By Wlady Pleszczynski on 2.4.02 @ 2:21PM
Is that Al Gore breathing down our necks? We only don't have eyes for Greta. Plus more in this daily roundup.
SO HOW WE DOIN'? This is just the beginning.
Our site continues to be programmed and designed as we speak. By
next week all features will be in place and up and running. The
important thing is that we have a roof over our heads and a place
to meet. We've got a lot of catching up to do. Plus some very big
plans.
AN ALL-TIME BRADY BUNCH: Yes, it was a super Bowl
-- though our own extended pre-launch activities didn't leave us
much time to watch New England's great performance. We did notice,
however, that on most every down N.E.'s defense "outphysicaled" St.
Louis. The team that can play hardest and smartest the longest
wins. Hero Ty Law summed up: "I don't think they took us for
granted. But I don't think they knew they were in for the kind of
fight they were in for." Now if only the game had been played under
an open sky -- it's not real football if it's not preceded by a
flyover by U.S. military jets.
WILL AL HAVE THE LAST LAUGH? In Washington, at
least, everyone was yukking it up at Al Gore's expense even before
his major speech in Nashville last Saturday night. Most notably,
Richard Berke's report
in Sunday's New York Times said North Dakota Democratic
Sen. Byron Dorgan "laughed uproariously when asked about supporting
Mr. Gore again." Fellow Democrat John Breaux added, "You have to be
likable before they can vote for you." But what's not to like? Al
retains his profile-inviting beard, and didn't bother to wear a
coat and tie despite the importance of the Nashville occasion.
C-Span viewers saw something else: Al repeatedly lurching away from
the podium to move closer to his audience. It's as if he were
keeping in shape for the next time he has a chance to physically
intimidate a debate opponent on the stage. Don't think he'll go
away. The key item in Berke's story was the backer who told Berke
that though Gore may be unpopular in Washington, "in the base of
the party, there's still a great deal of support for Al Gore."
Besides, he has history on his side. As the supporter noted, "When
I worked for Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, nobody in Washington
wanted them. Currently, a similar thing is going on with Al Gore."
We stand warned.
WHY IT'S WORTH READING ELLEN GOODMAN (SOMETIMES):
Because next to Margaret Carlson, Molly Ivins, and Anna Quindlen --
oh, and Arianna -- she's the next best thing to Hannah Arendt. Her
recent
column on Enron tries harder than most pundits to capture a
bigger picture. Sure there's anger among the ex-employees, but also
"lingering bewilderment, sadness, warring feelings of being foolish
and fooled, self-deceptive and deceived." Locals tell her about a
Kenny Boy "who rode the elevator with this employees, shared photos
of his grandchildren," and "had his finger in every good cause in
the city." "Trust has gone bust," Goodman concludes about Houston,"
but at least she also notes how a former employee quoted from her
401(k) form: "Remember, you're responsible for your own money."
A CRUEL AND UNUSUAL HIRING: "Oh, tell me will you
darlin', why you look so bad tonight? They's bags around your
eyeballs which is red instead of white." Is that what Roger Ailes
was singing when he hired Greta Van Susteren for Fox? (The lyrics
are from "Temptation (Tim-Tayshun)," a number one song of 1947.)
Look what's happened to her. Washington Post TV columnist
Lisa de Moraes
calls Greta's surgical remake "a witness protection program eye
job." From now on you'll recognize her only if you keep your eyes
closed. How long before we forget she helped turn CNN into the
Clinton News Network?
DIVISIONS AT THE WASHINGTON POST: "Belichek, Martz
Set For Coaching Duel," ran a headline to a Saturday Post
Super Bowl preview
story. "Trim the Coaching Commentary, Please," Post columnist
Michael Wilbon's
headline pleaded in the same sports section. He's sick of
everyone's being "stuck on the topic of coaches" and seeing players
"become secondary in the competition equation to the grand
puppeteers." Makes you wonder what he thought about his page's
terrific top
story on "legendary" coach Bob Knight, "back in the saddle" at
Texas Tech. P.S. On post-Super Bowl Monday no one was disputing
that one brilliant coach had outfoxed the other.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Sports, Law, Military