The Liz Smith Column | 09/16/2009 4:00 am
Liz Smith: Oh, Behave Yourself! – Kanye West's Swift Fall

"Bad manners … the infallible sign of talent," said regal Joan Crawford to snarly violinist John Garfield in the 1946 melodrama, "Humoresque."
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I was reminded of this remark, a favorite of mine, when I caught the now infamous Kanye West/Taylor Swift event on MTV’s Video Music Awards. However, sometimes bad manners are the infallible sign of slugging Hennessy from the bottle all night long.
It was just luck that I saw Kanye behaving badly. It would be absurd of me to claim I’m up on what MTV or most modern rock/pop/hip-hop music is dishing out these days. I tuned in to check out Madonna’s opening tribute to Michael Jackson, which was followed by Janet Jackson’s performance. Both were terrif. Madonna looked properly sedate and quite attractive in her somber modesty. Her remarks were from the heart, I felt. Miss Jackson gave it her all; really sensational.
I busied myself with other matters but later, in an inpatient moment of channel surfing, I found myself back at the VMA’s just as Taylor Swift was approaching the podium. The rest, as they say is history. (Kanye, jumping onstage, objected to Swift’s "Best Female Video" win, citing Beyoncé’s video as a preferable choice.)
Of course, it was a terrible moment for Miss Swift – shades of drunken James Mason interrupting Judy Garland’s Oscar acceptance in the movie "A Star Is Born." But today more people know Taylor’s name and face than they ever did 48 hours ago. Beyoncé covered herself with glory by later bringing Taylor onstage to finish her acceptance speech. This after Beyoncé had won her own award.
Kanye West further confirmed his cast-in-stone reputation as … an idiot. But stupid, crazy or just plain drunk, Kanye’s acting out did get everybody’s mind off more serious issues for a minute, and provoked a brief debate on the demise of civility. (Dead for about 15 years, I think!) He also heightened his profile and that’s what certain celebs want more than anything else. They go by the adage that there is no such thing as bad publicity, and often they are correct. I guess one might say Kanye is the Rep. Joe Wilson of the music biz.
Still, the messy outburst was the kind of moment one longs for at the Oscars; stars behaving badly or foolishly, something to talk about other than how long and boring the Academy Awards show is.
It was really a win-win-win situation. For MTV, for Miss Swift – once she recovered from the shock of being dissed – and certainly for Beyoncé, a class act if there ever was one.
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My heart goes out to the family of Patrick Swayze, who really fought the good fight against pancreatic cancer – 20 months! This terrible disease usually takes its victims in less than half that time.
I met Patrick only once, at a Manhattan screening of the movie "City of Joy." It was a project he very much believed in, something different from the roles that made him famous; those depended on his charm and sexy good looks as much as his talent. I remember Patrick as quite sensitive, a bit apprehensive perhaps, underneath his talking up the movie. He was very appealing, remembered something I’d written about his performance in "Ghost" and thanked me. He was wonderful looking, though still suffering a bit from the grueling shoot in India.
Swayze was too young, too vital, too nice to have gone so soon. And despite some fame-induced speed bumps along the way, he and his beautiful wife, dancer Lisa Niemi, made a successful go of their marriage for more than 30 years. In Hollywood, that alone is more than a miracle, and speaks volumes about both Patrick and Lisa.

Lisa and Patrick © Getty Images
























61 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
I believe all of us agree that Kanye West exhibited the poorest of manners at the Video Music Awards. He has apologized. He literally stole "the moment" from Taylor Swift. That’s something she’ll always remember.
I don’t believe President Obama will lose any sleep over Joe Wilson shouting out "You lie" over the healthcare bill. After all, Wilson didn’t "steal the moment" from President Obama. He knew he was talking to a very divided audience. Joe Wilson has apologized. The President has accepted his apology. This is what happened yesterday:
"Wilson had called the White House to apologize shortly after the incident, and he said at the time that the president "graciously accepted my apology and the issue is over." Republicans agreed, but several Democrats pressed the issue.
The final tally late Tuesday was 240-179, generally but not entirely along party lines. It was 233 Democrats and seven Republicans voting to chastise Wilson, 167 Republicans and 12 Democrats opposing the measure and five Democrats merely voting "present."
"The resolution is not about the substance of an issue but about the conduct we expect of one another in the course of doing our business," declared House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., who sponsored the measure with Democratic Whip James Clyburn, D-S.C.
Republicans tended to strongly disagree.
"We’re here on some witch hunt, some partisan stunt that the American people are not going to respect," said Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio. Visitors in the gallery applauded that remark, drawing a warning from the chair.
One of the Democrats voting "present," Barney Frank of Massachusetts, said, "I think it’s bad precedent to put us in charge of deciding whether people act like jerks. I don’t have time to monitor everyone’s civility."
There’s more here…
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090915/ap_on_go_co/us_health_care_heckling
As Obama talked down to the republicans during that same meeting calling their "liars and distorting information" Joe Wilson simply couldn’t take Obama’s lies anymore and called HIM out on it. Ironically, Joe Wilson’s "You lie" worked because the next day the language in the bill was changed so that illegal immigrants MUST show proof of citizenship before receiving medical care.
Did Joe Wilson exhibit bad manners? Yes. Did he apologize? Did the President accept his apology? Yes So, why was it necessary to go this far to have him apologize "again" to the House?
The Senators now need to focus on the healthcare bill not Joe Wilson. I mean, how could another apology make a difference to anyone? It won’t change a thing.
Ooo! I don’t. Wilson has yet to apologize to the American people who elected the president. He’s *our* president and he owes *us* an apology. What happened to the drumbeating the Republicans were doing at the beginning of the last administration? "You have to respect the office if not the man." It was the most disrespectful, arrogant, self-serving, and meritless thing he could do. He should never STOP apologizing for it. It’s one thing to have the spontaneous collective boos and cheers occur during president speeches. You hear it all the time, but one person calling out and calling someone a liar? No way will I give him a pass just because he quietly apologized to the president, and likely insincerely at that. What is it with South Carolina politicians anyway?
As for Kanye West, there has never been a more irrelevant human being in "entertainment." He’s never been taught sportsmanship, propriety, grace, humility… none of it. His treatment of others ranks almost up there with Chris Brown, his future roommate. And, he does NOT get a pass for being drunk. Drunk people may not possess impulse control, but they know what they’re doing and there’s no sidestepping that he felt exactly they way he demonstrated it. And you KNOW if the same had been done to him, he’d be whining and crying to anyone who would listen about how no one wants to give a black man cred. They always trying to beat down the black man. Ad nauseum.
" It’s one thing to have the spontaneous collective boos and cheers occur during president speeches. You hear it all the time, but one person calling out and calling someone a liar?"
Ahh, I get it…if MULTIPLE people yelled out at President Obama, it would have been ok, but the fact that only ONE person did somehow makes it bad. Please. That really is a terrible justification (I think the worst I’ve heard so far) of the same sort of lousy behavior (done by dems) that elicits such indignation when done by a Republican.
For the record, I don’t like what Wilson did either, because it was disrespectful. That said, the leftist whining is absurd. You don’t set the standard as "any and all disrespect of the president goes!" and then complain when the same standard is applied to a president you like.