Limbaugh's apology: Fox over-medicated
himself "so you would really, really hate Republicans"
Media Matters
October 27, 2006
During the October 26 edition of his nationally syndicated radio show, Rush
Limbaugh "apologize[d]" for being "wrong" in "speculat[ing]" that actor Michael
J. Fox either "didn't take his medication or he was acting" in a recent
campaign advertisement for Missouri Democratic Senate candidate Claire
McCaskill, but then immediately returned to attacking Fox by baselessly
accusing him of intentionally taking too much medication to induce the tremors
visible in the ad. Highlighting an October 25 interview Fox gave on NBC's
Access Hollywood, during which, Limbaugh stated, Fox "himself said he took too
much medication" before shooting the McCaskill ad, Limbaugh declared: "He
didn't do that when he goes on Boston Legal, but it happened for the taping of
this ad; and I think the reason for that is so you would really, really hate
Republicans." In fact, while Fox acknowledged on Access Hollywood that his
tremors were a result of having taken "too much medication," he did not say he
had intentionally done so. Indeed, after Limbaugh's remark, Fox appeared on the
October 26 edition of the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric and confirmed that
the tremors he had experienced during the taping of the ad occurred because it
is difficult to "calculate" the correct dosage of medication and, "[s]ometimes,
it kicks in too hard."
Additionally, Limbaugh claimed that the media have engaged in "an
irresponsible misuse of video from my ditto cam" in that "many cable outlets
have taken that snippet of video," in which Limbaugh is mimicking Fox's tremors
in the McCaskill ad, "and they're speeding it up, I am told," "to make
[Limbaugh's impression] look even more exaggerated to fulfill their claim that"
Limbaugh was "making fun of Fox." Limbaugh declared that he was merely
"try[ing] to describe for viewers on my ditto cam what I had seen" in the
ad.
As Media Matters for America has previously noted, on the October 23 edition
of his radio show, Limbaugh, noting that Fox is "moving all around and shaking"
in the ad, declared: "And it's purely an act. This is the only time I have ever
seen Michael J. Fox portray any of the symptoms of the disease he has." While
making this characterization, Limbaugh imitated Fox's involuntary movements in
the ad. Limbaugh added that "this is really shameless of Michael J. Fox. Either
he didn't take his medication or he's acting, one of the two." Later in the
broadcast, Limbaugh stated, "I will bigly, hugely admit that I was wrong, and I
will apologize to Michael J. Fox if I am wrong in characterizing his behavior
on this commercial as an act, especially since people are telling me they have
seen him this way on other interviews and in other television appearances."
On October 26, Limbaugh "apologize[d]" after airing a clip of Fox's
interview on Access Hollywood, in which Fox stated: "The symptoms that I had in
the interview or the ad that I did, that's called dyskinesia. That's actually
from taking too much medication." But later in the broadcast, Limbaugh asserted
that "[t]here's no question about it," Fox's ad "is a planned, late-stages of
the campaign tactic. ... These ads are scripted by Democrat [sic] campaigns.
... And [McCaskill's campaign] worked with Michael J. Fox on deciding how they
wanted him to appear. ...They wanted it to appear this way. ... You know, I
want to stress this. They wanted it to appear this way."
Fox further clarified the effects of his medication during his interview
with anchor Katie Couric on the CBS Evening News. Fox explained that
"[s]ometimes," the medication "kicks in too hard, and then you get what's
called dyskinesia, which is that rocking motion that I had when I did the
commercial." He added that "the notion that you could calculate it for effect
is -- you know, people with Parkinson's out there were just kind of going,
'Yeah, would that we could.'"
From the October 26 edition of Premiere Radio Networks' The Rush Limbaugh
Show:
LIMBAUGH: We had a call yesterday, and I dealt with this yesterday, and I
will deal with it again today as often as I have to, because there is an
irresponsible charge, and an irresponsible misuse of video from my ditto cam
here -- by the way, welcome to all of you watching on the ditto cam today --
there is an irresponsible charge that I was making fun of Michael J. Fox, and
that I said Michael J. Fox was faking it. Neither of those two charges have any
foundation of truth whatsoever and, yet, they continue to be leveled and they
continue to be distorted and amplified upon.
I'll explain why in the opening monologue, but I just -- I just want to tell
you, as I told the woman from Maryland, in fact, who called yesterday and said
she had heard that I was making fun of Fox and that she had seen video of me
imitating his gyrations and movements in the ad that he had done for Claire
McCaskill in Missouri.
Here -- and by the way, many cable outlets have taken that snippet of video
from the ditto cam and they're speeding it up, I am told. Now, I haven't seen
it, but I've been inundated with emails from people who say, "Rush, it's
unconscionable what they're doing. They're speeding it up to make it look even
more exaggerated to fulfill their claim that you are making fun of Fox." I'll
take you through this step by step. Here's what happened.
