ABOUT FIRST READ

First Read is an analysis of the day's political news, from the NBC News political unit. First Read is updated throughout the day, so check back often.

Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director

Mark Murray, NBC Deputy Political Director

Domenico Montanaro, NBC News Political Reporter



Obama takes center stage

Posted: Thursday, August 28, 2008 9:42 AM by Mark Murray

The New York Times looks at some of the potential risks of tonight’s speech before 75,000 at Invesco Field. “With daunting challenges of logistics, style and substance, the plan was hatched before the Republicans began a concerted drive to paint Mr. Obama as a media sensation lacking the résumé to be president. Now Obama aides are feeling all the more pressure to bring a lofty candidacy to ground level, showing that Mr. Obama grasps the concerns of everyday Americans.”

“On Wednesday, workers were still making changes to Invesco Field, home to the Denver Broncos, so it would feel more intimate, less like the boisterous rallies that served Mr. Obama so well early in the primaries, but also created the celebrity image that dogs him. They were still testing camera angles, so Mr. Obama would appear among the giant crowd, not above it. They took steps to reduce the echo effect, familiar to football fans, of speaking in such a cavernous space. Planners scrapped their idea to turn the audience of 75,000 into a giant phone bank, in response to fears that the cellphone system would crash (people will instead be asked to text-message friends and neighbors to support the campaign, program aides said would be effective nonetheless.)”

A Democratic senator told MSNBC’s David Shuster that Obama's speech tonight might be a bit different than what some may be expecting in a big stadium. Per this senator, Obama himself said the speech will not have the kind of soaring rhetoric some may be expecting.

The New York Post goes to the extreme with Obama's speech set up for tonight, which has some Roman columns. Its cover: " 'O' my God." But as Politico's Ben Smith points out, "Republicans who are mocking Obama's appearance haven't mentioned it, but George W. Bush accepted his own nomination in 2004 on a set with a similar neoclassical theme, with columns rising on either side of him… Indeed, the Bush set and the Obama sets currently look strikingly similar, with the podium set well in front of the columns, and connected by a path."

The New York Times profiles Obama. “Even before he entered public life, he began honing not only his political skills, but also his mental and emotional ones. He developed a self-discipline so complete, friends and aides say, that he has established dominion over not only what he does but also how he feels. He does not easily exult, despair or anger: to do so would be an indulgence, a distraction from his goals. Instead, they say, he separates himself from the moment and assesses.”

”But with … Obama officially becoming the Democratic presidential nominee on Wednesday night, some of the same qualities that have brought him just one election away from the White House - his virtuosity, his seriousness, his ability to inspire, his seeming immunity from the strains that afflict others - may be among his biggest obstacles to getting there.”

As reported yesterday, Obama and Biden will campaign in Pennsylvania the day after the convention. Now we’ve learned that on Saturday, the duo will head to Ohio, where they will first attend a memorial service in Cleveland for Stephanie Tubbs Jones before holding a rally in Dublin. On Sunday, the two will discuss the economy in Toledo.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Nice speeches, nice message, nice McCain attacks BUT....

Too bad Obama LOST the perception race.

The republicans already won because they succeeded in the perception war...getting most americans to perceive him as not ready to lead, not ready to be commander in chief, all of which Obama cannot overcome, or change.  And this, my friends, will be why Obama will lose in November, despite the unity stuff and nice speeches this week.

Oh, and when McCain picks Romney as VP, watch McCain's poll numbers soar through the roof because Romney is perceived as an economic wiz, even though he's a flip flopping panderer of the worst kind.

