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	<title>Observer &#187; Post Toasts Kerry!</title>
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		<title>Post Toasts Kerry!</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2004/08/post-toasts-kerry/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2004 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2004/08/post-toasts-kerry/</link>
			<dc:creator>Tom Scocca</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2004/08/post-toasts-kerry/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>"IT'S WAR," the New York</p>
<p>Post declared last Friday, over a front-page photo of a beaming John Kerry.</p>
<p>The message worked nicely in two senses: The candidate had just called out his</p>
<p>opponent in bold terms-"Kerry bashes Bush in prez race kickoff"-and he had done</p>
<p>it while wrapping himself in the bullet-shredded flag of his Vietnam swift</p>
<p>boat.</p>
<p> But there was the third sense: the Post 's own war, waged during the Democratic National Convention as</p>
<p>at no other time yet in the campaign. It was a noisy conflict, but a subtle and</p>
<p>indirect one-the target was John Kerry, but the real foe was the rest of the</p>
<p>press.</p>
<p> Mr. Kerry's faults have been openly denounced in the pages of the</p>
<p> Post : He flip-flops, he's</p>
<p>hoity-toity, he acts French. The sins of the Fourth Estate, though, the Post seeks to attack by example. Other</p>
<p>papers don't tell the story straight. Politeness and self-importance prevent</p>
<p>them from having the obvious, visceral, personal reaction that the Post believes the Democratic leadership</p>
<p>deserves. They don't write what they see; They write what they think they're</p>
<p>supposed to see, what they're told to see, what the Kerry folks want them to</p>
<p>see.</p>
<p> By Friday, though the newspaper reeked of gun smoke and hot iron,</p>
<p>the nominee stood in his Mary Beth Cahill armor, showing barely a chink. On</p>
<p>television, even the Post 's frequent</p>
<p>sympathizers couldn't muster any horror at Bush bashing</p>
<p> The clatter had cleared off, the battle was over, and wan</p>
<p>affirmations that Mr. Kerry had seemed to stay on message had been the main</p>
<p>report from the field, the one America saw on television.</p>
<p> The Post had poured its</p>
<p>150-proof outrage into the punchbowl at the media party that was the Democratic</p>
<p>National Convention, but nobody else seemed to feel it.</p>
<p> Plenty of dangers had lurked for Mr. Kerry, and the Post had helpfully (or hopefully) noted</p>
<p>them all: The candidate could have seen Bill Clinton upstage him with a reprise</p>
<p>of his "endless scene-stealing Elvis Presley entry at the 2000 convention." He</p>
<p>could have been undermined by Hillary Clinton, who was secretly "looking ahead</p>
<p>to 2008." He could have been dragged into a divisive discussion of "gay nups"</p>
<p>or humiliated by his "wacky wife" and "party-hearty daughters."</p>
<p> But he wasn't. Party discipline held, as most other media outlets</p>
<p>had predicted it would. Mr. Kerry's perils bounced harmlessly off him like so</p>
<p>many red, white, and blue balloons. By week's end, the Post was running a two-page headline to trumpet the news that Rudy</p>
<p>Giuliani doesn't agree with Michael Moore.</p>
<p> In Tuesday's early editions, the Post had devoted the front page to an image of Mr. Kerry looking</p>
<p>goofy in a hooded, pale-blue NASA clean suit. "BOSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM," the</p>
<p>headline gloated. And while the rest of the press struggled to come up with a</p>
<p>proper analogy for Mr. Kerry's getup, the Post</p>
<p>found the precise reference: a photo of Woody Allen in his sperm costume from Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex but</p>
<p>Were Afraid to Ask .</p>
<p> But before the night was over, the convention's planned agenda</p>
<p>had won out. By the final edition, the Post</p>
