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Who's more popular – Frank Underwood or Barack Obama? | |
(2 months later) | |
Whether it’s the earnest Josiah Bartlet from “The West Wing” or the manipulative Frank Underwood in “House of Cards,” Americans prefer television presidents to their real-life POTUS, President Barack Obama. | |
A Reuters-Ipsos poll taken this month found 54% of Americans held an unfavourable opinion of Obama, known for his cool and cautious presidential style, while 46 percent were favourable. | |
In contrast, asked to imagine that David Palmer of “24” was president, 89% of those who had seen the real-time Fox counterterrorism drama said they held a favourable rating of the decisive president played by Dennis Haysbert. | |
Martin Sheen’s Jed Bartlet of “The West Wing” - beloved by Democrats, including many who work in Obama’s White House - was rated favourably by 82% of its NBC viewers. | |
In the dark universe of “Battlestar Galactica” on SyFy, president Laura Roslin, played by Mary McDonnell, drew a 78% favourable rating among fans of her quest to find earth and escape the Cylons, a race of humanoid killer robots. | |
With Americans sharply divided along partisan lines, it is unlikely that any real-life president could achieve sky-high favourability ratings, said Tevi Troy, a presidential historian and author of “What Jefferson Read, Ike Watched, and Obama Tweeted,” a study of popular culture in the White House. | |
“Pretty much half the country is going to be predisposed against you just because that’s the way we line up with Republicans and Democrats,” Troy said. | |
Unlike fictional presidents, with their camera-ready looks and perfect timing, real-life presidents sometimes fumble. | |
Republican Ronald Reagan, who was an actor before turning to politics and eventually becoming president, was an exception, Troy said. | |
“His media people would say how great it was that he always hit his marks,” said Troy, who was a top domestic policy adviser in Republican George W Bush’s administration. | |
Morally challenged fictional presidents also topped Obama’s favorability ratings in the Reuters-Ipsos poll. | |
Of those who watch ABC’s steamy drama “Scandal,” 60% had a favourable view of Fitzgerald “Fitz” Grant, the philandering, scotch-swilling president played by Tony Goldwyn. | |
Frank Underwood also beat Obama. | |
In “House of Cards,” Underwood, played by Kevin Spacey, kills a passed-out congressman by leaving him in a running car in a garage, and pushes a journalist into the path of a subway train. | |
Imagining Spacey’s scheming character as president, 57% of respondents who have seen the Netflix political thriller said they held a favourable opinion of him. | |
Even Obama likes Underwood. “This guy’s getting a lot of stuff done,” Obama quipped during a December 2013 White House photo-op with Reed Hastings, Netflix’s chief executive. | |
“I wish things were that ruthlessly efficient,” Obama said. | |
There was one result from the online poll, conducted from March 5 to 19, that could give some solace to Obama: He is more popular with Americans than Russian President Vladimir Putin. | |
Seventy-six percent of Americans had an unfavourable view of Putin, according to the poll, while 24% were favourable. |