It’s now nearly 7 am in Austria. I’ve been up all night. And what a night.
I have supported Barack Obama for president ever since he announced his candidacy, in early 2007. There were times when I saw the rationale for this or that other candidate, but my preference was always Obama, never had a doubt.
On November 7, 2005, I attended a “taping”:http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=129775&title=barack-obama of _The Daily Show,_ and the guest was the new junior senator from Illinois, Barack Obama. I was really stoked to see him. I went with some Austrian friends, who now insist that I was gushing all about Obama even then, telling them to “watch this guy… he could really go places,” and all that. I don’t remember being so effusive, but apparently I was.
But, as you will see if you watch the video, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist interfered with my one chance to see a future president up close by calling an emergency vote that would keep Obama in Washington, D.C., for the day. He appeared via live video hookup, and that was neat too, but … well, I wish I had seen him for real. Maybe I will someday.
At that time I was very intrigued by Obama but still had no real reason to place undue hope in him. About a year later, David Remnick conducted an interview with Obama, and a “recording”:http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/10/30/061030on_onlineonly04 of the interview appeared on _The New Yorker_ website.
I can remember like it was yesterday driving late one night from New York City to my home in Westchester County, and listening to that interview on the way. The interview ended a few moments after I reached the garage, and I remember idling in the darkness to listen to the end, the way NPR always says you do. And I remember thinking, _Wow. This guy is something else._
I date my serious interest in Obama to that interview. In the turbulent years since, I’ve confronted plenty of Obama skeptics who want to know why I support Obama so thoroughly, in the face of a scanty resume and elusive rhetoric that seems to shirk the bone.
And I always say the same thing: _I admire his cast of mind, I admire the way he thinks._ I want a president who tries to confront as many sides of a problem as possible and forge the best possible answer that the political conditions permit, and Obama is the closest to that I’ve ever seen. And everything Obama has done and said since has tended to support that conclusion.
I never thought it would happen, and I always knew it would happen, at the same time. The next few years are going to be ones to remember.
Monthly Archives: November 2008
Congratulations, President-Elect Barack Obama!
The Champagne is Flowing in Austria!
It’s about 3 am here, and I just undid the cap. (Mini-bottles don’t have corks here.)
Congratulations to President-elect Obama!
As I Recall, Pennsylvania Seals It. Right?
MSNBC just called Pennsylvania for Obama. McCain spent the bulk of the last two weeks desperately trying to move the polls there, because there really wasn’t a victory scenario that didn’t include Pennsylvania. So that may be it for McCain.
Remy the Mouse + Scotch = Good Election Liveblogging
Maybe it’s just me, but I’m finding Patton Oswalt’s “profane musings”:http://blog.indecision2008.com/author/patton-oswalt/ on the Comedy Central website to be the absolute perfect tonic to the self-importance and smarm of Wolf Blitzer and his ilk.
Remnick Dons Reporter Cap, Blogs about Ayers
A bit harried here, watching CNN International and watching indispensible “streaming MSNBC”:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/22887506#22887506 and reading as many blogs as I can well after midnight in rural Austria, so I’ll just pass this on in its tersest form: David Remnick is in Chicago today, and he was present at a small gathering of reporters that William “Pallin’ around with Barack Obama” Ayers spoke with this afternoon, and “blogged about it”:http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/tny/2008/11/mr-ayerss-neighborhood.html.
The 1932 Election Changed Everything–Almost Everything, Anyway
I’m in the mood for a “realigning election”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Realigning_election, aren’t you? They’re almost as rare as “Halley’s Comet”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halley%27s_Comet, so we should be on the lookout for one in the event it comes by. We haven’t had one since 1932, you know.
This led to an obvious thought. In 2008 _The New Yorker_ has covered the election very closely; there have been innumerable articles touching on “Barack Obama”:http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2008/10/13/081013taco_talk_editors, “John McCain”:http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2008/05/26/080526taco_talk_toobin, “Sarah Palin”:http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/09/22/080922fa_fact_gourevitch, “Joe Biden”:http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/10/20/081020fa_fact_lizza, and “Hillary Clinton”:http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2008/06/23/080623taco_talk_hertzberg. There have been covers, blog entries, podcasts, and cartoons.
