Saturday, September 8, 2012
Ciao Charlotte. Y'all Come Back, Ya Hear.
Charlotte and the democratic convention were a trip. Glad we were a part of the love fest, as conventions nowadays tend to be. The week taught us that Americans remain optimistic about themselves and their country. Still much like FDR saw the nation in the turbulent 1930s: "The saving grace of America lies in the fact that the overwhelming majority of Americans are possessed of two great qualities -- a sense of humor and a sense of proportion." Onward and upward...

Friday, September 7, 2012
10-4: Keeping the Peace in Charlotte 24/7
One of the top jobs in Charlotte this week had to be in the country's fast-growing security industry. To be fair, the city was hosting a political convention headed by the US President, which demanded its own level of secret service security. Alongside the triple S corps, we learned that 4000 police and security officers, plus sheriffs, deputies, Homeland Security officials, and the NC National Guard, were enlisted for the week. Police teams came from the Charlotte area and around the country -- Chicago, Milwaukee, Louisville, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Myrtle Beach, New York, Richmond, among others -- and they were everywhere 24/7. On foot, on bikes, on horseback, in patrol cars, in helicopters. They rode around, rested in alley ways, flanked demonstrations, controlled access to streets, hotels, and public buildings, arrested drunks and disorderly citizens, and creatively directed traffic on main streets. Even I had a brief moment of Zen with a young officer at the illegal immigrant demonstration we saw. As things heated up, and police were preparing to arrest the illegals, I hustled around trying to get good position for photos. A young officer, one of about 100 on the scene, barked at me to step on the crowded sidewalk, and out of a closed-to-traffic street. I looked down at my feet, no more than 12 inches from the sidewalk as he ordered me to move. I looked him in the eye. He looked half my age, which he was. I asked him if he was serious. He nodded. I asked him to please let me do my job (people took me for a photo journalist), and pointed out that the sidewalk was packed (with cops mostly, I pointed out). There was nowhere to go, and my 12 inches of street were in no one's way. He repeated his order. I sighed and complied: Lucky me. As I swung through the sidewalk crowd, I nearly bumped into an encircled Rosario Dawson, the actress who had come to support the rally. Despite my good fortune, the presence of so many cops was unnerving, foreshadowing some kind of police state. By week's end, you had the feeling they were getting restless, ready to arrest anyone, even each other. The Charlotte sheriff chasing the Georgia cop chasing the Chicago patrolman chasing the Richmond police on bikes chasing the Carolina park patrol on horseback chasing the state National Guardsman in camouflaged Hummers. It could happen, you know.... (Top photo Charlotte Observer)


The President in the House
President Obama's speech set the convention crowds afire, and set a new record on Twitter for political tweets: 52,757 per minute from the more than 35 million viewers nationwide. We had no time to tweet, what with all the flag-waving, photo-taking, hand-holding, and high-fiving going on. Call us a couple of twits. It was a thrill to be among so many people from all over America. Some on the edge of their seats, some deeply reflective, some just looking forward in anticipation, hanging on every word. Few if any were seen with their smart phones or tablets. They were engaged. We were among six to seven hundred people in the convention ballroom. It sits right atop the big NASCAR Hall of Fame, whose fans mostly are expected to vote for the other guy. If a few of them make a pit stop for the President, it could make the difference in the race. Obama's speech sought to motivate the faithful, and he delivered it in the cadence of winners. Good communicators speak at about 124 words a minute....poor ones at up to 200. Most of us speak at about 165. Unless we're silently tweeting those 140-character updates and headlines....
Ashley Asks (Nicely) What Pisses You Off...
She apologized for using the phrase, then said it: "You work hard when you fight for things you believe in. Ask yourself, pardon the expression, what pisses you off." Ashley Judd, actor and activist, was on the panel discussing a tough issue -- forced prostitution in Asia and how the plight of young women there led to her involvement in a group called Population Services International (PSI). We attended the panel event Thursday because it focused on human development and poverty issues, subjects touching on UN Millennium Development Goals we knew a bit about. Miryam's job at the UN had human trafficking on its agenda, and my job had scientific development at its core. The panel touched many bases, from the perspective of Ashley and the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe Morgan Tsvangirai, ex-Foreign Minister of Britain David Milliband, ex-Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, and Michael Elliot, ex-Time editor and head of the ONE campaign against poverty. Some key messages: 1) "Afro misery" is old school thinking: Seven of the world's fastest growing economies are African. 2) Many people think America spends way too much to help other countries in their development. In fact, while America is the world's top contributor, it spends just 1.1% of its gross national product on international aid. Britain's share is lower, 0.5%. 3) China is very active in Africa -- "cell phones and the Chinese are the biggest changes over the past decade," noted Zimbabwe's Prime Minister. Thousands are in his country building roads, bridges, plants. 4) Celebrity activists have clout -- Ashley had lunch with Melinda Gates, Bill's wife and Foundation partner, and even got to eat Melinda's ice cream dessert. PSI gets funding from the Gates Foundation.
Speak Softly, Carry Big Stick
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Thank You, Mr. President
Calling Rush: It's Raining in Charlotte
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
A Bad News/Good News Call from POTUS
"pre-registration required" event that neither sob stories nor money no longer could buy. Miryam got turned away at the heavily fenced-off site of the Daily Show, which I hope makes Jon Stewart's free spirit squirm. Lesson learned: we are looking to either officially join a caucus or form our own the next time around. To get in the party events, it helps to be in the party.....
Where's Fox? Check the CNN Grill

Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Late Night Police Escort
We began the day in the midst of a demonstration, and we ended it at the sight of another. Protesters marched down Tryon Street, taunting police and chiding democrats during the keynote convention speeches. While we were tucked in the Rock Bottom cafe, police set up barricades and sent dozens of bike officers to the street outside the windows. Earlier that day we had seen the beginnings of the anti-movement, when a converted truck sported protest images and signs. Some marchers were from the self-proclaimed "America's media watchdog", a conservative group called the Media Research Center that bashes the "liberal media", democrats and their kind. Others from Occupy Wall Street and related groups railed against capitalism. Police escorted protesters along the demonstration rout, many reportedly taunted by marchers along the way. Turns out there was more smoke than fire -- police outnumbered protesters by the time the demonstration died down. No surprise that things ended just about the time Michelle's speech did. (bottom photos Charlotte Observer)
Actors Masquerading for Republicans?
One thing is clear: somebody has to be (a) extremely devoted and passionate, or (b) simply a jerk, or (c) being paid a lot of money to stand on a soapbox out in the rain proclaiming the cause. The causes with the loudest voices on the streets of Charlotte had "anti" prefixes. Protesters were against legal abortion, illegal immigration, gays, Wall Street, non-Christians, and of course Obama. Most followed the rules of peaceful civil demonstrations, holding signs and trying to chant in rhythm and rhymes ("Power to the People, We are not Illegal").. But a few protesters were exceptionally obnoxious, so much so that you had to wonder if they were being paid to be disruptive. An anti-abortion crusader walked through the James Taylor concert crowd holding a giant poster vividly depicting what he was against. He tried to time his moves while Taylor sang "Sweet Baby James". Simply Gross. Another protester on the corner of Tryon and Trade demonstrated why gays and lesbians could not be successful at reproduction. He and his team of amateur biologists used plastic props and a microphone to show how "penetration" simply could not happen. Simply Gross. Other protesters preached selectively from the Bible to castigate sinners around them, using karaoke set-ups or the hidden mikes that hawkers use at state fairs to sell veg-o-matics. They set up shop right outside the Epicenter of people traffic to read from their prepared scripts for hours at a time, looking and sounding like a hired dee-jay behind glass. Jobs are at a premium, and passersby were kind....I opted to shoot a photo of a more upbeat message on a Catholic church.
Hitting Rock Bottom

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Ground Control to Major Green
We Prepare to Meet Michelle
First Lady Michelle Obama is the big story today. She came into town last night and rehearsed her speech inside the hall. We are preparing to meet her, sometime around 10:30 tonight, somewhere in a bar or studio newsroom on the big screen. By then, about three dozen speakers will already have hit the podium and viewers should be well rested from snoozes. Our credentials do not get us into the delegate convention hall, so we must suffer the consequences of roaming around looking for the best place to enjoy the scene. Late night streetwalkers. (photo by Arca)
Day 2: We Feel a Party Coming On
We're headed to Uptown, looking to stroll around the city and see what we find. Yesterday we had time to see only a few city walkers on streets or in parks. They included a dude in a colorful walking suit listening over a fence to a group singing "Amazing Grace" in a church yard on Trade Street. Today, no one event on the schedule. May look around for celebrities, or try to get interviewed by the Daily Show reporters walking around. At the Bloomberg journalist forum yesterday, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert were described as "complementary sources of news" by the national press secretary for the Obama campaign. He meant not complementary to each other, but to network, cable, and web news sources. But hey? Aren't the Colbert Report and Daily Show broadcast on the comedy channel? We have come a long way America. Let's keep it up.

