MCCARTER: Obama's Not the New JFK--But He Sure Sounds Like It
Here's the witty and wise Jeremy McCarter on Obama's acceptance speech:
[youtube:FCQlT4swvyA]
The view from Stumper's seat as Obama arrived on stage.
Someone should invite Barack Obama
to give an explanation of particle physics while wrestling a gator.
Short of that, I don't what could make him give a flat or faltering
speech. The oratorical challenges that life has thrown at him over the
last four years—the 2004 convention, the race speech, Berlin—have given
chance after chance to flop, but the man seems incapable of doing so.
Thursday night's challenge was one of the tallest: bringing the
Democratic National Convention to a crescendo without providing fodder
for those who think him a preening, grandiose celebrity. So he took his
inside voice with him to the cavernous Invesco Field, and used it to
deliver what might be the most intimate talk ever offered to a crowd of
80,000.
Obama described the speech as "workmanlike." That's true, in the sense that it didn't have the rhetorical flights of some of his previous talks. But it also implies a level of strain, of visible effort, nowhere in evidence. (It sounded workmanlike only in the way that Tiger Woods going eight under for the round is workmanlike.)
He needed all his gifts for this one, beginning with the agile, dynamic voice—an instrument that lets him, like a singer with a four-octave range, hit notes and make tonal shifts unavailable to the rest of us. "What the naysayers don't understand is that this election has never been about me," he said, using a pianissimo note to draw people closer, before booming: "It's about you." There's also the sheer quality of the writing, not just the arc and the rhythmic drive of the overall speech, but little flecks of language, as when he described the promise of a democracy "where we can find the strength and grace to bridge divides and unite in common effort." Grace, the unexpectedly delicate word, recasts the whole sentence, makes you listen anew.
The good news for the Democrats is that Obama did what they needed him to do; the bad news is how much they needed him to do.
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Andrew Romano is a senior writer for Newsweek. He reports on politics, culture, and food for the print and Web editions of the magazine and appears frequently on CNN and MSNBC. His 2008 campaign blog, Stumper, won MINOnline's Best Consumer Blog award and was cited as one of the cycle's best news blogs by both Editor & Publisher and the Deadline Club of New York. Follow Andrew on Twitter.
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