Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: To POTUS, With Love

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I like Jim Morin's take on the Obama speech in Tucson, not only because I agree with it, but because it leaves a great deal to be discussed, largely based on the president's facial expression.

I looked on YouTube for a clip from "To Sir With Love," hoping to find something from early in the film, when Braithwaite walks into the uncivilized chaos of the classroom and begins his process of taking control by insisting that the students refer to him as "Sir" and that they address each other with similar respect. Either that or a clip from his conversations in the teachers' lounge, where the burned-out faculty assure him that he's wasting his time and that these nasty little hellions aren't worth the effort.

Couldn't find either, but — Sidney Poitier-style presence aside — that feels like the parallel: The civilized, thoughtful person who finds himself both appalled by the horrors around him and unsupported by those who, theoretically, should be his allies.

In the movie, the question is whether "Sir" will accept another, less thankless, job as an engineer or return to teaching. For Obama, it's a little different, since, if he does return in 2012, he'll be able to continue to work with the same class, rather than starting over with a new set of unkempt barbarians.

It's also a little different in that we never meet the teacher who "Sir" replaced, the one who was driven from the classroom by the little thugs. In this version, we find him building houses for the poor and monitoring elections around the world, apparently no worse for having missed out on spending four more lonely years being the only adult in the room, and, for the most part, undisturbed by being largely remembered for his failure to gain that second term.

 

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Comments 10

  1. Excellent cartoon. Excellent parallel. Thanks for starting my day out well, again.

  2. I’m reminded of when, a few months ago, there were those who were criticizing Obama for his lack of “fire,” and they wanted him to get angry or excited about something. It seems that he’s showing them that being more calm and collected is preferrable.

  3. I’m glad I’m not the only person who thinks that having a grownup for president is a nice change. Even if I am older than he is.
    BTW, the BBC did a good radio adaptation of To Sir with Love, and a sequel, Public Servant, in which he is temporarily working for the social services/child welfare department. They show up occasionally on BBC Radio 7.

  4. Sidney Poitier projected a similar presence in “In the Heat of the Night” when he replied to the police chief “They call me MISTER Tibbs.”

  5. btw: I enjoy this site and visit often. Keep up the good work. -ML

  6. What’s the objection to open captioning for the hearing impaired?

  7. Thanks — as to the comparison (which is mine and not Morin’s), I thought about some other “Blackboard Jungle” type movies, including that one, but most didn’t make the point I wanted. For instance, in “Dangerous Minds,” she accepts their culture and works it into her goals, which is just the opposite. In “Stand By Me,” he insists that they show pride and have confidence, which is related to what happened in “To Sir With Love” but isn’t much related to what Obama asked for in Tucson. “To Sir With Love” was the right movie — familiar to most of the audience and based on a man insisting on civilized behavior from a chaotic group, and getting no support from those who say, “It won’t work” and “It’s always been this way” and “You can’t change them.”
    It would, in fact, have been racist to say, “Oh, but he’s also black. Can’t use that one!”

  8. And, to expand on Mark’s comment — that’s not a stage direction, it’s a description of what has just happened. Flip on your closed-captioning some time and you’ll see how it works.

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