Why Not Me?

Unabridged
Author: Al Franken
Narrator: Al Franken
Genres: Comedy, Politics
Publisher: BDD Audio
Date: March 2010
Length: 6 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

NOT AVAILABLE IN CANADA (Publisher no longer making book)

First came Theodore White's The Making of the President, 1960. Then All the President's Men. Now the searing chronicle that will forever change the way we view the man and the office...

Why Not Me?

...chronicles the dramatic rise and dizzying fall of Al Franken, who would become the first Jewish president of the United States. Meet the president as a young man. Witness the Franken campaign in its infancy, as the candidate pledges "to walk the state of New Hampshire, diagonally and then from side to side." Go behind the scenes and meet Team Franken, the candidate's brain trust: including brother and deputy campaign manager Otto, a recovering sex addict and alcoholic, and campaign manager Norm Ornstein, the think-tank policy wonk who masterminds the single-issue (ATM fees) campaign. Cheer as Franken stuns the pundits by defeating Al Gore for the Democratic nomination, then is swept into office carrying all fifty states and the District of Columbia.

Then, through excerpts from Bob Woodward's detailed account of the first hundred days, The Void, go inside the Franken White House, which is gripped by crisis from day one. After the highly medicated chief executive exhibits a roller coaster of bipolar behavior, Franken is forced to cooperate with the Joint Congressional Committee on the President's Mood Swings. And when the committee releases Franken's personal diaries to the public, his presidency faces its ultimate crisis.


It began on a cold day in January, when Alan Stuart Franken took the oath of office and became the 44th President of the United States. It ended 144 tumultuous days later with the words: "Boy, am I sorry." Here for the first time in paperback is the searing chronicle of Al Franken's journey to the White House--the visionary campaign, the landslide victory, the hookers, the payoffs--told through confessions of key aides, Franken's own diaries, and excerpts from Bob Woodward's book on the first 100 days of the Franken Presidency, entitled The Void.

Witness the campaign in its infancy, as Franken decides to run on a single-issue platform: lower ATM Fees. Follow along as Team Franken canvasses the nation, attacking Al Gore, attacking U.S. banks, attending a couple of prayer breakfasts. Then go inside the Franken White House where for 144 days a President virtually reinvents the office, boldly appointing the first all-Jewish cabinet, then battling a severe case of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. As scandal rocks the Administration, Why Not Me? becomes a tragic American morality tale: of a man who dared to believe that anyone could be president--and paid the price for proving he was right. -->

Reviews (8)

Why Not Me? Why Bother

Written by Mandi Chestler on April 11th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

OK, I admit it. I normally love anything by Al Franken. But this one, unfortunately, is a waste of time for all but the most die-hard Franken fans.

Why Not Me?

Written by Michael Scott from Santa Cruz, CA on March 31st, 2006

  • Book Rating: 2/5

While I thoroughly enjoyed every other book I've read by Al Franken, this was not my cup of tea. It did have its humourous moments, but the story did not flow well for me. Perhaps I am more comfortable with him poking fun at current events, and current people in the news. If you are considering this "Why Not Me?" as your first venture into the world of Al Franken, I strongly recommend any of his other books first. Now, if he'd only release "Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot" on CD .

very funny

Written by John McCole on October 19th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I laughed many times. Very entertaining, and smart.

Why Not Me

Written by Thomas Schmall on August 3rd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

Great satire for the first half of the book where Franken focuses on the campaign, then deterioates into chaos when he attempts to describe his term in office.

Why Not Me?

Written by Linda Osborne on June 21st, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

This book is a very goofy satire. I enjoyed Franken's other books more, but if you like goofy humor, it's not bad.

Why Didn't Franken Do Better?

Written by Gem SPECTOR on April 5th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I enjoy Franken, this just isn't his best work. For a chuckle, not a laugh, order this book, but don't expect it to change your mood or your day.

"Why Not Me" by Al Franken

Written by I'm Listening in Houston on October 16th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 3/5

As a political satire this book had some funny moments that had me laughing out loud, but at times it was pretty absurb and sometimes repetitious. Not a bad "read" to pass the time to and from work, though.

