canyonwalker: Malign spirits in TV attempt to kill viewer (tv)
2024-08-25 10:07 pm

5 Things from Night 1 of the DNC

I was busy with work last week so I didn't have time to watch the Democratic National Convention. I'm just catching up on it now. I watched Night 1 of the DNC (from Monday) on Saturday night. Don't spoil the plot— I haven't read the books!

As Night 1 full videos ran some 6 hours I just watched about an hour of highlights. Here are 5 Things I took away from it:

1) From a messaging & communications perspective, it's great that Democrats are leading with a positive message

There's plenty negative Dems could say about Trump. And indeed many of the speakers did point out at least a few of his failings each. But on the whole the tone of the night was positive. That's important because audiences want to hear what a speaker or party is for, not just what they're against.

2) Jesse Jackson wheeled out, doesn't speak

Jesse Jackson has been an icon in progressive politics for decades. I remember when he ran for president in 1984 and 1988. (Well, he ran for the Democratic nomination those two times but did not win it.) I also remember him guest starring on Saturday Night Live, of all places, multiple times during his campaigns. He was always a powerful speaker. And he was flexible enough to continue articulating his message while playing the straight man in comedic skits opposite professional satirists. Thus I found his appearance at this 2024 convention saddening. Jackson, now age 82, is in failing health. He has suffered from Parkinson's Disease for several years. On Monday night he  was pushed out in a wheelchair by an honor guard. He struggled to wave to the cheering  crowd. He did not speak. I appreciate the nod toward his legacy, but seeing a once towering figure brought so low detracted from the night for me.

3) President Biden spoke strongly but not dynamically

So much has been made of President Biden's less-than-expected performance in a debate against Donald Trump two months ago. After months, nay even years, of Republican leaders trumpeting, falsely and without evidence, that Biden is mentally impaired and unable to speak coherently due to his advanced age, it touched off a three week storm of vocal dissatisfaction among Democratic donors and leaders that culminated in Biden dropping out of the reelection campaign. Thus when Biden spoke on Night 1 I was keen to watch his performance. Biden spoke strongly... but not dynamically. He was on point. He was coherent. He was forceful in his delivery. He was even inspiring. But he showed no range. He did little to vary his volume, tone, or pace of speaking. He used almost no hand gestures. In fact he mostly gripped the lectern with both hands as if to brace himself in a defensive pose. In my experience as a practiced speaker and speaking coach (I did this in Toastmasters for 7 years) these are hallmarks not of a mentally incapable speaker but merely someone who is not yet confident and skilled in their delivery. Could this be regression in skills because of age? Maybe. I don't know. But I more believe it's how Biden has always been as he's struggled throughout his life to overcome the stutter he's had since childhood.

4) Hillary Clinton was gracious in passing the "break the glass ceiling" torch to Kamala Harris

Former presidential candidate Clinton is painted by her detractors, mostly unfairly, as a bitter person. After the historically unprecedented setbacks inflicted on her 2016 campaign resulting in a loss to Donald Trump— a loss in the arcane and outdated Electoral College even though she won the popular vote by nearly 3 million votes— she arguably has a lot to be bitter about. Thus I I was impressed with the humility and grace Clinton demonstrated in her speech. Instead of recalling all the mean or unfair things done to her, instead of ruing about how she was not the woman to break the ultimate glass ceiling in the US, she warmly encouraged Democrats to help Kamala Harris do just that.

5) VP candidate Tim Walz tears up

Minnesota governor and VP candidate Tim Walz did not have a speaking role in Night 1 of the DNC. He did not speak, but the cameras often cut to him for reaction shots. It seemed like Walz was on the verge of tears the whole night. His face showed him struggling with raw emotion. I see this as a good thing, BTW. For far too long men have been socialized that showing emotion is bad, that it's a feminine thing and anti-masculine. But having emotions is not limited to one gender. I'm glad to see a male political leader model that it's okay for men to have feelings and show them.


canyonwalker: I'm holding a 3-foot-tall giant cheese grater - Let's make America grate again! (politics)
2024-08-23 06:19 pm

The Democrats Got their Mojo Back

I'm late to the party for saying this, but the Democratic Party has really gotten its mojo back the past few weeks. Put this in the category of "better late than never". While none of it may be news to you, if nothing else it's a message in a bottle to my future self.

When Joe Biden folded his reelection campaign just over a month ago the Dems were in the pit of despair. Biden had been lagging in the polls for months, and his uninspiring performance at a debate with Donald Trump June 27 caused a few big-money donors to start expressing doubts about him. The craven mainstream media glommed onto the story and ran articles about it twice a day for weeks, as if his opponent Donald Trump weren't still saying outrageous and dangerous things the whole time, not to mention speaking in increasingly unintelligible fashion— but no, Biden was the one having his mental acuity questioned daily. The Democrats' already sagging campaign dropped into a tailspin.

There was a brief moment following Biden's choice to drop out where the same chattering class of political pundits who talked his campaign into the ground expressed uncertainty about whether his endorsement of Kamala Harris, his former running mate, would improve the party's lot. Much to everyone's surprise, Kamala Harris stepping forward as the presumptive Democratic nominee didn't just improve things, it electrified the base. Democratic voters who'd previously worn hangdog looks suddenly snapped and crackled with new energy.