Again, its all about how you are perceived, not reality, not the issues, and because Democrats never get this through their thick skulls, they will always lose the White House.
Tell Dems to shut up about criticizing Obama's acceptance speech before it even happens:

http://strategy08.wordpress.com/2008/08/28/gov-bredesen-everything-thats-wrong-with-democrats/
Republicans who are mocking Obama's appearance haven't mentioned it, but George W. Bush accepted his own nomination in 2004 on a set with a similar neoclassical theme, with columns rising on either side of him…
*******************************************************

Someone PLEASE tell this to Ed Morrissey over at HotAir.com.  He has been beating the drum against the columns for two days now.  Ugh.

http://thepajamapundit.com/
Except W was president at the time, wasn't he?
Just as Senator Kerry said, "How pathetic"? "How desperate"?
Oh, that's too funny. All these folks who are so quick to criticize Obama for putting on the "wrong" shoe first were all over this Greek set.

It was further "proof" Obama is egotistical, or aloof, or thinks himself a messiah, or not ready, or Muslim, or even the anti-Christ... (I really read that yesterday).

Now it turns out its pretty much the same as what the Republicans used four years ago? Too funny.
Wow Republicans are lame.
It is a sad day in America when excellence and competence are viewed as a negative.

If only the media were more competent, we would not have to waste precious days of this campaign debating ridiculous points like the "risks" of giving a speech in a stadium.

I'll be glad when it is time to vote.

Obama/Biden '08/'12
Except that in 2004, George Bush was the sitting president and therefore wasn't trying to be more important than he was. He was already president. Barack isn't yet.  And therefore, it does give the impression that he thinks he is more important than currently he is.  And really, does he want to be compared to George Bush and do something he did.  Couldn't they have come up with a different set up.  And even if it supposed to honor the MLK anniversary. It seems out of place for a stadium.  When being in the stadium in from of 75,000 people is already risky.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5dPwegqgDU&feature=related

McCain is not the man he claims to be. The POW’s and military despise this man for all his lies and manipulation. Watch the video and see the real John McCain and I guarantee nobody will vote for this lying skunk.

http://www.vietnamveteransagainstjohnmccain.com/
i have never been so interested in a presidential nomination speech.

The first three nights of the convention i compare to an MMA fight.

night one, a few jabs and probing kicks were sent, while they set themselves up for the long haul.
night two saw a flurry of jabs and kicks, and their confidence grew.
night three they came with power blows from heavy hitters.

All setting up Obama for the submission move tonight.  
Who cares what it looks like?

Once he speaks, and if he can hit a home run and gets specific and nails McCain against a wall, it won't matter if he's on a street corner or in front of 80,000 people, though hitting a home run in front of 80,000 people helps.

No surprise the GOP wants to sweep anything Bush-Related under the rug. Such hypocrisy.

http://www.rodneyhopper.com
He'll take the White House to...YEAH!!!

Obama/Biden'08
Think he'll talk about the economy?  probable, but he'll miss the news that the economy GREW in Q2 by 2.2%; he'll just continue to insist that we're in a recession.    
Watching the Democratic convention these last three nights has been a roller coaster ride for me, intensely emotional. Even as I feel so proud of Hillary and Bill Clinton, so moved by the Kennedys, so nostalgic for John Kerry, I feel unsettled and anxious. I think that change is unsettling, risk is stressful. This is a big step, nominating a young(ish) African American senator, in a country controlled by the right wing media. I remember the sixties, the assasinations, the Vietnam War, the turmoil, and I know birth pangs are not easy. This is not going to be an easy transformation, from a right wing administration to the RIGHT adminstration, and I know Obama/Biden are going to need all the help they can get.
You don't have to worry about Obama delivering. He's been waiting for this night for a long time now and will make us all very proud. Please watch it on C-Span, however, so you get the ENTIRE speech without any of the crude commentary from people who really want a Republican to stay in the White House! Obama/Biden '08
This is a monumental occasion for America and to exclude people from being a part of history because of perception, I think that is a mistake.  Will some see Obama as a celebrity, a rock star? YES.  BUT, if you think the nomination of an african american as President is significant, wouldn't you want to be there?  He could counter the attack by being self-deprecating, joke about it.

