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DetailedEntrails
02-27-2009, 08:49 AM
http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2009/02/26/PH2009022600120.jpg

Joe the Author, Plumbing New Lows in Interest

By Paul Farhi
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 26, 2009; Page C01

Joe the Plumber (no longer a plumber; first name actually Samuel) popped into our town yesterday evening to sell his new book and to remind people that he's still a plain and simple guy. Mission accomplished, on at least one of his missions.

About 11 people wandered into the rows of seats set up hopefully in the basement of a downtown Border's bookstore to hear Joe speak. Joe addressed them from behind a lectern and with a microphone, but that seemed unnecessarily formal.

If you've already forgotten "Joe" Wurzelbacher, 35, of Toledo, Ohio, it just goes to show you how ephemeral the life of a plain-speaking, Republican Everyman is these days. Joe was the square-jawed guy briefly drafted by John McCain's campaign to be its Voice of Regular Folks. Joe got a couple of news cycles' worth of attention starting on Oct. 12 -- he remembers the date clearly -- when he was videotaped confronting Barack Obama about his small-business tax plans. He later called Obama's plans "socialism."

Now, only a few months later, he's kind of like a vestigial tail, a leftover artifact from a forgotten time. He's Clara Peller, Willie Horton or Gennifer Flowers -- names that are the questions in a "Jeopardy!" category called "Presidential Campaign Distractions." To his credit, Wurzelbacher is hip to the audacity of hype: "I get e-mails all the time from people asking me when my 15 minutes is going to expire," he grinned after his talk. "Sometimes they just write, '15 . . . 14:59 . . . 14:58 . . .' "

It's fair to say Joe's appearance at Borders at 18th and L streets wasn't eagerly anticipated. People just kind of shuffled over when Joe strode in with Thomas N. Tabback, the co-author of "Joe the Plumber: Fighting for the American Dream." Annie Hickman, a young woman whom Wurzelbacher called "sweetie" during a brief Q&A, was browsing when the PA announced that Joe was in the house. "I'm missing pottery class for this," she said.
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Lawyer Alana Hecht was curious. "I was upstairs reading 'Dreams From My Father,' " Obama's memoir. "It's just fate. Who could leave when this is happening?" She and Hickman laughed. Washington, such a weird town.

Joe had something to say about hard work and having good values; it's probably in his book, but he said it bluntly and plainly. He has presence; he's solidly built, with a shiny bullet head, and large, workingman's hands. "I'm just your average guy," he said several times.

He wore a gray long-sleeve undershirt and baggy jeans, and looked as if he just walked in from a construction site. Joe says he plans to work in construction (hello, stimulus package!) once his gig doing commentary for a conservative Web site runs out at the end of March. Plumbing? Not happening. "I show up on a plumbing job and the first thing someone's going to say is 'Joe the Plumber didn't do the job right,' " he said. "The next thing you know, it's on the national news. It would be naive to go back to it."

Wurzelbacher says he's still no fan of Obama, but confessed that he never liked McCain all that much, either. Nor has he cared for the politicians he's met on Capitol Hill. "Liars and thieves," he called them.

The only heat generated by Joe's appearance last night came when a young man named Jabari Zakiya recounted great moments in American racism (slavery, annihilation of Native Americans, segregation, etc.) and asked Wurzelbacher if the "hegemony" of the white man in America is "doomed" now that five states and the District of Columbia have majority minority populations.

Joe replied that he believes "our American heritage is being torn apart" by flag burners, critics of the military, and those who mock Christian values. He expressed his admiration for patriotic immigrants, and said he dislikes terms like African American and Asian American ("We're all Americans," he said). For some reason, he concluded by saying, "America has always been a kick-butt, take-names kind of country."

Wurzelbacher was scheduled to speak and sign books for three hours, but the Joe Show was over in 55 minutes. Total copies of "Joe the Plumber" sold: five.




Hes gotta just give it a rest. His 15 minutes are over. That picture is almost sad.

Behan
02-27-2009, 08:56 AM
His 15 minutes are not up until they stop writing articles about him (and posting them on forums).

Andreas
02-27-2009, 08:59 AM
http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/1378/1212104121158.jpg

DetailedEntrails
02-27-2009, 09:03 AM
http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/1378/1212104121158.jpg

Now thats the saddest picture ive seen. :-(

SBL
02-27-2009, 11:47 AM
Now thats the saddest picture ive seen. :-(

X2. rofl:-(rofl:-(

Hollis
02-27-2009, 11:49 AM
You guys should of read, "Of mice and men"


"Even the best laid plans of mice and men often goes astray"

ronnieraygun
02-27-2009, 11:53 AM
Virgil FTW.


That guy will make out just fine, if you get a book deal and the kind of publicity he has gotten, you've done just fine. He's gotten drowned out by real problems now, not some guy that's mad because he found out running your own business can kick your ass.

Merfeller
02-27-2009, 11:58 AM
Anyone who has ever worked in a Borders or Barnes and Noble knows that many book signings go like this. It's always sad to see an author sitting there with that "God, I don't want to be here" look. In this case, though, I hope he gets the hint. If I never hear the words "Joe the plumber" again it will be too soon.

el borracho
02-27-2009, 12:10 PM
Ugh, I hate when stores do that, it's always terribly awkward.

redvand
02-27-2009, 12:12 PM
Let see - a strong conservative promoting a book in Washington DC. :bash:

He was in DC covering CPAC for Pajama whatever. I heard him on one of the talk radio shows that were doing their show from CPAC. woot

Mackie
02-27-2009, 12:16 PM
Now thats the saddest picture ive seen. :-(

+ the thread title. rofl

Invisigoth
02-27-2009, 12:20 PM
strong conservative

roflroflroflroflroflroflrofl

redvand
02-27-2009, 12:24 PM
Strong conservative
roflroflroflroflroflroflrofl

He is more conservative than the CINOs in Congress.

