There are three things I hate in life: self-help books, FOX News, and short people. By all rights, I should, therefore, hate Greg Gutfeld’s latest book “The Plus”. Strangely enough, I don’t.
Okay, so I don’t really hate short people (not to be confused with “little people”, which is the current pc term for people formerly referred to as “midgets” or “dwarves”. I definitely don’t hate little people, let me be clear on that. My “short people” comment was meant to be a joke; in point of fact, specifically, a Randy Newman reference, which I realize now is extremely outdated and will completely go over the heads of anyone who is not familiar with ‘70s pop music, which is probably a large percentage of people reading this review, assuming those people didn’t just stop reading after the whole “short people” comment), I merely dislike self-help books, and I don’t watch enough FOX News to formulate an opinion either way, although I’ve seen enough to know that it is a Republican propaganda tool, and for that reason alone I can’t stand it.
Anyway, getting back to Gutfeld’s “The Plus”: it bills itself as “Self Help for People Who Hate Self-Help”, which is me. In truth, the book is kind of a Trumpian apologetics disguised as an attempt to offer useful advice on bettering one’s self. It’s full of just enough self-deprecation by the author to be endearing, while still managing to be annoying to the average liberal reader (a demographic that I am fairly certain Gutfeld neither marketed toward nor even wanted).
My relationship with Gutfeld is a bit checkered. (Okay, that sentence just sounds really bad. Let me try that again.)
Gutfeld is one of those FOX News personalities with not one but two popular late-night shows—-The Greg Gutfeld Show and The Five—-that I have never really watched with any regularity. I think I caught an episode of The Five once, and thought it was mildly entertaining. The episode was about “toxic masculinity”—-an important topic to be sure—-but I recall that the discussion eventually devolved into a series of jokes making fun of Jonah Hill, which, let’s face it, is almost too easy of a target.
Gutfeld pissed me off years ago when he published a book called “The Joy of Hate”, which I refused to read simply on principle. (I was, to be fair, very testy and unhappy at the time.) I gave his book “Not Cool” a chance and was surprised to find that I liked it. It was essentially a vicious lambasting of the so-called “liberal elite”, and I found that I actually agreed with much of it.
I had, unfairly, written off Gutfeld as one of those whiny conservatives, like Rush Limbaugh or Ann Coulter, who like to start wildfires and then blame liberals for playing with matches. In fact, Gutfeld is a lot funnier, smarter, and far less grumpy and vitriolic than others of his ilk.
In “The Plus”, Gutfeld seems to have become even more laid-back and even-tempered. While he doesn’t go into detail, he mentions that he had a “health scare” and it just happened to coincide with the outbreak of Covid-19 in the U.S. There’s really nothing like a global pandemic to make one reevaluate one’s socio-political/spiritual footprint in the world.
While I don’t agree with Gutfled on a lot of things (he is a self-admitted conservative libertarian who didn’t like Trump at first but has grown to appreciate the many good things he has done as president. What those good things are, he never quite articulates, but that’s probably beside the point. Let’s just say I’ll agree to disagree on some of his political stances), I do happen to agree with his basic tenets, the major one being that it is an individual choice that one makes whether to add more vitriol, anger, and hatred into the world (a minus) via name-calling, playing the blame game, and writing people off without listening to what they have to say; or to add more useful positivity (a plus) into the world via shutting up occasionally and listening to what the other side has to say.
I also like his view on what he calls “the prison of two ideas”, which is, essentially, trying to reduce the world’s problems into just two sides. Just because one didn’t like Obama as president didn’t necessarily mean that one is automatically racist. Just because one is fearful of an economic disaster doesn’t mean one doesn’t care about people catching Covid-19. Things are never simply black and white or two-sided. It’s this kind of thinking, according to Gutfeld (and I agree with him), that doesn’t allow for nuance and has exacerbated the divisiveness in this country.
“The Plus” is a short book, and while Gutfeld doesn’t take himself too seriously, he does have a few good ideas. For a short person.
(Sorry, that was a below-the-belt dig, and a minus. I’ll try better next time, Gutfeld.)