<p>yanked the silly-Kerry picture off the front to make room for a photo of Mr.</p>
<p>Clinton taken at his speech. "IT'S MY PARTY," the new headline said.</p>
<p> It took some courage for the Post</p>
<p>to have made fun of anyone at all. Around the press tent in Boston, there were</p>
<p>more opportunities to laugh at the paper than to laugh with it-thanks to last</p>
<p>month's ill-fated vice-presidential exclusive.</p>
<p> "[T]he Democrats will formally nominate their official 2004</p>
<p>ticket: John 'John' Kerry and John 'John' Edwards," syndicated humor columnist</p>
<p>Dave Barry wrote in his first convention coverage piece. "(Or, for you readers</p>
<p>of the New York Post , Dick 'Dick'</p>
<p>Gephardt.)"</p>
<p> The Miami-based Mr. Barry, who said he generally doesn't keep up</p>
<p>with the Post , returned to variations</p>
<p>on the punch line all week: "Teresa Heinz Kerry (or, for you readers of the New York Post , Dick Gephardt)"; "The New York Post is predicting Walter</p>
<p>Mondale [will be the nominee]."</p>
<p> "People kept saying, 'Boy, I really like the New York Post joke,'" Mr. Barry said. "So I kept making it."</p>
<p>Mocking the Post , Mr. Barry said, was</p>
<p>"kind of like a Leno joke" the first time he did it, but with repetition "it</p>
<p>becomes more like a Letterman joke"-an in-joke with readers about how far he</p>
<p>could drag the cliché. Like Ted Kennedy's weight or Dan Quayle's spelling, the Post 's failure was something that Mr.</p>
<p>Barry's readers in Biloxi, Miss., or Tulsa, Okla., could recognize. Mr. Barry</p>
<p>could have been describing the M.O. of the New</p>
<p>York Post .</p>
<p> But somehow, the tin can the Post</p>
<p>tied to Kerry's tail-"Boston, We Have a Problem"-didn't seem to be clanging</p>
<p>very loudly by Tuesday.</p>
<p> The banner on the convention package, previously "DEMS' BIG</p>
<p>WEEK," became "DEMS' LOVE-IN," accompanied by repeating photos of Mr. Kerry's</p>
<p>and Mr. Edwards' heads pressed close together, with Mr. Edwards puckering up.</p>
<p>"SHHH! KEEP IT IN THE CLOSET," the headline on the gay-nups story below said,</p>
<p>in case the subtlety had been lost on anyone.</p>
<p> The rest of the section was a grab-bag of outrages by the</p>
<p>Democrats: a "Bush-Bashing Meter" (set at a tepid 4 out of 10); a follow-up</p>
<p>piece about Teresa Heinz Kerry's "shove it" remark (accompanied by eye-rolling,</p>
<p>slack-mouthed photo); a bulletin noting that Ms. Heinz Kerry had once called</p>
<p>Ted Kennedy worse than Nixon ("[i]n a 1971 interview with The Washington Post ").</p>
<p> The feistiest entry came from columnist Andrea Peyser, under the</p>
<p>headline "Bill 'n' Hill out of lip synch as the party's odd couple." Having</p>
<p>observed Mr. Clinton's failed attempt to kiss his wife at a party, Ms. Peyser</p>
<p>concluded that the couple is completely and awkwardly estranged.</p>
<p> Ms. Peyser came away with the impression that Mr. Clinton would</p>
<p>rather have been, well, making time with a New</p>
<p>York Post columnist: "At one point, he placed his hand on my bare</p>
<p>shoulder."</p>
<p> In a brief phone conversation, Ms. Peyser announced that her</p>
<p>reporting had no agenda, personal or institutional, behind it. She declined to</p>
<p>discuss her approach to convention coverage in any detail. "I only write what I</p>
<p>see, the way I see it," Ms. Peyser said. That's become a sort of war cry for</p>
<p>the Post .</p>
<p> Through a spokesperson, Post</p>
<p>editor Col Allan and president Lachlan Murdoch declined to comment on any</p>
<p>aspect of the paper's convention coverage. But as the days of anodyne events</p>
<p>trickled by, reporters found less and less to complain about. Wednesday, Mr.</p>
<p>Morris and Kenneth Lovett reported that the G.O.P.'s reaction team had found</p>
<p>Mr. Clinton's speech "clever-but often wrong on facts" and Washington bureau</p>
<p>chief Deborah Orin quoted an anonymous Republican operative as saying Ms. Heinz</p>
