press conference

Obama to Reporter: “Don’t Waste Your Question”

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Mr. Cool almost loses it when a dogged reporter, John McCormick, from the Chicago Tribune presses for a response to the revelation that Obama’s Chief of Staff-to-be, Rahm Emanuel, had 21 taped conversations over Obama’s vacated Senate seat with disgraced Gov. Rod Blagojevitch.

Obama: Now He’s Really A Celebrity

Monday, November 10th, 2008
Michelle and Barack Obama out for dinner on Saturday night.

Michelle and Barack Obama out for dinner on Saturday night.

The McCain camp scored one of its few victories over the course of the campaign when it labeled Barack Obama a celebrity in advertising spots that ran in August. The criticism stuck because in many ways it was true: Obama was drawing thousands of adoring fans to every campaign rally he held.

But now that Obama is President-elect, Americans can obsess about their new, handsome Commander-in-Chief and his beautiful family without fear of being labeled star hounds. On Friday, the Obama camp posted election-night photos of the family waiting for Barack to be declared the winner on Flickr, and the page wouldn’t display for a while as visitors eager to see the new first family overloaded the site.

The Obamas are getting the real celebrity treatment: There are now grainy photographs chronicling their every move. The Huffington Post breathlessly declared Sunday, “Obamas Eat Out For First Time Since Win.”

Barack and Michelle Obama are meeting with George and Laura Bush Monday afternoon for their first official tour of the White House, and Washington insiders are predicting awkwardness as Obama meets with someone he has spent the last months criticizing on the campaign trail. But while Obama meets with the exiting president, continues to assemble his cabinet, and weighs what policy initiatives to take on first, us lowly citizens are tackling the real issue the first family needs to address, asking “what kind of dog should Malia and Sasha get?” [Ed note—presidential celebrities are just like you and me!]

Obama addressed this concern at his first press conference as president-elect on Friday.

With respect to the dog, this is a major issue. I think it’s generated more interest on our Web site than just about anything. We have—we have two criteria that have to be reconciled. One is that Malia is allergic, so it has to be hypo-allergenic. There are a number of breeds that are hypo-allergenic. On the other hand, our preference would be to get a shelter dog. But obviously, a lot of shelter dogs are mutts, like me. So the—so, whether we’re going to be able to balance those two things, I think, is a pressing issue on the Obama household.

Obama has been praised for running a brilliant campaign, but clearly he knows the real way to get into Americans’ hearts: talk about pets. Just Google “Obama family dog” and there will be thousands of stories and hundreds of breed suggestions for the Obamas to consider.

Even Bill Kristol is concerned a dog-friendly Obama will be an unbeatable president. Writing about Obama’s press conference, the conservative New York Times columnist said, “Here, in a few sentences, Obama did the following: He deepened his bond with every dog lover in America. He identified with every household that’s tried to figure out what kind of dog to get. He touched every parent with a kid allergic to pets. He showed compassion by preferring a dog from a shelter. And he demonstrated a dry and slightly politically incorrect wit by commenting that ‘a lot of shelter dogs are mutts like me.’”

A common refrain during the campaign from McCain and others was that Obama was an unknown. Now that he will be the next president, there is a demonstrated hunger from Americans to learn more about Obama and his family. What new styles will Michelle introduce? Where will the girls go to school? Will Barack follow through on his pledge to install a basketball court in the White House?

We’ll all be able to follow along as the Obamas make their new home in Washington. Some celebrities complain about the lack of privacy in their lives. But that doesn’t apply when it’s the president, right?

comic news

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

The men behind the Light Bright guerilla marketing campaign for Aqua Teen Hunger Force rattled members of the media yesterday at their press conference. “Are you not taking this seriously?” said one reporter. Another asks essentially the same thing. And then again. In a report on the conference today Fox News refers to the marketing campaign as a “botched scheme,” as if the Light Bright thingies actually were ill-designed bombs, devices meant to harm the homeland. One more time for Fox News: The thingies are ADS not BOMBS!

The Aqua Teen Hunger guys are cartoonists or, funnier, cartoon marketers, one in dreadlocks, the other in an outgrown Beatles do. At the press conference they spoke with deadpan irony about hairstyles. Yet the TV news reporters had to ask whether the men were “taking this seriously.” What they weren’t taking seriously was TV news. And why should they?