I'm reading The Drudge Report -- no, I think it's, actually, it's after the
show had started. I'm not even sure when -- one day, and then there's the link
to the Michael J. Fox video and the word "controversy" attached to it, so I
click on it, and I watch it. Now, I've seen Michael J. Fox recently on
television in a number of roles, on the show Boston Legal, which I love, and
I've seen Michael J. Fox interviewed, and I've never seen him the way I saw him
in this ad. Never. I've seen Parkinson's disease sufferers. I know a couple.
And I'd never seen this. I just had never seen it.
I run a radio show here, and I have a camera right there. I'm pointing to
it. Subscribers to my website can watch the program, and hundreds of thousands
do each and every day. So, in the process of describing for them -- after all,
I am a reporter [ahem] -- in the process of describing what I was watching, it
is a shock, as you've all seen it, it's shocking; it's unbelievable. You don't
see this kind of thing everyday, particularly in a television commercial -- not
even a public service announcement for the cause that might be involved do you
see something like this. And you couple that with the fact that I'd never seen
Michael J. Fox in this way, I began to try to describe for viewers on my ditto
cam what I had seen.
Now, anybody who listens to me describe what I saw would know this. It is a
purposeful attempt to smear. I mean, that's -- I'm not -- I'm not complaining
because that's the league that we all play in here, folks, and I don't whine or
moan about anything, but I am going to correct the record here because this is
something that's now had a lifespan of two days -- that I'm making fun of
Michael J. Fox. I would no more do that than I would make fun of anybody who
suffers a disease about which and over which they have no -- I wouldn't make
fun of anybody with a -- that is beneath me, and it's not -- there's no
evidence and history of it on this program at all, or in my behavior as a human
being and, yet, it's out there.
And the people who culled that video could easily listen to the audio that
accompanied it and would easily know and do know precisely what I was doing.
And yet, it is being used for the express purpose of distorting and smearing
for an audience that doesn't listen to this program.
[...]
LIMBAUGH: But there it is again -- exaggerating or faking. Never once did I
use the word "fake!" It's very simple what I said, and the context is, I am
stunned. I have never seen Michael J. Fox this way, I know he's got Parkinson's
disease, and I'm saying what -- if I know it's a political ad, and I know it's
to benefit Democrats. Ka-ching. Ka-ching. Ka-ching. Ka-ching. Ka-ching. The
neurons in my fertile brain start firing, and I say, "You know, he's either
exaggerating the symptoms or he hasn't taken his medication." Either/or. That
has become: "He's faking it," and "I was making fun of it."
Since then, and later in that program in the next sound bite, after
consulting a bunch of research, found out that he'd written in his own book
that he indeed goes off or manipulates his medication when he does public
appearances, which I've said, countless times this week, is fine with me. He's
tried to raise consciousness before members of Congress to get funding for
research into the disease. I understand how powerful that is. Now, it shows up
in a political ad for a series of Democrat [sic] candidates around the country,
two weeks before the election -- sorry, flak -- folks, I'm a political animal
and red flags raised immediately.
[...]
LIMBAUGH: And let me admit something now, since we played the audio sound
bite. In fact, let's -- let's go get it. Number seven -- can you play number
seven again? 'Cause I want to make an apology here. You have number seven from
the audio sound bite roster ready to go? All right, let 'er rip.
FOX [audio clip]: The symptoms that I had in the ad that I did, they're
called dyskinesia, and that's actually from too much medication.
LIMBAUGH: OK. I need to apologize. I was wrong, because I speculated he
either didn't take his medication or he was acting -- never said the word
"faking." Now, if you've got -- if you people on the left want to equate acting
with faking, I mean, go ahead. George Clooney would be a faker. All your
favorite actors -- we'll call them fakers. I never used the word.
But I was wrong. He did take his medications, and now, he took too much
medication. The point is, he did something differently to appear in this ad
than when he appears on Boston Legal. And that was my first human reaction --
"Whoa! I've never seen this! I have not seen this before." Now, I gather from
the past three days that we are to believe that this is the normal condition
that poor Mr. Fox has to live with each and every day. That's the impression
that they're leaving, is it not? That this is how his life is now.
But he himself said he took too much medication. He didn't do that when he
goes on Boston Legal, but it happened for the taping of this ad; and I think
the reason for that is so you would really, really hate Republicans, because
Republicans don't want to cure it. Jim Talent doesn't care; Michael Steele
doesn't care; nobody in the Republican Party cares. They don't want to cure
these things. They're happy, in fact, to see people suffer like Mr. Fox is in
his ad.
[...]
CALLER: And --
LIMBAUGH: And if you use too little, what happens?
CALLER: And if you -- the same thing.
LIMBAUGH: OK. Well, here's -- here's -- I'm -- I think I mentioned this
yesterday. I'm being inundated with emails of doctors, and neurosurgeons, and a
number of people, and I don't of
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