Sometimes a metaphor takes on a life of its own, and becomes a badge. Sometimes it even gets in the way of thinking more deeply.
I think both of those have happened with "One screen, two movies," attributed to Scott Adams as a description of current U. S. politics.
It's compelling image, but it shuts off discussion. When alluded to in a conversation, it's generally used as to indicate the speaker is on Team Red, but that's not such a big deal -- most people pick Red or Blue and few of them are shy about sharing their choice.
The big deal is, if people aren't seeing the same movie, they have no common ground. The metaphor implies the two main parties have no common ground.
We need them to have common ground. Sure, the President is just one person, so he (or, eventually, she) is going to be from one party or another. But Congress is supposed to do most of the heavy lifting when it comes to making laws and setting up the various Bureaus, Departments and Commissions that comprise the Federal Government, and that's a whole lot of of people -- a whole lot of people who need to find compromises they (and, I hope, we) can live with. To do that, they need common ground.
It'd better be "One movie, two interpretations." Sometimes those interpretations are deeply, fundamentally different -- but we'd all better hope they're seeing the same movie, or what's the point?
Update
3 days ago
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