|
BBC's
Conservation now: Global Top Ten
Ultimate Frisbee
The Wondering
Minstrels
Open Poetry Project
Today in Literature
Language Log
Wordspy
Lonely Planet
Calvinball:
Règle du jeu
CC Weblog
Poems of the
fantastic and macabre
BBC's
World Forum: Water
Caltech/Pasadena vs.
UIUC/Urbana
Guide to
Squash
Masters of Cinema
A Prairie Home Companion
Capitol Steps
Folkstreams.net
BBC Radio 3
del.icio.us
Brad DeLong's
Semi-Daily Journal
Daniel W. Drezner
Sangeetham
Set
Miscellaneous
writings
Movies watched
Journal archives
Journal
permanent links
Main page
|
17 April 2004
Journeys with George
I watched a most fascinating documentary today. Four years ago, NBC deputed Alexandra
Pelosi to cover the 2000 Bush presidential campaign. Ordinarily, an assignment like this
would have meant little in terms of who covered the campaign but Alexandra Pelosi is the
daughter of Nancy Pelosi, the Democrat senator representing California, and is a
registered Democrat. This, and the fact that Ms Pelosi likes to shoot with her camcorder
led to the helming of a most unique documentary film that followed the would-be
President around the country as he fought and warded off John McCain to grab the
Republican nomination and subsequently went on to win (putatively, perhaps) the
Presidential elections. The documentary not only sheds light on a less-known side to
Bush but also brings to the fore the tortures and ordeals of the press corps as they
fight travel fatigue, loneliness, separation from their families and a regular
nine-to-five routine only to cover a presidential campaign when at times they are
required to make meaningful stories out of a repetitive hash of stump speeches and weary
clichés. There are some really hilarious moments as Bush tries to win over Ms
Pelosi while the latter smiles wryly and rather patronisingly at his goof-ups and cowboy
instincts. A delectable treat.
|
Journeys with George
|