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Mark Katz

McCain's Comedy Comeback

BS Bottom - Katz McCain Laughing 134 Can jokes accomplish what attack ads didn't? Bill Clinton’s former humorist and speechwriter says the senator nailed it at the Al Smith dinner last night.

By all evidence, McCain's over-wound spin masters figured out something pretty important yesterday: in the realm of do-or-die strategic message-making, humor flatters where spin insults.

Spin is: I think you are just dumb enough to believe this: (insert your narrowly-construed-yet-arguably-true, focus-grouped message-of-the-day here. Go ahead, all candidates do.)

Humor is: I think you are smart enough to understand what's really going on. That blank is then filled in with something that everyone in the world already knows, with the possible exception of the person who is speaking. Something like: "I screwed up."

"Joe the Plumber recently signed a very lucrative contract with a wealthy couple to handle all the work on all seven of their houses."

That's exactly what McCain did yesterday in his back-to-back appearances at the annual Al Smith dinner and then on late-night television with his frenemy David Letterman. McCain gave a speech every speechwriter and humorist evangelizer like me daydreams about. For the eight years of a previous administration I stared into a computer screen and imagined the lines that might redeem Bill Clinton at his toughest moments and more often than not he picked the ones that were right for him and pulled them off brilliantly. When the history of the 2008 campaign is written, Thursday October 16 will be recorded as one of John McCain's best days. Rather than campaigning in swing states, he spoke to the swing part of people's brains—the part of the brain that processes messages that otherwise go unspoken.

Seemingly for the first time in months, McCain spoke honestly to the American people in his most comfortable voice. With each laugh he earned, people who otherwise do not like him said, "Hey, I kinda like this guy."

Perhaps it took standing in the archdiocese or sitting across from America's high priest of comedy for this famous “straight-talker” to remember the Cardinal rule of humor: self-deprecating candor costs (almost) nothing and buys back (nearly) everything -- specifically credibility and likeability.

Take this line for example: "Joe the Plumber recently signed a very lucrative contract with a wealthy couple to handle all the work on all seven of their houses."

Surely McCain detests that his wife's family wealth is a topic of conversation, yet he earned loud laughs with this daring joke. Later that evening, Senator Obama delivered a joke with essentially the same punch line that went flat. McCain figured out that in mano-a-mano humor debates, the winning strategy is to figure out the worst thing your opponent can say about you and then find the way to say it yourself.

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October 17, 2008 | 11:41am
Comments ()
jlk8888

I HAVE SAID FOR MANY YEARS IT'S NOT THE BIGGEST BOX UNDER THE TREE WITH THE PRETTIEST RIBBON... THE PRIZE IS IN SIDE!

IF WE ALL WILL OPEN THE BOX YOU WILL FIND McCain ... OUR REAL PRIZE THIS ELECTION YEAR! NOT JUST PRETTY BOX WITH RIBBON AROUND IT!

"jk" TEXAS

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3:17 pm, Oct 17, 2008
Gigohead19

Yes, McCain was funny, but Obama had some good jokes too. I think they both did quite well.

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4:19 pm, Oct 17, 2008
Johnnorth

What a pity they couldn't debate in this style. McCain was great, a different man from debates 1 and 2, though very good in 3. Maybe they should have had an archbishop as moderator

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9:54 am, Oct 18, 2008
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McCain's Comedy Comeback

by Mark Katz

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