DetailedEntrails
02-27-2009, 12:41 PM
Anyone who has ever worked in a Borders or Barnes and Noble knows that many book signings go like this. It's always sad to see an author sitting there with that "God, I don't want to be here" look. In this case, though, I hope he gets the hint. If I never hear the words "Joe the plumber" again it will be too soon.

Do they get paid for those appearances or do they just take the publicity as payment enough?

DetailedEntrails
02-27-2009, 12:44 PM
He is more conservative than the CINOs in Congress.

He is more of what makes them look bad. Id almost put him up as the GOP's Roland Burris. Speaking of Burris i dont wanna say something to nasty or incendiary but i...i just want him to end. I dont care how.

Merfeller
02-27-2009, 02:44 PM
Do they get paid for those appearances or do they just take the publicity as payment enough?

Promising or big money or controversial authors (as determined by the publishing house) are usually contractually obligated to do appearances and the publisher reps set up the signings with the store's management. In many cases they fail, as we can see here. I remember quite a few signings that went horribly wrong, even with authors who are now popular. Dan Brown pre-Da Vinci Code comes to mind. I remember him sitting alone in the Barnes and Noble Cafe for a couple of hours. One always feels bad for the person but I guess it's part of the game.

seraosha
02-27-2009, 05:27 PM
Saw the same thing at a Clive Barker book signing. Got my books and comics signed, stood around, went to my car put my stuff away, went back.

We went out to lunch, really nice guy, but talk about awkward. This was after the Hellraiser movies too, I thought it would be packed. He laughed it off, but you got to wonder if it hurts or if it's just business as usual.

Oh and "Joe the Plumber".

DPM_Sheep
02-27-2009, 05:47 PM
Saw the same thing at a Clive Barker book signing. Got my books and comics signed, stood around, went to my car put my stuff away, went back.

We went out to lunch, really nice guy, but talk about awkward. This was after the Hellraiser movies too, I thought it would be packed. He laughed it off, but you got to wonder if it hurts or if it's just business as usual.

Oh and "Joe the Plumber".

I'd figure business as usual. If you've got a publishing deal you're already 20 wrungs higher up the ladder than most writers ever get and by that stage, you'll have seen so many rejection letters and critiques you'll have very thick skin.

I think a large part of why these things go so badly is that they're very poorly advertised. I walked into an independant bookstore in my home town to see Michael Palin (of Python fame) chatting with the staff.

There weren't more that 20 people in there, even I'd had no idea he'd was coming and at the time, I went in that bookstore pretty regularly.

California Joe
02-27-2009, 06:04 PM
Let see - a strong conservative promoting a book in Washington DC. :bash:

He was in DC covering CPAC for Pajama whatever. I heard him on one of the talk radio shows that were doing their show from CPAC. woot

Kudos to you for being as dense as that ****. You realize that he was a prop for McCain when he was extremely desperate to pull out a win right? Like Gallagher and the watermelon. Joe was the watermelon.

DetailedEntrails
02-27-2009, 07:08 PM
Kudos to you for being as dense as that ****. You realize that he was a prop for McCain when he was extremely desperate to pull out a win right? Like Gallagher and the watermelon. Joe was the watermelon.

Bwahahahahhaha. Joe was a total rally monkey for redvand. If people still fail to see what he was there for then they are just dim.

domokun
02-27-2009, 07:18 PM
Now thats the saddest picture ive seen. :-(

x3... This isn't first place I'd expect to empathy for lonely guy who is eating lot of steroids. :roll:

redvand
02-27-2009, 08:43 PM
MSNBC interview (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/29414757#29414757) of Joe the Plumber

For you socialist democrats, the video will make your day.

Invisigoth
02-27-2009, 11:24 PM
Sorry but Joe the plumber is not a real conservative. Shallow, fiercely anti-intellectual and exclusionary might be the characteristics of Limbaugh, Hannity and Joe the Plumber, but they are not the characteristics of conservatism.

Do you really want the Republican Party to be the party of these guys?

gaijinsamurai
02-28-2009, 04:42 AM
x2, Invisigoth. I feel kinda bad for William F. Buckley, a Republican I for whom I had some respect, to have died when his party was being represented my our previous President, Sarah Palin, and Joe "the plumber".

BMUS
02-28-2009, 09:05 PM
Sorry but Joe the plumber is not a real conservative. Shallow, fiercely anti-intellectual and exclusionary might be the characteristics of Limbaugh, Hannity and Joe the Plumber, but they are not the characteristics of conservatism.

Do you really want the Republican Party to be the party of these guys?
No, but sometimes I wonder what the **** the conservatives are doing, is there not any standards they no longer have to stand up to?

Then I look at the libs and wonder the same.

GO JOE!

bababooey
03-01-2009, 08:35 AM
Sorry but Joe the plumber is not a real conservative. Shallow, fiercely anti-intellectual and exclusionary might be the characteristics of Limbaugh, Hannity and Joe the Plumber, but they are not the characteristics of conservatism.

Do you really want the Republican Party to be the party of these guys?

Well said. For 8 years this is how Republicans have come off. Its sad to see.

Eztyga
03-01-2009, 08:41 AM
Joe who...?