A Laugh Tsunami

Written by Robert Swanson on September 17th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Al Franken, a true comic genius. Al Franken leads us through his march to the office of the presidency of the world's only remaining Super-Power. I listened to this cd for awhile on my way to work on the NYC Subway. There were portions of the CD where I found myself unable to contain my laughter to the chagrin of fellow riders who must have thought me unbalanced (and unfair?) at my sudden outbursts of cachinnation. The best part of the book is when Franken is actually doing the reading. When other actors are reading Franken's words there is something missing. I believe Republicans (those who have sense of humor anyway) will enjoy this cd as much as Democrats, Liberals, Reformers, Greenies, Commies, Socialists, etc. I loved this CD so much I just ordered his other book: "Lies, and the Lying Liars who tell them"

Author Details

Author Details

Franken, Al

"Al Franken was born on May 21, 1951. Originally from New York City, his family moved to a small, southern Minnesota town, Albert Lea, where his father opened a quilting factory. Despite his father's best efforts, the venture eventually failed.

At the age of 6, Franken moved to suburbs outside of Minneapolis, where he spent most of his adolescence. Here, he lived in a district known as ""St. Louis Park,"" but, according to Franken, was also known as ""St. Jewish Park."" Franken's father worked as a printing salesman while his mother became a realtor.

Growing up, Franken was initially a Republican, following in his father's footsteps, who supported men like Herbert Hoover, Alf Landon and Thomas Dewey. However, in the wake of the '60s civil rights movement and Barry Goldwater's staunch opposition to civil rights, Al and his father changed party affiliation. From that time on, both Frankens considered themselves Democrats.

Al Franken began comedy at an early age. While a second grader, Franken watched in horror as a group of girl classmates performed a silly, second grade skit. Seizing the moment, Franken teamed with his boy classmates and wrote a skit mocking the girls. It left his female classmates in tears.

In high school, Franken performed well academically, maintaining an ""A"" average and participating on his high school wrestling team. He was accepted to Harvard University. During this time, Franken also performed stand-up comedy and stage shows with his partner, Tom Davis, a long-time friend from Minnesota. He was also active in drama clubs on campus. Franken also tried out for the Harvard Lampoon, but was rejected.

Upon graduating from Harvard in 1973 with a degree in general studies, Franken continued performing with Davis. Their witty-yet-raunchy performances, mainly for college crowds, caught the eye of then-unknown Canadian producer Lorne Michaels. Michaels, a fan of Monty Python, was contracted to develop a variety show for NBC. Michaels, seeing talent in the two, signed the duo for $500 a week each and flew them to New York City. Franken and Davis were the only people hired without actually meeting with Michaels. Had Michaels met with them, Franken often says, they probably would have never been hired. At the time, little did they know, Franken and Davis would help start one of the most innovative shows on television, ""Saturday Night Live.""

For his work on television, Franken is the recipient of four writing Emmys and a fifth for producing. During 1975-1980 on ""Saturday Night Live,"" Franken created such sketches as ""The Final Days,"" a parody of the Nixon presidency and ""The Me Decade,"" a commentary about why the 70s was about him, Al Franken. He also frequently appeared in sketches as an actor with Tom Davis.

When Franken, along with Lorne Michaels and most of the cast , left SNL in 1980, he trekked to Hollywood and tried his luck at movies. Franken wrote several unproduced screenplays; one was produced, the1986 unsuccessful movie, ""One More Saturday Night,"" which Al wrote and performed in with Tom Davis . Franken also made an appearance as a baffoonish baggage handler in the successful ""Trading Places,"" with Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd.

In 1985, Franken returned to Saturday Night Live, where he remained until 1995. Here, Franken expanded his acting resume, with impressions of Pat Robertson, Paul Simon and Paul Tsongas. He also developed his most popular character, self-help guru Stuart Smalley.

Aside from his work on SNL, Franken co-wrote and produced Touchstone Pictures' ""When a Man Loves a Woman,"" with Andy Garcia and Meg Ryan. The movie was domestically and internationally popular, drawing strong reviews and over $100 million worldwide.

Franken also wrote and starred in ""Stuart Saves His Family,"" a 1995 Paramount Picture based on his SNL character. Directed by Harold Ramis and co-starring Laura-San Giacomo and Vincent D'Onofrio, the movie received strong reviews but never clicked with audiences, generating only a million dollars in box office revenue. As Al Franken told Franken Web in an interview in 1996 about future Stuart endeavors, ""when a movie loses 15 million bucks, studios don't exactly break down your door to make a sequel.""