Was Biden all that bad? Was Harris that much better? The answer is yes-and-no to both. Biden and Harris are close on policy matters, so there's little change there. And Biden's challenges with mental acuity were nowhere near as bad as the dishonest GOP or craven mainstream media might've led the average person to believe. But where Biden failed, and the whole generation of Democratic leaders around him failed, was that they failed to control the message.

Media Matters

The area where Republicans have been absolutely killing the Dems the past 8+ years is messaging. And within the realm of messaging it's not the quality— the GOP routinely claim things that are transparently false and/or contradict things they claimed even moments beforehand— but the quantity.

Republicans have been getting their message out morning, noon, and night, leveraging not just their friendly TV/radio/print media outlets but also social media. Meanwhile Democrats seemed completely out to lunch on the modern media landscape, exhibiting no apparent understanding of the power of social media, let alone even the the "24 hour news cycle" of cable TV— which has been around since the 1990s.

The "old age" problem the Dems have isn't old age per se but that so many of the party leaders— who happen to be old in age— campaign like it's still the 1980s. They've been unable or unwilling to adapt to the times. While GOPs have been pounding their talking points 4 times a day, Dems have remained aloof and refused to engage the issues. They seemed to expect the media to (1) come to them and (2) dig deep to sort fact from fiction for its readers/viewers. Hahaha, that's not how most of the media works anymore.

"Weird"

So, is Kamala Harris really that much better— at media? That's also a yes-and-no situation. Yes, she is more active in providing grist for the media mill than her predecessor, though that's a low bar to cross. But also "no" because it's not just Harris who's different. The party leaders have really woken up around her. With her choice of Tim Walz she picked someone who gets it.

Walz, for example, fired back at Trump's rhetorical technique of branding his opponents with insulting nicknames. It's low-brow but generally has been successful for Trump. Walz didn't even pick a particularly trenchant nickname. He simply called Trump and Vance weird. But that was enough. Just firing back with anything was enough. Weird stuck. It gave supporters something to repeat, and once people were repeating it the guileless media started repeating it, too. It's a simple example of a rallying cry that helps inspire the base and capture the attention of swing voters.


canyonwalker: Cthulhu voted - touch screen! (i voted)
2024-08-06 09:29 pm

Kamala Harris Picks Midwestern White Guy

Today Vice President Kamala Harris picked a running mate for her 2024 presidential campaign. From just minutes after President Biden ended his campaign and Harris became the presumptive Democratic nominee, political pundits were already describing the kind of person Harris would have to pick to make her ticket palatable to middle America....

From the moment Kamala Harris became the presumptive nominee, the pundit class was saying she'd have to pick a Midwestern White Guy as her running mate

So I thought, why not pick a Midwestern White guy with experience running a presidential campaign, someone who's also familiar with the Biden/Harris administration, someone who's got executive experience, say, running a cabinet level agency....

Sec'y Transportation Pete Buttigieg meets the definition of Midwestern White Guy....

Oops, when the pundits said "Midwestern White guy" they left one thing unsaid...

From the moment Kamala Harris became the presumptive nominee, the pundit class was saying she'd have to pick a Midwestern White Guy as her running mate. They also meant STRAIGHT. Sorry, Mayor Pete.

Sorry, Mayor Pete.

canyonwalker: Sullivan, a male golden eagle at UC Davis Raptor Center (Golden Eagle)
2024-07-21 09:07 pm

Biden Folds

President Joe Biden has dropped out of the race for the 2024 election. He announced this morning he's ending his run for reelection. He endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for nomination as the Democratic party candidate.

Biden's move comes after weeks of the mainstream news media writing his political obituary. He showed poorly in the presidential debate on June 27, failing to land any rhetorical hits on Donald Trump and occasionally looking like a deer in the headlights. Nevermind that Biden continued to show a firm grasp on a variety of world events and how government and modern technology actually work, unlike Trump whose frequent rally speeches are ongoing word-salads with lengthy descents into nonsensical rants about things like sharks and the fact that batteries can't be put in a vehicle. (It's surprising Elon Musk endorsed him so strongly days after that.) A few billionaire donors turned against Biden, and "Is this the end?" was all the press could seem to write about for weeks.

The Republican party ultimately got in line behind an election-denying openly racist convicted felon and rapist who fomented a violent insurrection against the US Congress and his own vice president on January 6, 2020. But Biden had a weak debate performance 3½ weeks ago. Yeah, that's totally worse.

Look, I don't think Biden was the best candidate ever. I've written before about the problem of older leaders staying in political leadership long past the point where their political skills are showing to be badly out of date. Was Biden's mind also slipping? I'm not sure, as I don't trust most the publicized claims that it was. Everybody making that claim has ulterior motives. That's not to say they're wrong, just that there's reasonable suspicion about various personal motivations. But for anyone arguing that Biden was no longer mentally qualified, have you looked at the other guy?

Well, Kamala Harris is the presumptive Democratic nominee now. I don't think she's the best candidate ever, either. But again, look at the other guy. Harris in 2024!