Hurricane Palin

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[Commentary] The news abhors a vacuum. Politicians, public-relations disinformers, media consultants, and other spin artists may think it's wise to suppress the elemental force that is the news. But when the news breeches the container it's been stuffed into, mayhem results. Journalistic mayhem is a fine description for the last couple of days of Sarah Palin coverage. Starved to the point of collapse from the restricted-calorie diet served at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, the press needed a news feast to restore its powers. With the Republicans' convention lite staring them in the face, the ravenous press corps decided to switch the menu from St. Paul to New Orleans. The evening news anchors -- NBC, CBS, ABC -- were all defecting to the Gulf Coast over the weekend. But then the press scented the lard-fried Snickers bar that was Palin. Now that Hurricane Gustav has fizzled, there is only one disaster story to cover, and she's it. Thanks to McCain's miscue, everything the press touches about Palin turns into a scoop: her earmark flip-flops, her political inexperience, her Alaska Independence Party connection, her views on teaching "creationism," her book-banning phase, plus the "troopergate" scandal, her husband's ancient DUI, and her pregnant teenage daughter. And the press rampage has only just begun. Steve Schmidt, Sen John McCain's top campaign strategist, accused the news media Tuesday of being "on a mission to destroy" Alaska Gov Sarah Palin by displaying "a level of viciousness and scurrilousness" in pursuing questions about her personal life.


Hurricane Palin McCain Strategist Blasts Media (Washington Post) Palin hubbub leads Republican delegates to target 'liberal media' (Los Angeles Times) Citizen journalists converge on party conventions (C-Net|News.com)