“you can’t blink”
I love this lady. She gets it.
“Aides to Mr McCain said more interviews were scheduled for next week, but made it clear hostile networks would not be selected.”
Read: MSNBC.
They mean, after the ABC exception to the rule?
Looks like this "McCain Doctrine" is about as doctrinaire as the fabled "Bush Doctrine."
Until her interview with Charles Gibson, a veteran foreign affairs specialist
so much better than O’reilly, who doesn’t really know anything. It was a good first test of her skills and knowledge.
I didn't think it was a "tough tone". I thought it was an assertive, confident answer. No nonsense, just truth.
The AP web headline: Sarah Palin tries to defend qualifications, struggles with foreign policy questions
A real piece of crap if you ask me.
Read it for yourself Here
Here's his bio from before working on GMA. Where is the "foreign affairs" experience? Other than interviewing celeberties and politicians, I see no overseas assignments.
More misleading stuff from the MSM.
r. Gibson first became familiar to television viewers as a correspondent on ABC's "World News Tonight With Peter Jennings," as an occasional substitute for Ted Koppel as anchor on "Nightline," and as substitute anchor on "World News This Morning."
Mr. Gibson was chief correspondent covering the House of Representatives for ABC News from 1981 to 1987. On Capitol Hill, Mr. Gibson covered Tip O'Neill and the Democratic handling of President Reagan's legislative agenda.
On general assignment for ABC News from 1977 to 1981, Mr. Gibson reported on a wide array of national news, including investigations of the CIA, as well as economic stories. As a White House correspondent for ABC News from 1976 to 1977, he covered Gerald Ford's presidential campaign.
Mr. Gibson came to ABC News in 1975 from a syndicated news service, Television News Inc., which he joined in 1974. He covered President Nixon's resignation and the subsequent Watergate conspiracy trials for TVN.
From 1970 to 1973, Mr. Gibson was an anchor and reporter for WJLA-TV (then WMAL-TV), the ABC affiliate in Washington, D.C. Before joining WJLA-TV, he had been news director for WLVA-TV and Radio in Lynchburg, Va. His first job in broadcasting was Washington producer for RKO Network in 1966.
The National Endowment for the Humanities named Mr. Gibson a National Journalism Fellow at the University of Michigan in 1973, and he has served as a board member of this program, now known as the Knight-Wallace Fellows at Michigan, since 1988.
Mr. Gibson is a graduate of Princeton University, where he was news director for the university's radio station, WPRB-FM. He was honored with the 1992 John Maclean Fellowship, which is awarded to Princeton alumni "who have made a major contribution to American society."
Mr. Gibson, a native of Evanston, Ill., grew up in Washington, D.C. He and his wife, Arlene, live in New York. They have two daughters.