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- From: pat@sphinx.phys.Virginia.EDU (pat walsh)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.dan-quayle
- Subject: Re: Re. Integrity
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.220248.27226@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 22:02:48 GMT
- Sender: usenet@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU
- Organization: University of Virginia Physics Department
- Lines: 40
-
- Rocky Giovinazzo writes:
-
- >It sounds like you've been listening to Sam Donaldson defending himself
- >lately. I agree with you for the most part, but I'm obliged to point
- >out something Eleanor ___ (from _Newsweek_) mentioned a few days ago.
- >Apparently, the "media" consists of quite a lot of young people these
- >days, and this, she says, may or may not contribute to a tendency of
- >some organizations to report with a bias toward Clinton.
-
- Well, if I've been listening, it's all gone in one ear and out the other
- since I'm not sure what Sam has to say about this -- but if I sound like
- Sam, then Sam must be right! :-) :-) :-) Seriously, I have strong doubts
- about Eleanor (Clift?)'s thesis because 1) history, in the guise of Jimmy
- Carter's and Lyndon Johnson's administrations, suggests that we'll soon find
- out just how evenhanded the media can be and 2) an awful lot of young people
- these days are very conservative indeed!
-
- I do think that recent presidents -- from Johnson on -- have generally had
- a tougher time dealing with the media than their predecessors, chiefly
- because of the enormous effects of Vietnam and Watergate. These two national
- tragedies left the American public much less willing than before to trust their
- leaders, and I think the press has mirrored this change in attitude.
-
- It's also possible for media savvy to make it easier for the president to
- deal with the press. John F. Kennedy and Franklin D. Roosevelt both seem to
- have had an easier time than most since they both seemed to genuinely enjoy
- dueling with the press and outwitting them on occasion (Ronald Reagan, the
- "Great Communicator" -- who couldn't tell you his own name if you caught him
- without his note cards and Teleprompter -- pales by comparison, though he did
- outperform most other recent presidents in this respect). Nothing to put the
- press (and your political opposition) in its place more effectively than a
- little well-placed wit and humor; for example, contrast FDR's famous remarks
- about "my little dog, Fala" (enormously effective) with Nixon's "Checkers
- speech" (pious, humorless and embarrassing); or watch virtually any of JFK's
- press conferences. I don't think we can expect this level of media savvy from
- Clinton, though he'll probably be a big improvement on Bush.
-
- - Patrick Walsh
- University of Virginia Department of Physics
- pw@virginia.bitnet, pw@virginia.edu, pat@gomez.phys.virginia.edu
-