We Take Cover in a Port-a-Jon
Hats Off to Honoré
Monday, September 3, 2012
Miryam Meets Marianne. Lou Meets Heineken
When the skies opened on Labor Day, we were on Trade and College right outside of the CNN Grill, the spot the cable network had chosen for its convention studio. We ran into the first open doors we saw -- the Ritz Carlton lobby, to our surprise. We were not alone, but still managed to find a table for two. Right across from an informal meeting of the Black caucus. We listened to the "meet and greets" of the well-groomed, well-schooled delegates from New York, South Carolina, Charlotte, and Chicago. One woman introduced her college son to everyone else, proud of his participation at the convention. I settled down with a Heineken and Miryam checked out the lobby for an Uptown map. No map, but she met Marianne, the woman with the son, who introduced herself to Miryam. It was one of those lobbies you could nest in all day long.... Next stop: James Taylor in concert. (top photo Charlotte Observer)
We Wave to the `Lamestream' Media
The crowd was waving, applauding, smartphoning photos, shouting to space. We wondered what the fuss was. Fresh out of the Bloomberg forum, we were not used to such frenzy. The crowd was oohing and aahing the Hardball guys from MSNBC, better known in Republican circles as the "lamestream media". Kind of lame description...there is news and then there is opinion. When they are mistaken for fact, that's lame. Luckily Miryam and I know the difference...we waved to Chris Mathews on the MSNBC studio stage, just below a restaurant-bar called Whiskey River, owned by NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chris waved back (in our direction) and seemed to mouth the words "Hey Homey, Whazzup??" He then proceeded to sit down and have his hair done before the show started. We could not stay to listen because we were hungry and the skies were clouding up. Time to move on down the road in Uptown. In any case, if we try to give equal time to all the news media in town -- more than 15,000 crews in all -- we would literally end up lame from all the hiking.
We Meet Robert & Crew from Amsterdam
It's always interesting how others see us, and how we seem them. That's why I asked Robert Paques what he and his camera team were up to at the Bloomberg forum. During the Q&A part, Robert had posed a pretty good question to the panel: "In a world of Twitter, Facebook, Buzzfeed, Google, how important will week-long political conventions be down the line? Are they not becoming old-fashioned?" The given answers were: (A) "Political conventions are just lame. Things are not decided there anymore," said Matt Bai, chief political correspondent for the New York Times Magazine. (B) "They are old-fashioned, and they are just wonderful. Even though we know everything in advance, they remain eventful," said Al Hunt, the Washington Editor for Bloomberg News who, like me, covered the 1976 political campaign "without a Blackberry" and seemed especially in tune with the times. and (C) "The conventions may not be as important in news terms as they once were, but they remain generators of the day's multiple news cycles," said Ben LaBolt, national press secretary for Obama for America. Neither the panel, the Amsterdam crew, nor the audience could determine the correct answer at this stage of the political game. They all did agree, however, that Clint Eastwood would never again address a political convention, and that henceforth anyone attempting to deliver a convention speech that was not cleared in advance would be wrestled to the ground and beaten with a chair. At least that's what it sounded like they said. Olivia Ma, the news editor at YouTube, did note that the Eastwood speech continues to get big play ("in the millions") but could not say exactly where all the views were coming from....Oh yes, back to Robert. He and his team are filming a documentary on America's political conventions. He told me they have no buyer as of yet and are doing it on speculation. "It's so unreal for us in Holland to have these kind of things," he told me. I almost gave him a high five telling him about our life in Austria and the political system there. Viva Europe. My hunch is that Robert is on the right track by documenting realtime politics. Their original video, plus the Eastwood feeds, could turn out to be an Academy award winner. I asked for his card to keep in touch on their progress.
We Meet Ahmed & Other Egyptians
Turns out the forum was a gold mine for meeting people from other countries. Egypt was among them, and we met Ahmed and friends from Cairo. They had been integral pieces of the Arab Spring in Cairo and now were deeply involved in Egyptian politics. The group was sponsored by the US State Department to attend the convention, mainly to learn a bit more about how election nominations are run in our kind of democracy. Hillary knows her stuff.... The group came complete with interpreters contracted from Michigan (another swing state, by the way). They were feeding reports to both the Egyptian state media and Al Jazeera, the Arab news agency whose stateside studio was housed about an hour outside of Charlotte. I was told that was because there was no (affordable) room in the city inns.
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