I've never enjoyed "Family Guy," and has been said by others, I like Sarah Palin even less. She's not competent, she manages to throw a veneer of "Family/Traditional Values" over her more outrageous acts, and seems to groove on baiting her opponents. Her appearance at the Teabagger's Convention seemed to emphasize this, rather than mute it.
What's interesting here is that she's taking her cue from -- of all people -- Dan Quayle, and his silly criticism of the "Murphy Brown" show. I'd hoped that the responses from Quayle's critics would have addressed the bigger issues, but sadly, they went for the obvious. Quayle, instead of looking like a petty goof who couldn't spell, wound up becoming a hero to a certain segment on the right. It should have been one of the final nails in his political coffin, but he and Marilyn, (who, no doubt has been taking her cues from Angela Lansbury), managed to figure out how to make some political hay from a puerile and silly speech that should have been ignored.
Sadly, even the "spelling" issue was misused by everyone. Quayle could have played that as more of a joke, saying, "See? Just because you hold high political office doesn't mean you're perfect. Good job, Son." His opponents made the joke for him, but missed the broader point that Quayle was taking a bastardized Noblesse Oblige approach, something which has never worked at any point in American politics, (unless you count Bill Clinton and his declaration of how he did not have sex with that woman, in which case it blew up in his face. Did great for his opponents.)
Sarah Palin and her "soccer mom" game plan will not work, in part because real soccer moms, who are trying to navigate the treacherous waters that the people Palin wants as supporters have put us in, are not the fools that the far right wants to think they are. Limbaugh may laugh at them, Hannity might dismiss them, and Savage might berate them as Sheeple, but they are, by and large, better educated, better informed, and more motivated to pay attention to what's happening to the country than these people are giving them credit for. (Okay, I left out Stern beating his meat over them, but you already knew about that one.)
Palin comes across as oblivious to the real concerns of working families. It's a sad fact, but that's the primary reason the Republicans are not going to win anything much in November to my way of thinking. They'll get a few seats, but the reality is that if I had to guess, not much is going to change. When you have Newt Gingrich crying "Hands off Medicare and no socialized medicine for America!" you have to wonder just how far down the rabbit hole you've fallen.
In the meantime, pass the mushrooms. It's tea time.