I’m asking: Is there anything more worthless than those real-time reaction lines to candidates’ speeches?
January 11, 2012
If you watched last nightโs primaries on CNN last night you saw something that I thought surely had been relegated to the โnice tryโ bin four or eight years ago.
Itโs those real-time reaction lines, where men and women in the next primary stateโSouth Carolina in this caseโtwist some Fisher-Price knobs one way to indicate the speech theyโre listening to is making them happy, and another way to say itโs making them mad.
First, thereโs the mind-splitting imbecility of the exercise. To acknowledge the difference between men and women and monkeys, shouldnโt people have a moment to think about how they feel about the candidateโs words? Or is it just, free market GOOD, entitlements BAD?
But even setting aside that objection as theoretical โฆ For the life of you, you canโt see how the linesโdifferent for men and womenโcorrespond at all with the actual points the person is making. They go up while the crowd is cheering, down when the candidate is talking. They flatline when the candidate makes a ringing point, and they spike when he calls his campaign volunteers the best in the history of New Hampshire.
Wolf Blitzerโor โBlitz,โ as Herman Cain and I call himโdoes a lot of silly things with a straight face. (Maybe thatโs why the beard comes in handy.)
But as far as Iโm concerned, this is the silliest. โDM