THE PAST IS PROLOGUE

I don’t usually comment on the debates. I don’t do
play-by-play and in story terms these debates have basically been yawners.

But one moment from the VP Debate has stuck with me. Palin
set it up early by conspicuously asking Biden, “Can I call you, Joe.” Then later
when he brought up McCain’s record she pulled the trigger with “Say it ain’t
so, Joe. There you go again, looking backwards.”

Biden’s reply when asked to respond by moderator Gwen Ifill,
“Gwen, as you know, past is prologue,” seemed awfully academic to me given
Palin’s down home diction. But now a video has come out that shows Biden may
have been doing a little setting things up of his own.

This video is long – 13 minute – so it is preaching to the
choir, but it seems to be designed to tell the Dem faithful what they need to
know to pivot character attacks on Obama back to their strong point, the
economy. Don’t have 13 minutes? The trailer is only 30 seconds.

In McCain’s defense at least initially he seemed to learn
his lesson from the Keating fiasco and he earned his reputation as driver of
the “Straight Talk Express” by being open and honest about his mistakes with
reporters. But now, in an analogous situation, he seems to be ducking even off
the record interviews. Am I the only one that finds that strange?

THE MAYOR FROM MAYBERRY

Great stories always have an inherent symmetry. This is
particularly true of those stories written by history.

At the beginning of the Bush Administration in 2002 John
DiIulio, who had run President Bush’s Office of Faith Based
Initiatives resigned and called Karl Rove’s minions “Mayberry Machiavellis.” For many the name stuck.

But among Mr. Rove’s most useful political skills is his
ability to see the branding gems hidden inside many insults. Attack George W’s
grammar and miraculously his syntax will become even more tortured. Then Neocon
commentators will stress how “down home” and “mainstream” W’s wisdom really is,
as if most folks didn’t actually pass the seventh grade and most “ranches”
aren’t devoted to growing cattle but to producing an endless supply of scrub
brush that needs to be telegenically cut.

So it is to be expected that the Mayberry theme of this
White House might lead the Rovian Repubs to choose a down home Mayor from a
backwoods little town even smaller than the mythical Mayberry for the role of
VP.

And Sarah Palin, who got here training in front of the
camera as a local sportscaster for KTUU-TV in Anchorage, is playing it for all
it is worth. And more power to her. Her unique speaking style, so easy to
imitate and so brilliantly parodied by Tina Fey, is a form of verbal branding that will make sure her 15 minutes of fame won’t
run out who ever wins this election.

That her verbal style is a conscious decision – and so
worthy of praise – can be seen if you listen to how she responded in debates
when she ran for Governor of Alaska. The winks, nods, “aw shucks” and “I’ll get
back to yas” just aren’t there.

To see how effective this type of verbal branding can be in
building a heroic persona, listen to the Master, Andy Griffith in his classic storytelling routine “What It Was, Was Football.” One problem for McCain: If Palin is playing wise and steady Sherrif Andy,
who is playing the socially awkward, nervously erratic and occasionally irrationally
angry role of Barney Fife?

VOTE EATING VILLAINS

Yes, Virginia, there are real villains in politics. In our
book The Elements of Persuasion we stress not
demonizing an antagonist. In the real world, as opposed to Hollywood, you
should be careful using the V word. But there are times it fits. We are
reaching one of those times.

I’m not talking about nasty attack ads. Those are often in
the eye of the beholder. Your hero is my antagonist. Your scandalous lie is my
biting social commentary. It’s an American tradition that goes back at least to
the mercurial friendship and bitter hurt feelings of Jefferson and Adams. A
little mud slinging keeps our democracy down to earth, and hurray for us for
doing it. Americans are a scrappy bunch. That is one reason we’re such lovable
galoots. But the desire to win can go too far.

If there is one thing all Americans should agree on it is
that every citizen has a right the right, if not the duty, to vote. That is not
a technical right granted by a benevolent State, it is an Inalienable Right
made tangible by the sacrifices of our Founding Fathers and “watered by the
blood of patriots” in every generation since. So organized voter suppression is
truly villainous.

And what could be more villainous
than a banker foreclosing on little Nell’s mortgage then twirling his
metaphoric mustache as he has the sheriff tear up her ballot because she
doesn’t live there anymore. According to the website The Michigan Messenger someone connected with
Repubs is trying to do just this in battleground state of Michigan.
The Messenger’s post must have touched some nerve because a slander suit has been filed. TPM fact-checked to find out who was paying the attorney fees and got shined on by the shyster involved which is not a good sign.

If this is actually happening, shame on whichever party
allows it.

Of course there are more
sophisticated technical ways of denying – or enhancing – the vote (and both
parties seem to do it). Check out HBO’s Hacking Democracy – availabe on disk – a
truly scary documentary. Perfect for your pre election Halloween Party.

MC CAIN SHOULD SAY NO

As I said in the last post both candidates should take a
strong NO position on the suggested financial sector bail out for purely story
reasons. Lets start with McCain.