<p>Kerry's subdued convention address had been "bizarre."</p>
<p> By Thursday, describing Mr. Kerry's arrival in Boston,</p>
<p>correspondent Stefan C. Friedman was seeing much what the rest of the media</p>
<p>saw, to judge from the coverage: "Like a conquering hero, John Kerry returned</p>
<p>home yesterday standing at the bow of a harbor cruise boat surrounded by more</p>
<p>than a dozen of his Vietnam War crew mates." But as if to remind readers that</p>
<p>not all is well in Democrat-land, Post</p>
<p>editors tucked a completely unrelated story, about the Democratic National</p>
<p>Committee's entanglement with "disgraced developer" Charles Kushner, in the</p>
<p>middle of the boat story.</p>
<p> And confronted with a well-behaved Ms. Heinz Kerry, Ms. Peyser</p>
<p>had to criticize her for not being out of control-for being "a sonorous,</p>
<p>facially expressionless, peace-sign-flashing, purposefully maternal zombie."</p>
<p> The Bush meter hovered in the mild middle of the scale.</p>
<p> So when the war came Friday, the Post 's troops were spent. Mr. Kerry "touched all the right bases in</p>
<p>a well-received speech," David Seifman wrote in an analysis piece. Ms. Orin</p>
<p>wrote that Mr. Kerry "gave what some analysts rated the speech of his</p>
<p>life"-though she also noted that the candidate "ignored virtually his entire</p>
<p>19-year Senate record, which got him the rating as its No. 1 most liberal</p>
<p>member." (In fact, National Journal ,</p>
<p>which issued Mr. Kerry's No. 1 liberal rating for 2003, had only rated him No.</p>
<p>11 for his entire career.)</p>
<p> It remains to be seen whether the Post 's coverage of the D.N.C. will seep into the bloodstream:</p>
<p>Already, People magazine's profile of</p>
<p>the extended Kerry campaign, a favorable treatment with a posed photograph,</p>
<p>bore the headline "Trail Mix," suggesting an assortment of nuts. By the time of</p>
<p>the Republican convention at the end of the month, it will perhaps be clear who</p>
<p>else follows the lead.</p>
<p> Ms. Peyser, like the last Japanese soldier in the jungle, refused</p>
<p>to give out at the end of the week, accusing Mr. Kerry of saying "absolutely</p>
<p>zilch of substance."</p>
<p> Even the clever layout items took it easy on the nominee. Lou</p>
<p>Lumenick gave Mr. Kerry's campaign film short, A Remarkable Promise , three stars. A report card graded Mr. Kerry's</p>
<p>speech out at a B-plus.</p>
<p> And the Bush-Bashing Meter, redubbed the Bush-O-Meter, rose to a</p>
<p>modest "8 out of 10."</p>
<p> In drawing the needle, though, someone had pinned it clear to the</p>
<p>top of the scale.</p>
<p> The</p>
<p>New York Times has a new czar, and he hails from the provinces. Tuesday</p>
<p>afternoon, editor Bill Keller announced that the paper will be elevating</p>
<p>Washington editor Richard L. Berke to a newly created position, tentatively</p>
<p>called associate managing editor for news.</p>
<p> Mr. Keller's memo describes the job as being to "propel the daily</p>
<p>news coverage, the way Jon Landman (before detouring to Culture) was driving</p>
<p>enterprise, or Adam Moss (before defecting) was driving features." That means</p>
<p>duties ranging from "harvesting ideas" to focusing coverage of "big breaking or</p>
<p>running stories," according to the memo.</p>
<p> Mr. Berke, currently the No. 2 person in the Washington bureau,</p>
<p>said that he had been talking with Times</p>
<p>brass about moving to some other job for a while, but the czarship offer</p>
<p>"happened pretty quickly."</p>
<p> One thing Mr. Berke won't bring to the position is much firsthand</p>
<p>experience of life on West 43rd Street. "There's a lot I need to learn about</p>
<p>the New York operations," he said. His last prolonged exposure to New York, he</p>
<p>said, came when he went to journalism school at Columbia. "I haven't lived</p>
<p>there since '81," he said.</p>
<p> The Times has not yet</p>
