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Reviews
We’ve Got It Made in America: A Common Man’s
Salute to an Uncommon Country
By
John Ratzenberger and Joel Engel
Despite
the declaration in the book’s subtitle, Ratzenberger
is not exactly a common man. He has appeared in Hollywood
movies (he’s the only actor who’s voiced a character
in every Pixar film), played postman Cliff Clavin
on Cheers, and now is host of the Travel Channel’s
John Ratzenberger’s Made in America. And yet his
voice throughout We’ve Got It Made in America
is that of a blue-collar guy reared in Bridgeport,
Connecticut, who embodies the virtues that have
made the United States first among nations. The
book is a by- product of Ratzenberger’s
current television program, which chronicles
American
factories that manufacture American products — some
of them economic staples, some of them offbeat.
His core philosophy sounds simplistic, even
simpleminded: “Wake
up in the morning, put your hand to something
useful,
and take care of yourself and your family,” Ratzenberger
says. “It’s simple, it’s direct, and it works.
And for more than a century, that’s how
most people in this country lived.” Simple?
Yes. Simpleminded? No. That’s why the
text is quite likely to carry a strange
fascination for readers, no matter what
their personal politics happen to be.
Just when Ratzenberger’s
rants
seem predictable, he changes direction
to say something unexpected and even
downright
contradictory to the superpatriot persona
he adopts most of the time. He is especially
critical of major American corporations
abandoning loyal employees by moving
overseas solely for bottom-line considerations.
Ratzenberger’s
unpredictability
coupled with a modicum of erudition
drives
readers
to the final word of each chapter,
much
like
a Wall Street Journal editorial compels
even those it angers to read every
sentence
because the arguments are presented
so skillfully.
— Steve Weinberg, AmericanWay Magazine
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Despite his résumé as an actor (Cheers, Superman, TheEmpire Strikes Back), Ratzenberger sees himself as a blue-collar everyman and identifies more closely with the factory workers he interviews on his Travel Channel cable TV show, John Ratzenberger's Made in America than he does with the "Hollywood elite." Like his show, Ratzenberger's book celebrates manufacturing in America—and then digresses into a stimulating if contradictory mishmash of political ideas. Nostalgic and perhaps more than a little naïve, Ratzenberger wants to return America to its golden age: "We need to get back to being the industrial giant." At times, his politics resemble those of Michael Moore circa Roger & Me, as in his critique of corporations for abandoning loyal employees by moving operations overseas. But it's the "Hollywood powers that be" and "intellectual elites" who bear the brunt of Ratzenberger's anger. President Bush, meanwhile, gets his compliments for a lack of "contempt for the average American's intelligence" and
for his actions in Iraq. Compelling for his unpredictability,
this patriotic, independent-minded author will alternately
frustrate and fascinate both progressives and conservatives.
-
Publishers Weekly
"John, a truely fine patriotic American, bares his soul in this
thought-provoking, insightful tome."
- Phyllis Diller
"In a funny and thought-provoking way, John reminds us of the real
America, how great we feel to be Americans, and why all is not lost for
our future."
- Glen Charles, Co-creator of Cheers |
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