Remember, this election is about America choosing its
“hero-in-chief” We are looking for someone who can hold their ground in a
difficult and dangerous world. In marketing terms it is about having a strong
and sustainable brand.

The McCain campaign has been pushing two related brand
concepts; 1). McCain is a maverick and 2) McCain “will fight for you”. Saying yes to this bailout seriously erodes
both messages.

By definition a maverick does not run with the herd, and
that goes double in the middle of a stampede. It looks like that is what
Paulson is trying to get going. The Treasury Secretary probably sincerely
believes that this is best way to save the situation, or it may just be that
this is the way the Bush Whitehouse likes to market its proposals (it does seem
eerily similar to how we got into Iraq and passed the Patriot Act) but that is
the current administration’s story choice. For McCain to beat the bad rap that
he is “McSame” he needs to separate himself from those choices. He needs to stand strong against the biggest special interest in
Congress – the Financial Products Industry. If he doesn’t his maverick brand is toast.

McCain also needs to say no to protect his only really effective brand slogan
“I’ll fight for you.” You can’t go into a fight by giving up before it
starts. And you won’t have much leverage to “hold the bad guys
accountable” and “make them famous” if you give them a blank check and promise
not to ask any hard questions for the next two years, and that is what this
bailout does.

So McCain should just say “Thanks but no thanks” to the
Treasury Secretary’s proposed 700 Billion dollar “bridge loan to nowhere.” His
political survival depends on it.

If you don’t think a tsunami of populist anger is heading
our way check out this ad I found on that bastion of socialist skullduggery –
Market Watch
. BTW last Friday was the 13th Annual “Speak Like a Pirate Day” so in
the spirit of better late than never – ARGHH!

MONEY TALKS

Not all stories are words. Some are told visually, some
numerically. The right spreadsheet at the right time can speak volumes.

A headline like the one I woke up to in this Sundays L A
Times:

“Bailout to reach
$700,000,000,000”

(with every zero in there for emphasis) makes it crystal
clear that the Market Meltdown will be sucking up all the story oxygen for a
many news cycles to come.

So how can the McCain and Obama campaigns get ahead of the
story and roll it into their candidate’s vision of the future? I’m not talking about political spin or
partisan posturing. Any hint of that will probably prove fatal. I’m talking
about how the candidates can use their points of view – the empathic connection
they have been developing for months with the voters – to help us all get
a handle on this problem. That’s what heroes do – they bring us together for
the common good by giving us a common framework to solve our problems.

How should Obama and McCain do it? Interestingly enough both
campaigns should follow the example of Nancy Reagan and “JUST SAY NO!”

The reasons why they should say no are different for each
candidate because each candidates story is different but the fact that they
should both end up saying the same thing – NO – gives me bipartisan hope.

In the next day or two I’ll go into details on the story implications for each
candidates. But to get an overview of the situation I suggest you check out
this interview Bill Moyers just did with Kevin Philips
.
Philips first major work – The Emerging Republican Majority – was done
while he was working in the Nixon White house and laid out what became known as
the Southern Strategy. Since then his analysis has crisscrossed back and forth
over party lines. His book “Wealth and Democracy” is as good a macro analysis
of the problems America now faces as I have ever read. In this interview Phillips makes it clear that
current financial crisis is a bipartisan problem long in the making, with more
than enough mud to go around if we want to start slinging. Hopefully we
won’t.

To stay up on breaking
news you might want to try out ‘The Big Picture” blogsite if you don’t use it
already.

KATRINA WITH CASH

There is a real symmetry between what is happening right
now on Wall Street and what happened in the 9th Ward of New Orleans
when Katrina struck. Both that hurricane and the financial down turn we are now in were acts of nature. Hurricane seasons brings nasty storms, and stocks go down as well as up. 

The job of a government agency – FEMA or the SEC – is to
make sure that as few people as possible are hurt by the laws of physics. But if you are a committed Neocon and believe that if you can’t have less government you can at least make
sure the government you do have will work less well, then the
crooks and cronies you have manning the levies and policing the street when the shit inevitably hits the fan will be predictably
incompetent. This isn’t a mistake. It is the result of doctrine.

According to Andrew Leonard at “How the World Works John McCain is trying to get ahead of this story by calling for the firing of
SEC head Christopher Cox. Aside from the slight “lets eat our own young” aspect
to this, it is a good story move by McCain. A bad move would have been to say
Cox was “doing a heck of a job.”

But Cox alone isn’t the real culprit. Over at “The Big
Picture” Barry Ritholtz makes it clear that the real decisions that put us in
this mess happened in 2004
. So it now seems there might actually be a smoking gun here. Unfortunately for
McCain if his suggestion to have a 9/11-style
investigation of this mess were to actually take it looks like there would be plenty of GOP
fingerprints on the pistol. 

If it is all seems too much
of a bummer to bare believe me I understand, and so does Jon Stewart.  He’ll put it in perspective. 

