Analysts say Obama came up short
Politico
Tim Mak
9/7/2012
"The emerging consensus on President Barack Obama's convention address suggests the wear of four hard years has taken its toll: that it was a dispassionate, ordinary speech that lacked the soaring rhetoric that Obama had led most to expect; that it contained modest content and sober promises colored by the president’s experience with reality; and that it featured the deficiency of setting out goals without offering out the specific means to achieve them.
The president, brought to national prominence by an exceptional oratorical ability, gave a relatively flat speech, some commentators argued.
“Let’s be blunt. Barack Obama gave a dull and pedestrian speech tonight, with nary an interesting thematic device, policy detail, or even one turn of phrase,” wrote Michael Tomasky, the editor of the progressive journal Democracy, at The Daily Beast.
“This was the rhetorical equivalent, forgive the football metaphor, of running out the clock: Obama clearly thinks he’s ahead and just doesn’t need to make mistakes. But when football teams do that, it often turns out to be the biggest mistake of all, and they lose,” concluded Tomasky.
“(I)t got the job done. But I didn’t feel any real passion in the delivery. It felt more like an actor soldiering through his lines,” wrote Kevin Drum at Mother Jones. “There was nothing memorable, nothing forward looking, and nothing that drew a contrast with Romney in sharp, gut-level strokes. Obama was, to be charitable, no more than the third best of the Democratic convention’s prime time speakers in 2012.”
“In the shadow of Clinton’s performance, the president often felt flat, rote, and unconvincing — almost as though he wasn’t quite convinced by his own arguments and promises, and felt a little awkward selling them to us,” wrote the New York Times’ Ross Douthat.
“I’d still give Bill Clinton props for the best speech of both conventions,” agreed ThinkProgress’ Joe Romm.
Those on the right were even more pointed:"
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View the complete article at:
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/80913.html
Politico
Tim Mak
9/7/2012
"The emerging consensus on President Barack Obama's convention address suggests the wear of four hard years has taken its toll: that it was a dispassionate, ordinary speech that lacked the soaring rhetoric that Obama had led most to expect; that it contained modest content and sober promises colored by the president’s experience with reality; and that it featured the deficiency of setting out goals without offering out the specific means to achieve them.
The president, brought to national prominence by an exceptional oratorical ability, gave a relatively flat speech, some commentators argued.
“Let’s be blunt. Barack Obama gave a dull and pedestrian speech tonight, with nary an interesting thematic device, policy detail, or even one turn of phrase,” wrote Michael Tomasky, the editor of the progressive journal Democracy, at The Daily Beast.
“This was the rhetorical equivalent, forgive the football metaphor, of running out the clock: Obama clearly thinks he’s ahead and just doesn’t need to make mistakes. But when football teams do that, it often turns out to be the biggest mistake of all, and they lose,” concluded Tomasky.
“(I)t got the job done. But I didn’t feel any real passion in the delivery. It felt more like an actor soldiering through his lines,” wrote Kevin Drum at Mother Jones. “There was nothing memorable, nothing forward looking, and nothing that drew a contrast with Romney in sharp, gut-level strokes. Obama was, to be charitable, no more than the third best of the Democratic convention’s prime time speakers in 2012.”
“In the shadow of Clinton’s performance, the president often felt flat, rote, and unconvincing — almost as though he wasn’t quite convinced by his own arguments and promises, and felt a little awkward selling them to us,” wrote the New York Times’ Ross Douthat.
“I’d still give Bill Clinton props for the best speech of both conventions,” agreed ThinkProgress’ Joe Romm.
Those on the right were even more pointed:"
............................
View the complete article at:
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/80913.html
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