In 1997, independent film-makers Rob Rollins Lobl and Sam Sokolow approached Franken to film a cameo in their movie, ""The Definite Maybe,"" the story of 25-year-old New Yorker searching for meaning in life. Franken played a Vagabond the title character meets in the subway.

A year later, by the request of Tom Hanks, Franken appeared in the HBO miniseries, ""From the Earth to the Moon."" Filmed in Florida, the $80 million production chronicled NASA's first babysteps into space. Franken played Presidential Science Advisor Jerome Weisner in the first segment of the film.

Franken is a well-known political satirist. In 1988, CNN hired him to provide commentary at the Democratic National Convention in Atlanta. In 1992 and 1996, he anchored Comedy Central's election coverage with then-Republican Arianna Huffington. Arianna and Al's writing for Comedy Central's ""Politically Incorrect"" in 1996 received an Emmy nomination. Franken has also contributed news commentary to Newsweek, The Nation and Rolling Stone, among others.

In 1998, Franken wrote and starred in NBC's ""Lateline,"" a behind-the-scenes look at a ""Nightline""-type news program. Featuring guest stars like Richard Gephardt, Jerry Falwell and Robert Reich, the political show received strong reviews (People Magazine gave the show an ""A"") but in the wake of the Clinton-scandals, failed to capture an audience. NBC renewed the show after its 1998 run but cancelled it in 1999. Overall, ""Lateline"" filmed 19 episodes.

Franken is also a prolific and NY-Times best-selling author. ""I'm Good Enough, I'm Smart Enough and Doggone It, People Like Me,"" was released in 1992 and chronicled the life of Stuart Smalley, Al's SNL self-help guru. A New York Times bestseller, it was also nominated for a Grammy in the ""best comedy"" category.

""Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot"" was released in 1996 and became an instant classic. Fueled by strong reviews (even the NY Post liked it) and a distaste for the ""nutcase right,"" the book spent five weeks at the #1 spot and eight months on the list. The audio version also won a Grammy in the ""best comedy"" category. Indeed, Franken is among few political figures who can claim to have won a ""Grammy.""

His successful follow-up, ""Why Not Me?"" chronicling the fictional Al Franken presidency, enjoyed similar success, staying on the NY Times bestseller list for several months. In May of 2002, Franken published another book, ""Oh, the Things I Know : A Guide to Success, Or, Failing That, Happiness,"" which poked fun at self-help books. That, too, was a NY Times bestseller and recipient of a Grammy nomination.

In 2001, Franken and his daughter played themselves in the movie, ""Harvard Man."" Franken has also made appearances on hundreds of radio and television shows, including ""3rd Rock from the Sun,"" ""The Tonight Show,"" ""Hannity and Colmes"" and ""The Late Show."" In 2000, Al Franken was a cast member of the short-lived animated series, ""Clerks,"" based on the Kevin Smith cult film. In 2000, he also appeared in a commercial for Parkay Margarine.

Franken is an active lecture speaker. He has given speeches to hundreds of corporations, universities, and other organizations. He has twice been the keynote speaker at the White House Correspondents Dinner for President Bill Clinton, National Press Club, USO tours, DNC dinners and a commencement speaker at Harvard in 2002.

In early 2003, the NY Times wrote that Al Franken is considering a radio talk show on a network for liberals, who have traditionally been shut out of talk radio. Tentatively, an Al Franken talker is being planned for the Fall of 2003.

In August of 2003, Al released his fifth book, ""Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them,"" which Franken describes as ""a fair and balanced look at the right."" The book spent 7 weeks on the NY Times #1 spot. The Fox News Channel sued Franken and his publishing company, Penguin Books, for trademark infringement over the term ""fair and balanced."" A judge later dismissed a motion to stop the publication of the book as ""wholly without merit, both factually and legally."" The book was a #1 NY Timest bestseller, and the audio version also won a Grammy.

On March 31, 2004, Al launched ""The O'Franken Factor"" with co-host Katherine Lanpher on Air America Radio.

Franken currently lives in New York City with his wife, Franni. He has two children, Thomasin (a school teacher) and Joe, a college student."