WHEN HEROES FALL

As reported in the NYT Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews have been replaced as MSNBC political
anchors. From a hard-nosed business standpoint this is a very strange decision.
MSNBC has been rising in the ratings because Olbermann and Mathew tell
political stories – not just dryly report spin-meister prepared data points.

What’s the difference?
A political story has a defined point of view. That is, it is told by a hero
who lets us know how they feel about the facts (stories are fact wrapped in
emotion) . If the hero’s point of view agrees with mine, then I stay tuned to
that channel. If not, I click my remote. It’s a free country.

Fox shot to the top of the cable
news pack by recognizing that the idea of a purely impartial “objective” point
of view was a paradigm whose time had long passed. Fox crossed the line by failing to report the facts
accurately (famously the largest common factor among people who erroneously
thought Iraq was behind 9/11 was that they got their news for Mr. Murdock’s
organization) but it was on to something. When political tastes started to
shift, people looked for a fresh set of news heroes. MSNBC’s stock began to rise
because Olbermann was willing to say how he felt about the facts he was reporting on Iraq. The audience shared his outraged point of view – and so his audience grew.
Mathews, for all his blow-hard faults, is clearly passionate about politics and tends to wear his heart on his sleeve. Both Olbermann and Mathews are powerful political story tellers and because of them  MSNBC could claim
to be “THE PLACE FOR POLITICS”

But all that is gone now, and when
in a few months MSNBC gradually leaks away the loyal viewers it spent years
courting and sinks back beneath the waves becoming not a distinct brand but
just one more cable news mash up it will be the lack of guts of its parent
company NBC to stand up to a little heat from the Repub hit teams that will be
to blame.

Once you loose brand loyalty it is
very, very hard to get it back. If I were a shareholder in GE I would be very
upset, because the NBC execs are clearly putting their political cowardice in
front of my cash profits. And that doesn’t seem very American to me.

THE BOAT CIRCLES BACK FOR JOHN

There is a posting on YouTube that is stylistically very similar to the Swift Boat commercials run against John  Kerry, but probably more damning because it is focusing on what has just become fair game – McCain’s temperament. What Philip Butler, himself a POW during Vietnam – and former Annapolis classmate of McCain’s – is saying is important to hear if you are at all concerned with that famous 3:00 AM phone call moment. Check it out here.

I’m not endorsing this position – I wasn”t there and don’t know Senator McCain personally -  BUT IT IS MUST SEE! If only because it demonstrates a basic law of politics – what goes around comes around.

NOW FOR SOMETHINGS COMPLETELY DIFFERENT

There has been a lot of discussion about John McCain’s VP
pick. One of the best takes I’ve seen was by Winston Smith over at Philosoraptor.
He wrote:

Ham Sandwich McCain’s Actual Choice for Veep

John McCain has revealed that his
apparent choice of Sarah Palin as his Vice Presidential running-mate was, as
many observers predicted, a carefully-staged hoax. "Yeah, right,"
McCain campaign manager Rick Davis said of Palin, laughing with reporters.
"As if! What do we look like, a bunch of complete lackwits? You guys will
believe anything."

McCain’s actual running mate will be a ham sandwich.

The sandwich, said by analysts to be "a little light on the ham," has
never held any public office and is incapable of speech or rational thought. It
is thought that the choice will solidify McCain’s credentials as a
"maverick."

"John McCain makes decisions with his gut," said Davis. "That’s
what Americans like, right?"

There is more and you can
click over to it here. And thanks to Andrew Sullivan for the heads up.

And if like me you are a big Samantha Bee fan, here is her and Jon Stewart’s take on it, also thanks to Mr. Sullivan: Completely worth the watch.


VILLAINS

Every story needs a Villain – an Antagonist that represents
the obstacles the Hero must overcome. If you don’t have one, other story tellers will
create one for you, and your story might get out of your control.

That is what has been happening with media coverage of the
Dem convention. Because Obama has not clearly defined McCain as a living,
breathing Antagonist – the personification of all that has gone wrong in the
last eight years – pundits of all political stripes are free to choose Obama’s antagonist for him. It might be the Pumas, it might be a petulant Bill, it
might be disgruntled big spenders, but it is going to have to be somebody,
because without an Antagonist there is no story, and story is the only way to
fill hours and hours of airtime.

It is possible that the Obamistas have been cleverly laying
back and Obama will come out swinging hard tonight. If that is the case Obama
can’t waste time being bipartisan. He needs to get his knuckles dirty from the
get go. We know he can float like a butterfly, now it is time for him to sting
like a bee. He doesn’t need to attack McCain directly. What he needs to
do is attack the Repub brand as a “failed extremist philosophy”. Bill Clinton
and John Kerry laid the groundwork, but it is up to the nominee to
start landing the hard body blows that will put McCain into the ropes.

You probably heard Bill’s speech. John Kerry’s was largely
lost so that pundits could preen for the camera. It is definitely worth a
listen. Check it out here.