paradise. I’ve been walking around for three weeks unaware that Glenn Beck says I say he’s a plagiarist. He’s mistaken. I said he was a sucker.

Back in June, I posted something here about a novel with Glenn Beck’s name on the cover called The Overton Window. I pointed out that it shared a lot of pretty tired plotting with a sad, self-published piece of jerk-off fan-fiction called Circumference of Darkness. And I pointed out that the similarities were hardly surprising, since a man named Jack Henderson was both the author of Circumference and the ghostwriter of Overstock, or Overweight, or whatever Beck’s awful book was called.

You don’t even have to look it up. Here’s what my post said:

So why — except for the completely inverted politics — does The Overton Window read so much like Circumference of Darkness? Because they were written by the same guy, a 52-year-old computer programmer named Jack Henderson.

He gets sole credit on Circumference. (And why shouldn’t he? He published it himself.) On Overton, he gets thanked by Beck for “pouring his heart and soul into this project.”

And, apparently, his leftover plot.

My point was that Beck, a lazy chiseler, had done the literary equivalent of buying a term paper online, and that the bottom feeder who’d sold it to him had sold it elsewhere before. I don’t know how much clearer I could have been.

It wasn’t, as it turns out, clear enough for Glenn Beck. He says I’ve accused him of plagiarism.

Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha… ahh… ha-ha-ha-ha. I’m sorry (gasp) I am sorry (gasp) Media Matters is reporting today, uh, and the Huffington Post is reporting today that “Beck’s book…” I’m quoting from the Washington Post… “Beck’s book…. the ah, uhm, ah, Overton Window, resembles a 2005 techno-thriller by a 52-year-old computer programmer named Jack Henderson. Chris Kelly points out that Beck’s book is very much like Henderson’s Circumference of Darkness…

Why the laughter? The Washington Post had panned Overdone, and that, for the purpose of the Beck program, makes the very mention of its name ipso facto hilarious.

That’s weird.

Uh-oh. Sarcasm.

They’re saying that I plagiarized Jack Henderson’s book, because it’s very similar. Stu, could you do me a favor. Could you o… (wheeze… heh-heh…) could you open the ah, the ah Overton Window for me… (babble from fluffers) No, I think it’s right under my name… whose name is there? (unintelligible sycophancy) Jack Henderson! I selected Jack Henderson to help write this book because I read Circumference of Darkness!

Your guess is as good as mine about what point he thinks he’s proving. But it’s killing his employees.

Only about four people read it and it was BRILLIANT. IT WAS BRILLIANT.

No, Smiley’s People was brilliant. Circumference of Darkness is so sad it gives you Contact Loser.

I wrote it…

He means “I read it,” but I swear he says “I wrote it.”

.. and I called Kevin while I was on tour and I said, “Kevin, uhm, I need someone to help me write this story… and I told him the story over like a three day period and he said, “Ach, I know who can help.” He said, “I’m going to send you a book.”

If you’ve lost the thread of this narrative, it’s because Beck has jumped back in time, not unlike Martin Amis’s Time’s Arrow. Another book Beck didn’t write.

While I was on tour I started to read Jack Henderson’s book. And I said, “Well let’s see if we can get him to write.” Jack has been working on this… it’s pretty hard to steal from someone you employ.

Tell that to Rush Limbaugh’s maid.

I’m in genuine awe of Beck’s ability to get self-righteous about paying someone else to do his work, so he can put his own name on it and foist it on rubes. But the problem is I never said Beck stole anything. I said Henderson stole from him. By selling him a used book.

You know (wheeze) and who helped write and who you credit, but there. There’s the Huffington Post… GOOD JOB.

Thanks?

You could have figured that out by reading his name underneath mine.

But I did figure it out by reading his name underneath yours. That’s what I wrote.

Yer smart. Unbelievable.

Oh for heaven’s sake.

I don’t want to get in a pissing match with Glenn Beck, but I also resent being pissed on by Glenn Beck. So let me be as clear as I can possibly be:

I never said Glenn Beck stole The Overbite Window. He is just as much its author as Sarah Ferguson is the author of Budgie the Helicopter. He bought it, fair and square.

The only people from whom he’s stolen anything are his readers.



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Earlier this month, Glenn Beck did what precious few authors have tried and failed to do over the past four weeks: unseat Stieg Larsson from the top of the New York Times bestseller list. Beck’s thriller The Overton Window topped the charts with more than 132,000 copies sold in its first week, according to Nielsen Bookscan (which tracks approximately 75% of total book sales). This isn’t exactly new territory for Beck, who has seen his name at the top of the charts in fiction, non-fiction, and even children’s picture books. Since 2003, Fox News’s conservative host has sold almost 5 million copies of his books in the United States alone.