As for the "celebrity" issue, that's rhetoric.  Show me a President that can't run an effective government, pass effective policies BECAUSE others think of him as a celebrity.  I'd think less of him if he decided to buy into the rhetoric.  Obama has shown his strength of character time and time again, he's stuck to hitting back on policy instead of personal attacks. So I wish him well and I am soo jealous not to be there!

No way, No how, NO McCain
Why is that the Republicans making jokes about the stage set up at Invesco Field. Almost all the Federal Buildings in Washington DC. resembles Roman architecture especially the Capital.

Thank you,
Tony
I don't think Obama's so-called celebrity status "dogs" him. Many Americans are hungry for a leader who's respected at home and abroad. Besides the man claiming celebrity is a negative--old man McCain--consorts with celebrities himself. (I wish the MSM would perform more analysis and not just parrot the Republican talking points. Frankly, you sound vacuous.)

Finally, I have no doubt Obama's speech will do just what it needs to do. Public speaking and thoughtful language are Obama's strong suit. I'm looking forward to tonight.
I still say that the guy who's on Leno 200 times versus Obama's 0 times shouldn't dare to call Obama a clebrity.
Bush used Roman columns because he wanted to be Emperor. Obama doesn't have such illusions.
Obama needs a plain old, "here's what I'll do for you" speech tonight, not a "give peace a chance" love-in speech. He needs to tell us straight up what he's going to do as President. At least, that's what I'd like to see.
Tonight's forecast for Denver courtesy of Weather Channel:

Partly Cloudy, 70 degrees and 0% chance of precipitation.

I guess God doesn't love "Focus on the Family" and their prayers for rain.

No way!

No how!

No McCain!
Vietnam Veterans Against John McCain Please listen to this video about this Scum Bag Traitor.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFhhvaIXA9A&NR=1
the hypocrite rethugnutz will make a mountain out of a molehill, ignoring what bush did but screaming to hi heaven about Obama
By commading this huge deal in the stadium, you just know Obama is making up for, shall we say, other inadequatcies.
If you are thinking of voting for john mcain please check this site out as a long life conservative this idiot will bring down the Republican party.
http://www.nojohn.com/
What I can't wait for is when Obama tells God to get off HIS throne. I sure hope it will be televised.
Obama could talk about the Denver sewer system, and his little followers would call it the greatest speech ever.
Virginia in Fort Worth...who is stupid? half and half make a whole....so how is he also part "arab"??? does he have some heretofore unknown genetic makeup that allows this to happen? and YOUR racism is spewing everywhere..."stupid blacks"????
John Stewart said something the other night that gave me clarity into the republicans that I had not really been able to identify before, and YOU madame, are the embodiment of it...."Republicans love this country, THEY JUST HATE HALF THE PEOPLE WHO LIVE IN IT"  
I don't get the entire argument that being popular is bad for Obama. I think it reeks of the elitism that republicans have for us commoners who see Obama as a great leader.  Accepting the nomination in an setting that allows more of us in is a good thing--the Pepsi Center was going to be swamped, just swamped.
“On Wednesday, workers were still making changes to Invesco Field, home to the Denver Broncos, so it would feel more intimate, less like the boisterous rallies that served Mr. Obama so well early in the primaries, but also created the celebrity image that dogs him."

Celebrity image that dogs him? According to who FR?

The "celebrity problem" is a creation of McSurge, Karl Rove and the Republicans.

The same people who brought us 9/11, yes 9/11, the Iraq debacle, the mortgage crisis, oil from $26 to $140 a barrel, "heck of a job Brownie" after Katrina, Guantanamo, soaring inflation, the list is endless.

As far as I'm concerned, the Republicans should not even have a right to field a candidate this election cycle. They've done so much damage they should just be required to watch from the sidelines.

How much are they charging for parking?


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=1300339

First Read e-mail alerts


Sign up for First Read alerts
The first place for key political news and analysis

Syndicate This Site

Add First Read to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google