democratic national convention

P+P@The DNC: What Obama’s Speech Really Means

Friday, August 29th, 2008


Photograph by Chris Nelson / Full gallery here

They say first impressions are everything, but my first impression of Barack Obama’s speech last night wasn’t much. I was slightly dismayed at how let down I was by “the once-in-a-generation experience.” Covering the convention should have given me the ultimate insight into Obamamania. For most of the time, I was convinced that, aside from a few moments (the Roll Call vote, Bill’s speech, and hearing Obama utter the words “I accept your nomination for president”), it would all be a waste.

But at an afterparty last night, something pulled my head out of the journalistic, observational fog. I had spent the week trapped in a political convention bubble, enveloped by a non-stop barrage of punditry. At the “Yes We Can” Celebration party thrown by Perennial, the same management company behind the epic Wyclef Jean event earlier in the week, I watched a set by the Black Eyed Peas, who managed to penetrate my persistent cynicism with their raw energy and gusto.

Toward the end of the evening, I had gotten separated from the rest of the group, and decided to walk outside to see if there were any interesting conversations to be had. I struck up one with two African-American men, who didn’t know each other, but both of whom, by coincidence, were from Los Angeles. As we chatted, a Kenyan man wearing a dapper suit approached looking for a light and joined in on our chat. He had flown all the way from Kenya just to see Obama’s acceptance speech. His tribe in Kenya neighbors that of Obama’s father.

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P+P @The DNC: On the Ground at Invesco, Waiting, and Waiting…..

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Like many other people, our fearless reporters, Brooke-Sidney, Max Zimbert, and Torey Van Oot are waiting in line at Invesco Field. We just got a text from Max that said:

We arrived in line at  1:10. It’s about a 1.5 to two-mile long line. About 15 minutes later, we merge with another line near Seventh and Walnut, and some people start complaining.

Security officer responds: “There’ll be no negativity in my line. It’s a day of positive change. Positivity all around.”

More pix after the jump!

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P+P @ The DNC: Wyclef Gets The Unity Thing

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008


Photography by Chris Nelson – click on slideshow to view larger images

DENVER — “I’ll be gone ‘til November,” sang Haitian national and former Fugees member, Wyclef Jean, softly crooning the lyric to one of his most popular songs —as he has at many concerts before last night.

But then a pause: “And why is November so important?” And with that simple question, the mostly young and raucous crowd roared back a response, shouts of “Obama!” mixed in with exuberant acknowledgment of what is at stake in the political world for young Democrats.

With a rousing blend of political activism and musical mastery, Wyclef Jean brought the house down at local bar, Theorie, in front of revelers that included Reps. Jesse Jackson Jr., but who were mostly young, ethnic, and all on the same partisan page.

Aside from providing an astoundingly good musical experience, the palpable energy between performer and party-goers proved that unity of thought among today’s young liberals comes easier than within the Democratic Party itself, as Wyclef himself has noted and tried to change.

White, black, Latino…everyone jumped up on stage at the end as Wyclef climbed the speaker stack and wrapped the show with a twenty plus jam session, chanting Obama and whipping the crowd into a frenzy over and over again with alternating tempos before finally walking out the front door.

It was the singular event of the weekend thus far in terms of raw energy. 2012 Host Committee: take note.

P+P @ The DNC: Random Sightings

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Rev. Al Sharpton stops for a picture with DNC volunteers bright and early at Denver International Airport

I’m pretty sure I was still half-asleep when I stumbled off the plane and into Denver International Airport early this morning. Maybe I was a bit delusional from getting just 3 hours of screaming-baby-on-fight-interrupted sleep, but I think I was expecting to walk off of the runway and into the heart of the convention — American flags, pontificating pols, protesters and all!

A few campaign manager manual-carrying suits and strange cowboy-dressed visitor’s guides aside, my first impression of Denver was disappointingly drab —  but alas, a short ride on the terminal shuttle later, I walk right into none other than the Rev. Al Sharpton. Actually, I walked past Sharpton, stopped in my groggy stupor to do a double-take then fumbled (unsuccessfully) around in my carry-on bag to find a notebook or voice recorder or some sort of tool for recording our interaction. He stopped to take a photo or two with what seemed to be a group of DNC volunteers before being whisked away. All I managed to snag was this picture via BlackBerry, but I’m sure we’ll have many (hopefully more fruitful) run-ins to note in the days to come!

Crackberry Photograph by Torey Van Oot

Coffee Klatch: Daily News Round Up

Monday, August 18th, 2008

The Great Debate: This weekend’s debate between Prez candidates Barack Obama and John McCain at Orange County’s Saddleback Church has been making the news—mostly because by all accounts, McCain kicked Obama’s ass. Of course, McCain, even as a “fake” Republican, had the advantage in a debate where the setting is a church, which tends to draw a more conservative crowd. But still, the Los Angeles Times’ description of the debate, moderated by Pastor Rick Warren, should send chills throughout the Obamamaniacs who believe the Chosen One should be moonwalking to the White House. Obama is dubbed, “analytical and nuanced,” says the Times, which is newspaperspeak for “he’s f9%cked in the debates!” Everyone knows, the average American is too dumb to sit through long, ponderous replies, which is why McCain will do better in the forthcoming debates. McCain, said the Times, “answers the same questions crisply to greater applause.”

The sequel to this story, comes today, as the blogosphere is alight with claims that McCain knew the questions beforehand, even though he was not to hear Obama’s portion. McCain’s teams has responded to this outburst with a wag the dog manuever, pointing fingers and whining that NBC News covers Obama more and it’s so not fair. Politics is fun isn’t it? It’s almost like watching five-year olds in a playground. Except the five-year olds are more mature.

Where’s My Veep At? The Democratic National Convention is a week away and the Republican National Convention is two weeks away, and still no VP announcement has been forthcoming. The Financial Times says that an announcement from Obama might come by Thursday, since announcing the pick over the weekend would be fruitless. Still, the same names are floating around: Joe Biden, Evan Bayh, Tim Kaine, and Kathleen Sebelius. Over the weekend, John Kerry was mentioned, which seems absolutely bizarre. For McCain, Tom Ridge and Joe Lieberman still seem to be in the running.

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