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Valenti's Credits Keep on Rolling
Motion Picture Association of America chief executive Jack Valenti testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1984.
(By James K.w. Atherton -- The Washington Post)
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"We compete viciously every day," he said of the companies Valenti brought into the coalition. "Think of the egos in this business. They are considerable. The only guy who can knock those heads together . . . is Jack."
Even people who oppose him on policy, such as Parents Television Council President L. Brent Bozell, praise his courtesy and intelligence and are unable to say a harsh word about him.
"I wish I could afford him," Bozell said with a laugh.
Despite having stepped down as MPAA's chief executive in 2004, Valenti still works from an office in the trade association's building and continues to make political donations -- $27,600 to prominent Republicans and Democrats so far in the 2006 political cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks contributions.
Stevens, who chairs the Senate Commerce Committee, approached Valenti on the indecency issue. "We're old World War II pilots and have known each other a long time," Stevens said in an interview. "I trust him."
Inouye, the ranking Democrat on the panel, said Valenti had reached a "point in his life where men and women consider him to be above politics" despite his having served in the Johnson White House.
"He essentially went from the White House to 'Casablanca,' " said Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), who has worked with Valenti for three decades and described him as a throwback to an era of civility when the two parties worked together. "He is like a classic movie; every new audience is amazed at how good that old movie is."
Larry Noble, the executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, said Valenti's work has to be seen in the context of his advocacy for Hollywood studios.
"I have never gotten the feeling . . . that he has anything in mind other than the interests of the motion picture industry. It's not as if one would say he is looking at what's best for America or what's best for the consumer," Noble said. "That is not a criticism in the sense that that's his job."
Bill Moyers, who served with Valenti under Johnson, suggested that was a limited view of the man. "He is exactly the Jack Valenti I knew in 1960 except that he is half a century older. By that I mean that he was a straight shooter then, and he is a straight shooter now.
"If I were an industry, or a cause, I'd want Jack for my lobbyist because he wouldn't take it on unless he realized it was important and valuable, and he could be true to himself," he said. "He is one of those rare men where what you see is what you get."
During his recent testimony, Valenti cast his arguments against regulation in terms of defending the nation's freedoms.
"When you live in a free and loving land -- a democracy -- it gets messy at times. When you have a First Amendment, that means you must allow into the marketplace a lot of things I personally find vile, profane and just plain stupid," he said. "That is the price you pay for the freedoms that we enjoy."
Valenti then said that when his 4-year-old grandson turns 10, he plans to take him to see the Normandy cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach where 9,387 American servicemen are buried -- he remembered the number precisely -- "so he understands that . . . these young men gave him the greatest gift in the world; they gave him the gift of freedom."
When a reporter asked if he expected to be around when he was 90 to make that trip, Valenti replied with a laugh. "Of course. Are you kidding?"


