Posted on 04/28/2004 4:51:36 AM PDT by Liz
Edited on 04/28/2004 5:08:08 AM PDT by Sidebar Moderator. [history]
In recent weeks, even Senator John Kerrys closest friends have been at a loss as to why the Democratic Presidential candidate has failed to communicate the most humanizing part of his biography: his war record as a decorated Vietnam veteran. "I know hes quite capable of it," said Bob Kerrey, the president of New School University, former Nebraska Senator and fellow Vietnam veteran. "I dont know why its not working now."
But there seems to be a very clear reason why: Mr. Kerry is terrible on TV.
"Abysmal," said John Weaver, the former strategist for Senator John McCains Presidential run and the man who coined the "Straight Talk Express."
Watching Mr. Kerry on TV, he said, "I dont know if its a stream of consciousness or stream of unconsciousness."
"Its a lot of words and no clarity, a lot of presence and no warmth," said Chris Matthews, the host of MSNBCs Hardball, who was preparing to interview Mr. Kerry for an hour on April 27. "And I think hes got to deal with that."
Take a look, for example, at NBCs Meet the Press on April 18. Tim Russert aired a tape of Senator John Kerrys appearance on the show 33 years earlier, when he was a young, jut-chinned veteran, 27 years old, full of baleful gravity, expressing a sense of shame for his actions in Vietnam. The camera cut back to Senator Kerry, now a man running for President of United States.
"You committed atrocities," said Mr. Russert gravely, asking Mr. Kerry to address the statements of the young man on the screen.
Suddenly, the current John Kerry, of 2004, gave a stumbling, inexplicable guffaw.
"Where did all that dark hair go, Tim? Thats a big question for me."
And suddenly, inexplicably, the question showed up: Where did all that gravitas go, John? Thats the big question for the viewer. The appealing young veteran disappeared, the angry, vengeful Democratic candidate disappeared, and John Kerry, the callow Swiss-prep-school boy returned, as vividly as George Bush the smirking frat boy makes his appearances on national television. "Awful," said MSNBCs Chris Matthews. "Just awful."
In recent appearances, Mr. Kerrys digressions and obfuscations about whether he threw a war medal or a ribbon on the White House lawn in 1971or whether the young Mr. Kerry should have used the word "war crimes" to describe actions in Vietnamhave obscured the candidate. At every turn, he has managed to turn the TV screen into smoked glass: Hes right in front of you, but you cant quite make him out. With his morose patrician mien and robotic deliveryparodied with precision by Jon Stewart on the Monday, April 24, Daily Show, surely not a good thing for the candidateMr. Kerrys TV performances are sounding a gut-level alarm about his ability to inspire confidence in the electorate. "He needs to speak the truth and speak from the heart and not try to calibrate his views or his actions," said Mr. Weaver. "The public catches on to these things, and they can see through whether theres a calibration going on or not. He needs to stop that."
He didnt need to speak the name of former Vice President Al Gore. But a media strategist for another Democratic Presidential candidate said that Mr. Kerry had to lose the "legislative speak" and begin talking "like a normal person communicates, speaking in simple, more declarative sentences that have a clearer meaning for people." Compared to President George W. Bush, he added, Mr. Kerry appeared more intelligent, "but there are many instances in which George Bush communicates more clearly."
The Republican attack ads about Mr. Kerry that have run in 18 battleground states have set the tone for Mr. Kerrys appearances. Since April 15, theyve speared Mr. Kerry for having said in the fall of 2003, "I actually did vote for the $87 billionbefore I voted against it." The context, of course, was important: Mr. Kerry was criticizing Vermont Governor Howard Dean at the time, arguing over how to balance the budget in the context of the war in Iraq. But instead of squelching that image with a decisive blow, Mr. Kerry has continually cemented it with distended, lumbering TV appearances.
But it also showed the power of simplicity: a single one-liner could define an entire interview. Mr. Kerrey said the candidate needed to reconnect with his own history.
"I think hes got to go back to remember what it felt like and help people understand what it was like in 1971," said Mr. Kerrey. "It was a terrible time, and he was a kid. And he just said some indefensible things. How unusual does that make him for a 25-year-old? Not very. Especially during that time. He served honorably, with great distinction."
But even when Mr. Kerry attempts to let his passion fly, he becomes hectoring and aggressive. On Monday, April 26, Good Morning America host Charlie Gibson asked Mr. Kerry to explain his inconsistent stories about whether he once tossed war medals or ribbons onto the White House lawn in 1971. Maybe it was a quibbling issue, all things considered. But was this the best way to tackle it?
Senator Kerry: Charlie, Charlie, youre wrong! That is not what happened. I threw my ribbons across. And all you have to do is go back and find the file footage.
Charlie Gibson: And someone elses medals? And someone elses medals, correct?
Senator Kerry: Later, after, excuse meexcuse me, Charlie!
It hadnt helped that the first live shot of Mr. Kerry was of him shaking his head in disgust at Mr. Gibsons setup to the interview. On TV, Mr. Kerry projects a subtle disdain for the medium while he is appearing on it. He doesnt even plan on answering the questions, if he can help it. "Theres no such thing as a trick question with Kerry, because he just wont answer it," observed Mr. Matthews. "Well, let me put it this way, Chris, or Well, the real question here, Chris . See, thats the problem with him. And I find afterward, well be having conversations afterward, and its hard to get to him even then."