<p>chosen a replacement for Mr. Berke, who will be moving to New York in</p>
<p>January-assuming that the election is over by then. And if this contest spills</p>
<p>over into 2005? "If that were to happen, I'm sure we'd have to adjust," Mr.</p>
<p>Berke said. </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>"IT'S WAR," the New York</p>
<p>Post declared last Friday, over a front-page photo of a beaming John Kerry.</p>
<p>The message worked nicely in two senses: The candidate had just called out his</p>
<p>opponent in bold terms-"Kerry bashes Bush in prez race kickoff"-and he had done</p>
<p>it while wrapping himself in the bullet-shredded flag of his Vietnam swift</p>
<p>boat.</p>
<p> But there was the third sense: the Post 's own war, waged during the Democratic National Convention as</p>
<p>at no other time yet in the campaign. It was a noisy conflict, but a subtle and</p>
<p>indirect one-the target was John Kerry, but the real foe was the rest of the</p>
<p>press.</p>
<p> Mr. Kerry's faults have been openly denounced in the pages of the</p>
<p> Post : He flip-flops, he's</p>
<p>hoity-toity, he acts French. The sins of the Fourth Estate, though, the Post seeks to attack by example. Other</p>
<p>papers don't tell the story straight. Politeness and self-importance prevent</p>
<p>them from having the obvious, visceral, personal reaction that the Post believes the Democratic leadership</p>
<p>deserves. They don't write what they see; They write what they think they're</p>
<p>supposed to see, what they're told to see, what the Kerry folks want them to</p>
<p>see.</p>
<p> By Friday, though the newspaper reeked of gun smoke and hot iron,</p>
<p>the nominee stood in his Mary Beth Cahill armor, showing barely a chink. On</p>
<p>television, even the Post 's frequent</p>
<p>sympathizers couldn't muster any horror at Bush bashing</p>
<p> The clatter had cleared off, the battle was over, and wan</p>
<p>affirmations that Mr. Kerry had seemed to stay on message had been the main</p>
<p>report from the field, the one America saw on television.</p>
<p> The Post had poured its</p>
<p>150-proof outrage into the punchbowl at the media party that was the Democratic</p>
<p>National Convention, but nobody else seemed to feel it.</p>
<p> Plenty of dangers had lurked for Mr. Kerry, and the Post had helpfully (or hopefully) noted</p>
<p>them all: The candidate could have seen Bill Clinton upstage him with a reprise</p>
<p>of his "endless scene-stealing Elvis Presley entry at the 2000 convention." He</p>
<p>could have been undermined by Hillary Clinton, who was secretly "looking ahead</p>
<p>to 2008." He could have been dragged into a divisive discussion of "gay nups"</p>
<p>or humiliated by his "wacky wife" and "party-hearty daughters."</p>
<p> But he wasn't. Party discipline held, as most other media outlets</p>
<p>had predicted it would. Mr. Kerry's perils bounced harmlessly off him like so</p>
<p>many red, white, and blue balloons. By week's end, the Post was running a two-page headline to trumpet the news that Rudy</p>
<p>Giuliani doesn't agree with Michael Moore.</p>
<p> In Tuesday's early editions, the Post had devoted the front page to an image of Mr. Kerry looking</p>
<p>goofy in a hooded, pale-blue NASA clean suit. "BOSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM," the</p>
<p>headline gloated. And while the rest of the press struggled to come up with a</p>
<p>proper analogy for Mr. Kerry's getup, the Post</p>
<p>found the precise reference: a photo of Woody Allen in his sperm costume from Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex but</p>
<p>Were Afraid to Ask .</p>
<p> But before the night was over, the convention's planned agenda</p>
<p>had won out. By the final edition, the Post</p>
<p>yanked the silly-Kerry picture off the front to make room for a photo of Mr.</p>
<p>Clinton taken at his speech. "IT'S MY PARTY," the new headline said.</p>
<p> It took some courage for the Post</p>
<p>to have made fun of anyone at all. Around the press tent in Boston, there were</p>
