I hate to sound naive, but I was disappointed in Arnold
Schwarzenegger's latest performance -- as the philandering former
governor of California, seeking redemption through a new autobiography,
who sits for an interview with CBS correspondent Lesley Stahl.
In
Schwarzenegger’s appearance on “60 Minutes” Sunday night, he had an
opportunity to offer contrition for his sins. And, here, I’m only
talking about his sins against his long-suffering estranged wife, Maria
Shriver. I’m not even talking about the allegations of Schwarzenegger
having groped more than a dozen women over the years who did not want
his attention and were humiliated by it.
Instead, he offered up
tight-lipped, terse, even matter-of-fact responses to questions about
his colossal betrayal of his wife. He admitted he had other affairs in
addition to the affair with the family housekeeper with whom he fathered
a son around the same time that he fathered his fourth child with
Shriver. “This was a recurring problem?” asked Stahl, poking him to come
a little cleaner. “I’m not perfect,” he answered. There’s an
understatement for you.
His actions seem even more
despicable, if that’s possible, when you consider -- as “60 Minutes”
reminded us by running the tape -- that Shriver made an electrifying
defense of her husband in the wake of the groping allegations when she
made a campaign appearance, telling an audience, "You can listen to
people who have never met Arnold or who met him for five seconds 30
years ago. Or you can listen to me." We don’t know what, if anything,
she knew or believed about the allegations of sexual harassment. But,
according to Schwarzenegger, she had no idea that he and her housekeeper
had a son together.
Yes, it’s always difficult to own up to
deeply personal transgressions, and he did have the good sense to say
that the affair with the housekeeper was “the stupidest thing” he did in
his relationship with Shriver and that it inflicted horrible pain on
her and their children. But no one forced him to write a book about
himself or sit for this interview.
Schwarzenegger has been many
things in his multi-faceted life -- a onetime possessor of a storied
physique, a savvy real estate investor, a popular action hero and,
against all odds, the elected governor of California. Precisely because
he’s so adept at reinventing himself, I figured he would reemerge
chastened, introspective and remorseful. Instead, as he told Stahl,
some denial and secrecy have been part of his pattern as he moves
through his life. Sunday night, he came across as a man who has simply
moved past all the emotional damage he wrought and now wants another
incarnation.
Let’s just hope Maria Shriver has moved way past him.
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