Not only has Mr. Kerry not relayed his ideas with clarity, he has failed to relay the visceral presence of an unaffected personality. On his Meet the Press outing, he told Mr. Russert: "Now, were in a position now to be able to respond and introduce myself to the country. I look forward to that. I look forward to Americans getting to know who I really am." But why was he looking forward? There he was, live on television, with every chance to be himself.
"Im not sure what the message isthat may be the essence of the problem," said Joe McGinniss, the author of The Selling of the President, the best-seller that detailed Richard M. Nixons media strategy. As a Massachusetts resident, Mr. McGinniss said he had never seen Mr. Kerry do well on TVor even in public, for that matter. "When he sits down one-to-one with somebody, hes not good," said Mr. McGinniss. But then again, he added, neither was Mr. Bush, or Mr. Nixon. "They knew Nixon was never going to be good in a situation like that. The shows that Roger Ailes directed had the appearance of spontaneity, but it was all carefully scripted. You put Nixon in a thing where he looks like hes taking a risk where hes not. Theyre going to have to dress up the set for John Kerry, but he cant do it on his own. Hes not Jack Kennedy, although he wishes he were."
Mr. Matthews described Mr. Kerry as more like Kennedys speechwriter, Ted Sorenson. "Hes kind of, like, world-weary, and he has that voice of wariness, almost like a Scandinavian winter," he said. "Its cold and its weary. Thats what he sounds like when hes interviewed."
Despite Mr. Kerrys problems, a number of observers said it was still very early in the race. And its also not clear that the crucial voters even watch shows like Meet the Press or Hardball with any regularity, or even interest. "Typically, for the swing-voter type, when youre asking somebody about the choice of words 33 years ago, those people have a 100 percent record of either forgiveness or completely not giving a [expletive deleted]," said Lawrence ODonnell, the MSNBC political analyst. "Have we learned nothing from George Wallaces career?"
Mr. ODonnell said these TV appearances were simply testing grounds.
"The reason we stare at John Kerry in April is that Tim is the best indicator there is on how rough its going to be on you in a Presidential debate in October," said Mr. ODonnell, who like Mr. Russert once worked for Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan. "Oh, look at that, theres a vulnerability there. And, Oh, by the way, hes got several months to work on that."
Still, Mr. Kerry has a lot more history to contend withTV history. "You create a tremendous number of obstacles in the obstacle course of life by going on television for 27, 30 years," said Mr. Matthews. "Because the age of television has created this incredible archive system. No matter what youve ever said, it can come popping out at you. But the only way you can replace old stuff is with new stuff, so you have to constantly make your new stuff more compelling. Thats how you do it. So television has a permanence, but you almost have to do battle with your old tape."
Meanwhile, everyone is waiting for Mr. Kerry to transform.
"The Democratic friends I have keep saying, Wait, wait, hell get better," said Don Hewitt, the executive producer of 60 Minutes. "Well, Im waiting, and I dont know if he will or not. He may yet surprise me and make it apparent why hes the guy Id like to see as President of the United States. I havent seen it yet.
"Maybe he needs some good professional advice," he added, "if hes in a mood to take it."
You may reach Joe Hagan via email at: jhagan@observer.com.
Then there's the damaging revelations about his gas-guzzling cars, SUVs, planes, boats and motorized recreational vehicles.
Yet, Kerry's worst Kodak moment was his hour-long MTP interview.
When MTP ran videos showing him testifying before Congress about committing war crimes, he laughed inappropriately, when one would expect a thoughtful comment on this serious subject. Kerry was trying vainly to spin........... then made a dumb comment about his hair, then and now.
Then we found out Kerry paid $1000 to fly out his hairdresser for his MTP appearance. Kerry's bigbuck hairstyling is ironic on light of his damaging comment about his post-Vietnam hair.
Not even when he's tugging me by the hair with both hands...
Kerry is the perfect Dem candidate, for Bush. If Kerry is still around in November it might be a 50 state sweep. A landslide of epic proportions.
Imus was joking this morning about how Terry McAwful had sat in for Chrissy last night, for the Kerry interview.
If they really think that's the most humanizing part of his biography, no wonder they're at a loss.
It's ALIVE! ALIVE!
If he's paying $1000 for a haircut, I'd almost think he's paying just as much if not more for all that bad advice he's being given.
WASHINGTON, D.C. With the air gushing out of John Kerry's balloon, it may be only a matter of time until political insiders in Washington face the dread reality that the junior senator from Massachusetts doesn't have what it takes to win and has got to go. As arrogant and out of it as the Democratic political establishment is, even these pols know the party's got to have someone to run against George Bush. They can't exactly expect the president to self-destruct into thin air.
With growing issues over his wealth (which makes fellow plutocrat Bush seem a charity case by comparison), the miasma over his medals and ribbons (or ribbons and medals), his uninspiring record in the Senate (yes war, no war), and wishy-washy efforts to mimic Bill Clinton's triangulation gimmickry (the protractor factor), Kerry sinks day by day. The pros all know that the candidate who starts each morning by having to explain himself is a goner.
What to do? Look for the Dem biggies, whoever they are these days, to sit down with the rich and arrogant presumptive nominee and try to persuade him to take a hike. Then they can return to business as usualresurrecting John Edwards, who is still hanging around, or staging an open convention in Boston, or both.
If things proceed as they are, the dim-bulb Dem leaders are going to be very sorry they screwed Howard Dean.
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