(And today the magazine’s website is offering a massive amount of coverage, including stuff from “James Surowiecki”:http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/jamessurowiecki/2008/11/the-permanent-c.html, “Hendrik Hertzberg”:http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/hendrikhertzberg/2008/11/defamation.html, “Lizzie Widdicombe”:http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/tny/2008/11/on-the-bus.html, and a very timely Election Day edition of “Book Bench” dedicated to the act of “reading”:http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2008/11/other-stories.html while waiting to vote. Really, they’re “flooding the zone”:http://www.newyorker.com/search/query?keyword=election%20day%202008&sort=publishDateSort%20desc,%20score%20desc&queryType=nonparsed.)
Nobody could fairly complain that _The New Yorker_ has stinted on election coverage this year.
So let’s look at the last realigning election! What did _The New Yorker_ do then? Surely not a cover, that wasn’t the way they did things. That’s fine. But a tart, expectant entry in the Talk of the Town? Perhaps a cartoon expressing relief? That seems certain.
Not if you judge by the issues around Election Day, it isn’t. Election Day in 1932 fell on “November 8”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_1932. _The New Yorker_ had issues dated November 5 and 12.
The only sign of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor in either of those issues appears to be on a single page dedicated to a satirical newspaper called “The Blotz” and written by Frank Sullivan—so saith the Search Archive.
“The Blotz” is difficult to summarize; it looks pretty funny, actually, but most of the humor is simply lost on us. There’s a box on the top that has “OUR PLATFORM: Deutschland Über Alles” in it; there’s an item making fun of the many Roosevelts all over the country who will presumably be clogging the ballot box for FDR. There’s a little pictorial representation of “Governor Roosevelt” in which he resembles the Cryptkeeper from _Tales from the Crypt_.
Ah, humor. It reminds me of when I yank out an issue of _Punch_ to peruse, and similarly fail to get any of the jokes.
In any case, it’s safe to say that the 2008 version of _TNY_ outstrips its 1932 counterpart. So much for realignment; times change. Hurrah!
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Block the Vote
_Jill Lepore’s recent “article on the secret ballot”:http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/10/13/081013fa_fact_lepore?currentPage=all makes a suitable accompaniment to today’s edition. Click the cartoon to enlarge it, and go vote, even if they put you in the dunk tank!_
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Read “The Wavy Rule” archive.
Shirley Jackson’s “Lottery” on Film
I never knew that films had been made of Shirley Jackson’s classic June 26, 1948 story, “The Lottery“. Turns out you can view a classic 1969 short based on the story right now on the blog we saw that…, via the magic of YouTube. (But if you’ve never read the story, do that first!)
The dialogue in the film is a bit wooden (as it is in the story, frankly), and it moves very slowly by today’s standards, but when the climax comes, it’s remarkably shocking even if you know what’s coming. Be sure to unwind with Paul Morris’ Wavy Rule cartoon, in which he gives the story a softer ending.
Take the New Yorker Digital Edition Out for a Test Drive!
_For a more thorough look at the Digital Edition, look “here”:http://emdashes.com/2008/11/the-new-yorker-digital-edition.php. —M.C.S._
I just received a message in my in-box announcing that “the first issue of _The New Yorker_’s digital edition is now available.” This feature is available to anyone who has a subscription, so if you want to check it out, you should hasten to “register”:https://admin.buysub.com/pubs/N3/NYR/entry.jsp?cds_page_id=3638&cds_mag_code=NYR&id=1225745193819&lsid=83081446338013005&vid=1 at the _New Yorker_’s subscription fulfillment website.
It doesn’t seem possible, but apparently anyone with a subscription not only can read the current or recent issues in the digital reader but can also “access any issue”:http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/digitaledition/faq/ from the magazine’s 83 illustrious years of existence. Now that’s what I call added value! If that isn’t a powerful incentive to subscribe, I don’t know what is. _The New Yorker_ is, of course, now well past its four-thousandth issue.
For those of us who bought _The Complete New Yorker_ when it first came out, it’s almost not comprehensible to see the entire archive so prettily available in my browser—but I’ll get used to it! And the reader application does look very snazzy.
More on the interface and accessability as we learn more about it. In the meantime, we congratulate _The New Yorker_ on this bold new era!
