Tuned In - TIME.com

The Hillary Speech

A couple quick from-vacation thoughts to kick off discussion:

I have no idea whether Hillary Clinton's endorsement speech helps Barack Obama politically or not. But simply from a standpoint of televisual interest, it's funny that people have talked about this speech as a dread moment of great risk for Obama.

Why? Modern conventions are the most reliably boring events on TV. Clinton's speech introduced actual drama and suspense for once—even if the suspense was entirely trumped up by a media obsessed with imagining Clintonian intrigues. What would she say? How would she say it? Whose side would she be on? (Also, she didn't release the speech well in advance, putting us in the rare situation of watching a political speech and not already knowing what the speaker was going to say.) This ginned up tremendous interest, while almost guaranteeing—because of expectations set by the pre-speech chatter—that if she did anything short of take superdelegates hostage, it would be viewed as a cathartic gesture of unity.

In other words, she made Tuesday night appointment viewing. I don't know if that will move a single vote, but that's not exactly a bad thing for a campaign. I've watched a lot of Hillary speeches over the campaign, but I don't remember one this fiery, or this fierily received—especially the Harriet Tubman crescendo, which subtly alluded to the interconnection of women and African American's issues historically. (There was an impressive bit of visual stage management too, with floor whips handing out "Hillary!" signs for the beginning of the speech, then replacing them with blue unity signs halfway through. Update: Another notable visual—notable by its absence—was the almost total lack of pictures of Bill or of Hillary as First Lady in her intro video, though her primary campaign had treated her years as the President's wife as part of her qualifications.)

Again, I don't know how it plays in the polls. Maybe it wins Obama votes. Maybe she overshadows him. But it beats having people change the channel.

(The usual disclosure: I'm an Obama voter. Robo-James, I'm pretty sure, is still solid for Ron Paul.)


Vacation Robo-Post: Drinking in Moderation

Unless Robo-James and his comrades have overthrown the humans, the Democratic National Convention has begun by now, with the Republicans up next week. That means the general election, and next month brings the first Presidential debate.

If the primary debates are any guide, we can make a good guess as to the content of the debate questions: in an effort to appear "tough," and gin up good soundbites for the next day's news, at some point a moderator is going to spend half an hour grill the candidates over whatever the gaffe, personality story or hot-button controversy of the week is.

Of course, it's easy to criticize the moderators for what they've asked in the past. What do you want them to ask about this time?

That's the high-road question. If you'd rather just take the low road, let's create a Presidential debates drinking game. I'll start: when a moderator uses the phrase "the race card," do a shot.

And every time a moderator mentions "elitism," do a shot with a beer chaser, to prove you're down with the working man.


The Morning After: Robo-Version, 08.26.08

While Flesh-James is on vacation, Robo-James has generated this free-for-all thread to discuss anything that's caught your eye in the worlds of TV, media, or other matters Tuned Inland-y. Think of it as do-it-yourself guest blogging.


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About Tuned In

James Poniewozik

James Poniewozik writes TIME magazine's Tuned In column, about pop culture and society. Tuned In, the blog version, is about the stuff we used to call "TV," whether it's in your living room, on your computer or -- once the networks figure out the technology and line up the advertisers -- in your dreams themselves. Read more

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