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Opinion: But Arnold and Leno are still tight

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Heck hath no fury like a talk-show host scorned. So it wasn’t surprising that David Letterman threw a hilarious hissy fit after John McCain canceled on him as part of McCain’s return to Washington to solve the financial crisis. Except, of course, as Letterman revealed, McCain was still in New York getting made up for an interview with Katy Couric.

McCain defenders say Letterman’s tantrum proves that he’s part of the MSM anti-McCain lynch mob. But Letterman has treated McCain respectfully in the past, and his jokes about McCain’s age have been good-natured. Clearly, however, Letterman was stung by the snub. So is this proof that entertainers have placed themselves above their station, as they say in Britain?

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I don’t think so. Politicians have admitted comedians and actors into their charmed circle, with both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton making cameos and ‘Saturday Night Live’ and McCain himself announcing his candidacy on Letterman’s show. So why wouldn’t a talk-show host stiffed by a candidate be just as aggrieved as a ward heeler on learning that a presidential candidate was a no-show?

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