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Thompson to Leno: I'm Runnin'
Five decades after the Nixon-Kennedy debates, three decades after an actor and former TV host was elected president and a good decade and a half after Bill Clinton blew sax on the Arsenio Hall show, the perception still persists that anytime a candidate uses TV strategically, it's a sign that he or she is a new kind of media-savvy politician. Thus the hullaballoo over Fred Thompson's choosing his old network NBC to announce his candidacy for President, on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
But really, was there a more (strategically) conservative and old-fashioned move Thompson could have made? In an age of niche media, he chose to debut on one of the flagship shows of the ever-shrinking mass media. He even chose network over cable, opting out of the New Hampshire Republican debate on Fox News, dissing the multi-candidate debate format to Leno in the process: "I don't think much of 'em," he drawled. "I don't think it's a very enlightening forum, to tell the truth."
So how did Thompson enlighten his audience about his candidacy? Well, he's running for "our kids and grandkids." And there's a red pickup truck involved. Leno did engage Thompson with a few foreign-policy questions--Iran, Thompson said, has "a guy who's not put together well upstairs running the country." (You make the Bush joke--it's too easy.) But Thompson's loudest message was stylistic, casting himself as a homespun guy, who likes drivin' his trucks and droppin' his g's and who just put together his campaign with some fellas "around the kitchen table." (An expensive kitchen table I'm sure that was.)
Polls? "Well, you can't tell too much about polls nowadays..." Campaigning? Shucks. He just likes "to get out with the folks. Sometimes I'll communicate with 'em over the airwaves." Everything about his manner suggested he was going to offer the viewer a steaming cup of Folger's coffee. Even his position on the couch seemed cannily casual--slumped slightly back, as if he were kicking back in the living room, while also accentuating that vaunted electoral height advantage by leaning over to get down to Leno's level.
In the pre-Reagan era, Thompson's media strategy might have seemed like brave new politicking. But today, just as he's presenting himself as a politically conservative option for Republican voters, he's also presenting himself as a stylistically conservative choice (even as he offhandedly plugged his campaign website), a scripted-drama candidate compared with, say, Rudy Giuliani's pugnacious, reality-TV persona or Mitt Romney's game-show-host slickness. (In this sense, Law & Order, the most stylistically retro of today's TV franchises, with its barely updated take on Dragnet, was perfect training for Thompson.) Whether that manner will serve him in other formats, and whether it's really suited to campaigning in 2008, will be among the more interesting media questions of this election. But for now, Fred Thompson is officially tryin'.
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1
Yee Haw!!!
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2
My mom likes him. She can't tell me why. She can tell me that he was on Law & Order, a show she watches religiously. She knows he was a Senator from Tennessee but she can't tell me when. Which is ironic because we lived in Tennessee when he was the Senator.
Thompson's campaign is the biggest joke in politics since Dukakis rode around in a Tank and everyone who votes for him is a moron. This is exactly what's wrong with American politics.
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3
I wouldn't say everyone who votes for Thompson is a moron. Anyone who watches Jay Leno, on the other hand...
Thompson's only in the race because Southern social conservatives need to vote for someone who looks like them, talks like them, goes to the same church as them and hates gay people as much as them. The sad thing is his candidacy is going to take votes from Mitt Romney and help elect multiple divorcee and noted baby murderer Rudy Giuliani.
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4
"Baby murderer"?
I didn't see Thompson on Leno except for what you just embedded, but he certainly was savvy enough to avoid the three thousand debates they've had so far. Also, he did the awkward "I've never watched a late night TV show" quickly stand up and walk away once the host starts to thank you move.
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5
Fred is a joke. All I will say is you will never hear him say anything that has substance. He does not understand the issues and he will strictly build his platform and his voting record on what will keep him elected. He appeals to the not-so intelligient NASCAR crowd and anyone who actually listens to his words or even pays attention to politics and issues in this country, will realize he is always always talking out his a__.
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6
Fred thompson is a blithering moron.When he worked for Nixon back in the day Nixon was kind enough to call him a "useful idiot" and that is coming from a paranoid drunk....America is doomed if this jackass gets even 10% of the vote....He will never be the president but if he gets that much of the vote(assuming he gets the nomination)we (people that have brains) will have 10% of the voting population that voted for him (plus the 26 %ers that still praise bush) to live in fear of {yes i said fear the wingnuts} I fear their knuckle-dragging,meth-addicted,nascar watching,psuedo-religious zealotry drenched,hypocritical,homophobic,xenophobic,gun-toting asses more than the "brown people".Is this still america or amoronica?
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7
the "brown people" Jared? Seriously, are you confused or to scared to clarify. Their are brown skinned people all over America. There are Indians, African-Americans, really tan whites, Hispanics and even some Muslims are "brown." Did you have a favorite "brown people", or is blasting out Southern stereo-types and a brief history lesson on Nixon all you have to bash a candidate?
As for your question, I say amoronica.
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