Nonverbal Often Worth 1,000 Debate Words
A Long Sigh, A Peek At A Watch, A Five O'clock Shadow: Expert Explains How Appearance, Gestures Can Tip Scales
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President Bush looking at his watch during presidential debate Oct. 15, 1992, at Univesity of Richmond's Robins Center. Independent candidate Ross Perot is at rear. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)
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Photo Essay
Great Debates
Key moments and match-ups in past presidential debates.
As the nation waited to see whether John McCain showed up for his first scheduled debate with Barack Obama Friday night, political consultant Laura Schwartz pointed out to Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith that it was 48 years ago to the day when the young, handsome John F. Kennedy took on Richard Nixon.
Nixon had a five o'clock shadow, and a shirt that didn't fit.
He'd had knee surgery a month before and, Schwartz explained, "had dropped 20 pounds. He showed up at the debate, refused makeup, looked pale, looked pasty, and had an ill-fitting shirt from losing that weight. He didn't get a new shirt. So, it's really important. That shows you're healthy. It shows you're out there to compete."
In the end, said Schwartz, "Those listening on the radio said Nixon won and those watching, the 70 million, said Kennedy won. So, a lot of lessons were learned from that very first debate."
And, says Schwartz, it changed the way candidates prepare for the sessions. They use "briefing books (prepared a month in advance) about every issue and every talking point and every solution they've offered, everything from what the other candidate has been saying about it... not only what you need to say, but be prepared for what they have to say.
"But it's not just about what you say. It's how you say it, and how you look when you say it. They will be practicing under the big bright lights because, tonight, 90 minutes -- that's endurance, endurance under bright lights and under pressure."
It's estimated the first Obama-McCain debate could draw 100 million viewers and set a record, if it happens, Schwartz noted.
Then she looked back at a famous moment in the 1992 debate among President Bush, Bill Clinton and Ross Perot.
It was the first televised town hall-format debate and, Schwartz recalled, Mr. Bush was asked a question about the recession. He was told by an audience member about its personal impact, "and he looked at his watch, he looked bored. He looked out of touch. And his polling went down the next day."
The first debate in 2000 between Mr. Bush's son, George W. Bush, and Al Gore is still remembered for a long, deep Gore sigh, and Gore rolling his eyes. "He claimed he didn't know the camera would get his reactions, but they certainly did," Schwartz said. "So, in preparing for the next debate, his staff sat him down and made him watch the 'Saturday Night Live' parody of himself to see how much these things get rooted in pop culture."
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Democrats are pushing a bailout deal that puts 20% of the money into the troubled Acorn housing organization. This is pure pork by democrats.
The deal that%u2019s on the table now is not a very good deal. Twenty percent of the money that should go to retire debt that will be created to solve this problem winds up in a housing organization called ACORN that is an absolute ill-run enterprise, and I can%u2019t believe we would take money away from debt retirement to put it in a housing program that doesn%u2019t work.
Obama''s own words:
From Dreams of My Father: ''I ceased to advertise my
mother''s race at the age of 12 or 13, when I began to suspect that by doing
so I was ingratiating myself to whites.''
From Dreams of My Father : ''I found a solace in
nursing a pervasive sense of grievance and animosity against my mother''s
race.''
From Dreams of My Father: ''There was something
about him that made me wary, a little too sure of himself, maybe. And
white.''
From Dreams of My Father: ''It remained necessary
to prove which side you were on, to show your loyalty to the black masses,
to strike out and name names.''
From Dreams of My Father: ''I never emulate white
men and brown men whose fates didn''t speak to my own. It was into my
father''s image, the black man, son of Africa ,( he lies here he has no
African roots he is Arab!!) that I''d packed all the
attributes I sought in myself , the attributes of Martin and Malcolm, Du Bois and Mandela.''
Now this is the change the Dems bring!!
You are taking snippets out of context from the autobiography of how a man came to terms with both his white American and black African heritage. Barak Obama''s honest self journey is a snapshot of various times in his life. No intelligent person stays stagnant. They move and change. Obama had no contact with his African heritage while growing up. In order to be a whole person, and to deal with the racism he encountered because of his color, his journey of discovery was necessary. Obama is a man who can move comfortably in two worlds. He has chosen to embrace both, rather than reject one. That speaks well of both his intelligence and his maturity.