<p>more opportunities to laugh at the paper than to laugh with it-thanks to last</p>
<p>month's ill-fated vice-presidential exclusive.</p>
<p> "[T]he Democrats will formally nominate their official 2004</p>
<p>ticket: John 'John' Kerry and John 'John' Edwards," syndicated humor columnist</p>
<p>Dave Barry wrote in his first convention coverage piece. "(Or, for you readers</p>
<p>of the New York Post , Dick 'Dick'</p>
<p>Gephardt.)"</p>
<p> The Miami-based Mr. Barry, who said he generally doesn't keep up</p>
<p>with the Post , returned to variations</p>
<p>on the punch line all week: "Teresa Heinz Kerry (or, for you readers of the New York Post , Dick Gephardt)"; "The New York Post is predicting Walter</p>
<p>Mondale [will be the nominee]."</p>
<p> "People kept saying, 'Boy, I really like the New York Post joke,'" Mr. Barry said. "So I kept making it."</p>
<p>Mocking the Post , Mr. Barry said, was</p>
<p>"kind of like a Leno joke" the first time he did it, but with repetition "it</p>
<p>becomes more like a Letterman joke"-an in-joke with readers about how far he</p>
<p>could drag the cliché. Like Ted Kennedy's weight or Dan Quayle's spelling, the Post 's failure was something that Mr.</p>
<p>Barry's readers in Biloxi, Miss., or Tulsa, Okla., could recognize. Mr. Barry</p>
<p>could have been describing the M.O. of the New</p>
<p>York Post .</p>
<p> But somehow, the tin can the Post</p>
<p>tied to Kerry's tail-"Boston, We Have a Problem"-didn't seem to be clanging</p>
<p>very loudly by Tuesday.</p>
<p> The banner on the convention package, previously "DEMS' BIG</p>
<p>WEEK," became "DEMS' LOVE-IN," accompanied by repeating photos of Mr. Kerry's</p>
<p>and Mr. Edwards' heads pressed close together, with Mr. Edwards puckering up.</p>
<p>"SHHH! KEEP IT IN THE CLOSET," the headline on the gay-nups story below said,</p>
<p>in case the subtlety had been lost on anyone.</p>
<p> The rest of the section was a grab-bag of outrages by the</p>
<p>Democrats: a "Bush-Bashing Meter" (set at a tepid 4 out of 10); a follow-up</p>
<p>piece about Teresa Heinz Kerry's "shove it" remark (accompanied by eye-rolling,</p>
<p>slack-mouthed photo); a bulletin noting that Ms. Heinz Kerry had once called</p>
<p>Ted Kennedy worse than Nixon ("[i]n a 1971 interview with The Washington Post ").</p>
<p> The feistiest entry came from columnist Andrea Peyser, under the</p>
<p>headline "Bill 'n' Hill out of lip synch as the party's odd couple." Having</p>
<p>observed Mr. Clinton's failed attempt to kiss his wife at a party, Ms. Peyser</p>
<p>concluded that the couple is completely and awkwardly estranged.</p>
<p> Ms. Peyser came away with the impression that Mr. Clinton would</p>
<p>rather have been, well, making time with a New</p>
<p>York Post columnist: "At one point, he placed his hand on my bare</p>
<p>shoulder."</p>
<p> In a brief phone conversation, Ms. Peyser announced that her</p>
<p>reporting had no agenda, personal or institutional, behind it. She declined to</p>
<p>discuss her approach to convention coverage in any detail. "I only write what I</p>
<p>see, the way I see it," Ms. Peyser said. That's become a sort of war cry for</p>
<p>the Post .</p>
<p> Through a spokesperson, Post</p>
<p>editor Col Allan and president Lachlan Murdoch declined to comment on any</p>
<p>aspect of the paper's convention coverage. But as the days of anodyne events</p>
<p>trickled by, reporters found less and less to complain about. Wednesday, Mr.</p>
<p>Morris and Kenneth Lovett reported that the G.O.P.'s reaction team had found</p>
<p>Mr. Clinton's speech "clever-but often wrong on facts" and Washington bureau</p>
<p>chief Deborah Orin quoted an anonymous Republican operative as saying Ms. Heinz</p>
<p>Kerry's subdued convention address had been "bizarre."</p>
<p> By Thursday, describing Mr. Kerry's arrival in Boston,</p>
<p>correspondent Stefan C. Friedman was seeing much what the rest of the media</p>
<p>saw, to judge from the coverage: "Like a conquering hero, John Kerry returned</p>
