Chat-show Obama
Twenty-five minutes into the show the President strides in, shakes hands with Kevin (of the studio band), makes a fitting remark about Kevin’s suit; and, after a minute or two of inane preliminaries, Leno and Obama get down to the serious business of discussing the US economy.
AIG…Tell us about those bonuses, asks Leno. Obama obliges; and Leno poses a supplementary on the Bill providing for 90 percent tax on those bonuses. Before the President could say anything the show host announces yet another commercial break, asking Obama to hold his answer.
I will’, says President Barack Obama, adding, ‘I’ve got a good answer, too’ (studio applause). Millions of TV viewers the world over witness the world’s most powerful man being put on hold for a commercial break. Such is the marvel of television that it can make the mighty grin and bear it.
During the Emergency (1976) our all powerful PM Indira Gandhi, at an interview with a US channel, got cut-off, mid-sentence, by a clock-watching TV anchor who switched her off saying, ‘That’s all we have time for, madame Prime Minister’.
As for the Obama show with Jay Leno, media pundits in the US would have us believe that President Obama wanted to get beyond the Washington media , and push his economic agenda with folks who don’t read NYT or WSJ; he wanted to reach out to the grass-roots audience fed on soap and stand-up comedy in TV. Barack Obama may well be in a spot over the slide-down in the US economy. But I didn’t realise he was that desperate as to appear on the Jay Leno show.
Obama has endeared himself to millions as a President with a common touch. But isn’t he doing it a bit much, by signing up for chat-shows, that too barely two months into his office ?
Crosspost : My Take by GVK
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