Not only do Beck’s books sell at record levels, but so do his book picks. Every month or so, Beck holds up his latest choice from one of his favorite genres: thrillers, non-fiction (mainly about the founding fathers), and polemics. Like Oprah, Beck has turned into a literary tastemaker and for the authors he’s interviewed on his programs and their publishers, the results are staggering. George Washington’s Sacred Fire, Peter Lillback’s 1,200-page biography first published by the tiny Providence Forum Press in 2006, has sold more than 45,000 copies this year, according to Bookscan. The vast majority of those sales coming after Lilliback appeared on Beck’s television show in mid-May.

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Stewart took it to Glenn Beck last night. And as usual, it was ridiculously entertaining.

On a recent episode of his show, Beck was seen touting that Fox News was the only media outlet bold enough to air footage of the Israeli flotilla raid.

It wasn’t. Stewart proceeded to highlight the seemingly endless list of networks who had also aired the footage (everyone from CBS to Univision!). And making the lie even worse was the fact that all the instances came well before the airing of the Beck episode in question.

WATCH:



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UPDATE: Glenn Beck has issued a statement, addressing the matter described below:

In discussing how President Obama uses children to shield himself from criticism, I broke my own rule about leaving kids out of political debates. The children of public figures should be left on the sidelines. It was a stupid mistake and I apologize–and as a dad I should have known better.

I think that was the right thing to do under the circumstances.

—–

So, call me crazy, but I’m beginning to think that Fox News infotainer Glenn Beck’s principles lack some internal moral consistency.

See, a couple of days ago, Beck interviewed sometime-Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, and he took what appeared to be a principled stand on the matter of how people should treat the families of public figures. Speaking with Palin, Beck decried the tactic: “Leave my family, leave people’s families alone…When it was Bill Clinton, you don’t go after Chelsea Clinton. You don’t talk about the Bush kids. Now, the minute they get into politics, that’s a different story. You leave the families alone.”

Now, Beck’s stand here was rooted in the belief that Sarah Palin’s new neighbor, journalist Joe McGinnis, moved in next door to her with the intention of being a danger to Palin’s children. That is, as they say, some horsedung. Nevertheless, I can definitely get on board with the whole “leave the families alone” idea. Glenn Beck has had a long time to reflect upon that time he mocked a woman’s miscarriage because her husband committed the terrible crime of being the host of a rival morning show in the same market as Beck. Maybe he felt bad about that! But whatever the reason, decrying the practice of criticizing the families of public figures is, at the root, very laudable.

Here’s the thing, though: Beck was only able to abide by those principles for a few hours. On this morning’s broadcast of his radio show, he chucked all of that out the window and went on an extended jag of mocking Malia Obama, who had the temerity to get herself caught up in the news cycle:

LISTEN:

Gah, here is some of the transcript of this thing:

BECK: (imitating Malia) Daddy? Daddy? Daddy, did you plug the hole yet? Daddy?

PAT GRAY (co-host): (imitating Obama) No I didn’t, honey.

BECK: (imitating Malia) Daddy, I know you’re better than [unintelligible]

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Mm-hmm, big country.

BECK: (imitating Malia) And I was wondering if you’ve plugged that hole yet.

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Honey, not yet.

BECK: (imitating Malia) Why not, daddy? But daddy–

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Not time yet, honey. Hasn’t done enough damage.

BECK: (imitating Malia) Daddy?

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Not enough damage yet, honey.

BECK: (imitating Malia) Daddy?

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Yeah?

BECK: (imitating Malia) Why do you hate black people so much?

GRAY: (imitating Obama) I’m part white, honey.

BECK: (imitating Malia) What?

GRAY: (imitating Obama) What?

BECK: (imitating Malia) What’d you say?

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Excuse me?

BECK: (laughing) This is such a ridiculous — this is such a ridiculous thing that his daughter– (imitating Malia) Daddy?

GRAY: It’s so stupid.

BECK: How old is his daughter? Like, thirteen?

GRAY: Well, one of them’s, I think, thirteen, one’s eleven, or something.

BECK: “Did you plug the hole yet, daddy?” Is that’s their — that’s the level of their education, that they’re coming to — they’re coming to daddy and saying ‘Daddy, did you plug the hole yet?’ ” Plug the hole!

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Yes, I was doing some deep-sea diving yesterday, and–

BECK: (imitating Malia) Daddy?

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Yeah, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, I was doing–

BECK: (imitating Malia) Why–

GRAY: (imitating Obama) Yeah, honey, I’m–

BECK (imitating Malia) Why, why, why, why, do you still let the polar bears die? Daddy, why do you still let Sarah Palin destroy the environment? Why are — Daddy, why don’t you just put her in some sort of a camp?

And on and on it goes like that.

So, to revise the central tenets of Beck’s “leave the families alone” credo, people should only criticize the children of public figures of people whom Glenn Beck doesn’t like, including the ones who are stillborn.

[Would you like to follow me on Twitter? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com -- learn more about our media monitoring project here.]



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