<p>home yesterday standing at the bow of a harbor cruise boat surrounded by more</p>
<p>than a dozen of his Vietnam War crew mates." But as if to remind readers that</p>
<p>not all is well in Democrat-land, Post</p>
<p>editors tucked a completely unrelated story, about the Democratic National</p>
<p>Committee's entanglement with "disgraced developer" Charles Kushner, in the</p>
<p>middle of the boat story.</p>
<p> And confronted with a well-behaved Ms. Heinz Kerry, Ms. Peyser</p>
<p>had to criticize her for not being out of control-for being "a sonorous,</p>
<p>facially expressionless, peace-sign-flashing, purposefully maternal zombie."</p>
<p> The Bush meter hovered in the mild middle of the scale.</p>
<p> So when the war came Friday, the Post 's troops were spent. Mr. Kerry "touched all the right bases in</p>
<p>a well-received speech," David Seifman wrote in an analysis piece. Ms. Orin</p>
<p>wrote that Mr. Kerry "gave what some analysts rated the speech of his</p>
<p>life"-though she also noted that the candidate "ignored virtually his entire</p>
<p>19-year Senate record, which got him the rating as its No. 1 most liberal</p>
<p>member." (In fact, National Journal ,</p>
<p>which issued Mr. Kerry's No. 1 liberal rating for 2003, had only rated him No.</p>
<p>11 for his entire career.)</p>
<p> It remains to be seen whether the Post 's coverage of the D.N.C. will seep into the bloodstream:</p>
<p>Already, People magazine's profile of</p>
<p>the extended Kerry campaign, a favorable treatment with a posed photograph,</p>
<p>bore the headline "Trail Mix," suggesting an assortment of nuts. By the time of</p>
<p>the Republican convention at the end of the month, it will perhaps be clear who</p>
<p>else follows the lead.</p>
<p> Ms. Peyser, like the last Japanese soldier in the jungle, refused</p>
<p>to give out at the end of the week, accusing Mr. Kerry of saying "absolutely</p>
<p>zilch of substance."</p>
<p> Even the clever layout items took it easy on the nominee. Lou</p>
<p>Lumenick gave Mr. Kerry's campaign film short, A Remarkable Promise , three stars. A report card graded Mr. Kerry's</p>
<p>speech out at a B-plus.</p>
<p> And the Bush-Bashing Meter, redubbed the Bush-O-Meter, rose to a</p>
<p>modest "8 out of 10."</p>
<p> In drawing the needle, though, someone had pinned it clear to the</p>
<p>top of the scale.</p>
<p> The</p>
<p>New York Times has a new czar, and he hails from the provinces. Tuesday</p>
<p>afternoon, editor Bill Keller announced that the paper will be elevating</p>
<p>Washington editor Richard L. Berke to a newly created position, tentatively</p>
<p>called associate managing editor for news.</p>
<p> Mr. Keller's memo describes the job as being to "propel the daily</p>
<p>news coverage, the way Jon Landman (before detouring to Culture) was driving</p>
<p>enterprise, or Adam Moss (before defecting) was driving features." That means</p>
<p>duties ranging from "harvesting ideas" to focusing coverage of "big breaking or</p>
<p>running stories," according to the memo.</p>
<p> Mr. Berke, currently the No. 2 person in the Washington bureau,</p>
<p>said that he had been talking with Times</p>
<p>brass about moving to some other job for a while, but the czarship offer</p>
<p>"happened pretty quickly."</p>
<p> One thing Mr. Berke won't bring to the position is much firsthand</p>
<p>experience of life on West 43rd Street. "There's a lot I need to learn about</p>
<p>the New York operations," he said. His last prolonged exposure to New York, he</p>
<p>said, came when he went to journalism school at Columbia. "I haven't lived</p>
<p>there since '81," he said.</p>
<p> The Times has not yet</p>
<p>chosen a replacement for Mr. Berke, who will be moving to New York in</p>
<p>January-assuming that the election is over by then. And if this contest spills</p>
<p>over into 2005? "If that were to happen, I'm sure we'd have to adjust," Mr.</p>
<p>Berke said. </p>
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