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Anger in the Age of Obama April 7, 2009

Posted by Matt Brown in Politics.
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It’s 2:04 PM and I can feel my brain turning to mush.

It isn’t the first time its happened, and I doubt it will be the last. I’m sitting here at my desk, searching through various news websites and blogs, trying to find something interesting to write about. I glance through the CNN Political Ticker, and I can feel my eyes start to glaze over as I scan the headlines for todays new manufactured political “crisis”. Omg, Obama farted at the G20. Sarkozy turned up his nose. Americans are outraged. Eric Cantor releases a statement on how Republicans would never embarrass our country like that, and it this flatulence incident just shows the glaring inexperience of our administration.

Below that are 6 other stories showing people getting outraged over tiny, mundane things. I switch over to gchat, where I’m talking with Maya, hoping that she’ll say something intelligent to break my mental lethargy. Instead, she describes, in graphic detail, her baby Miles’ latest poops. Now my head is full of political spin drivel, AND I know what a “four wiper” is. My eyes are bleeding.

Yes, I have a sneaking suspicion that I’m getting dumber, and I’m giving part of the blame to this newfangled internet news machine, which I’ve been so hooked up to, trying to mine article ideas.

From October to around February, the theme of the political news was “Hope”. It was the centerpiece of a winning political campaign, and it lurked in the background of several other issue debates. “We’re plotting a new direction”, we were told. “We’re going to erase the mistakes of the past, and we’re going to make history.” Political copy swelled with Hope, and I felt it burst into reality at the Obama Inauguration, where I felt like I was getting a big hug from a million formally oppressed liberals. Not only was it satisfying to get so recklessly emotionally involved with a cause, but writing was easy. I churned out thousands of words, and could have easily churned out thousands more if there was enough of a market.

But Hope no longer appears to be the dominant emotion in politics right now. It appears that Hope has given way to Anger.

Anger at politics and politicians is certainly nothing new. Would be politicos of my generation would do well to study Mark Twain and H.L Mencken to get a good historical perspective on government loathing. To me though, this anger is different…its broader, deeper, and profoundly personal.

The frustration seems to be pretty broad, and is popping up all over the place. People flip out over AIG bonuses, even though they represent tiny percentages of the stimulus bills. Folks are losing their jobs, their homes and their retirement plans. We can turn on the TV to see Lou Dobbs give himself a hernia while flipping out about Mexicans, and see Glenn Beck build a Chamber Of Fear bunker in Ruby Ridge and wait for the Second Coming. Add all of this up with the fact that quite a few people felt personally attacked by Obama’s very existence, and a culture of very unrealistic expectations, and we have the recipe for a smoldering vat of Anger.

Now, I’m just speculating here, but I think I might have an idea while some of that anger is so strong. Never in my short life have I felt the difference between generations this much. On one hand, we have an older generation who has held political, economic and cultural power for the last several decades…the Reagan Democrats, older working whites, etc. Their families might have moved out to the suburbs in the white flight era of the 1950s and 60s, and now the demographics of their neighborhoods are completely different. Their social values did not get passed down the following generation, and more socially progressive policies look to march on. The economy shifted from blue collar to high tech service, and they might have been left behind.

I’m not saying that feeling is totally unjustified or wrong, just my hypothesis.

Me? I’m not angry. I don’t have the capacity to stay angry at everything anymore…I get scandal fatigue. I pick a few pet issues to get all righteously indignant about (the achievement gap in American public schools, the growing anti-intellectualism of America, poor reporting, the fact that the Mike Brown still won’t hire a GM for the Cincinnati Bengals, those sorts of things), and then try to sift through the rest of the stories, separating the total crap from the important things that other, intelligent, passionate people will fight.

My little sister still gets angry at every injustice, and I have a few friends who still do. Bless their hearts. Others have totally unplugged themselves, washed their hands, and declared that the issues of the world are “somebody else’s problems”. I hope that as I continue to get older, I don’t lose my ability to get angry. Its important to get angry sometimes…it shows you still have passion, that you’re still paying attention.

But that anger needs to be channeled into productive sources, not trapped in a spin cycle of fear and loathing. If you’re upset about the way things are going, there are legitimate, proper cycles to go about changing things. Now is not the time for bunkers or fear chambers. To fall into that trap would end whatever hope and goodwill we might have accumulated, and put us all right back where we started.

I’d go on, but my gchat is flashing again, which means another “the baby pooped!” story….and my mind is back to mush.

What They Don’t Tell You About Greyhound Buses… March 15, 2009

Posted by Matt Brown in Humor, Politics, Stories and observations.
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This website has been updated sporadically lately for two main reasons. One is that I’m crazy busy with some TFA related projects (see my sister blog, somedayallblogs.wordpress.com). The other reason is that I’ve been working on some longer writing projects. Here is one story that I thought maybe you guys might enjoy, about my bus trip to Washington DC to blog about the Obama Inauguration for a small Ohio Newspaper. Enjoy

The instructions on my ticket confirmation email seemed simple enough. Please bring your photo ID, your email confirmation number, and please get to the Greyhound Station 1 hour before your bus departs. My plan was then to get on my bus, take a nap, read a book, jam to my iPod, and before I knew it, I would be at Union Station in Washington DC. Easy.

But alas, things are not always so simple. I suspect there is quite a bit they don’t tell you about Greyhound Bus journeys.

First, customer service isn’t exactly a priority. Me and my girlfriend (D) arrived at the station for our bus trip at 3:30 AM, and noticed the station was almost completely empty. Apparently, demand for the 4:30 bus from Columbus to DC on a Monday was sparse. Seeing that I was the only one in line at the ticket counter, I walked right up to the front, thinking that I would simply exchange my confirmation number and ID for my tickets, as per the instructions in my email. The Ticket Lady was engaged in a rather lively discussion with a security guard and a bus driver, punctuated by the occasional aaaaaaw shiiiit, and aw no she’s didn’t! I politely coughed to show that I, a customer, needed to be served. The Ticket Lady looked up at me, glared, and continued her conversation.

I turned around and gave my girlfriend a confused look. Was this the right ticket counter? Was it closed? We couldn’t see any sign that would indicate that, and the email did tell us to come to the station at such an ungodly hour. The Ticket Lady apparently noticed, and turned to me. “Sir. I notice you’re getting a little antsy. I am talking right now. Please wait your turn.” She said all of this as if the bus driver was a paying customer, waiting to check his duffel bag and head to Chicago. She then turned back to her friends and said just loud enough for me to hear; can you believe these kids? What are they doing here so goddamned early?[1] I shrugged and sat down by my backpack. I guess this is why Greyhound wanted us to get here so early.

After an uncomfortably long wait, we eventually got our tickets, and sat down next to the door to wait for our bus. “I’m so excited for this trip. Are you excited yet?” D asked me. I had every reason to be. I had managed to talk the editors of my local newspaper to take me off the high school sports beat, and let me cover the inauguration of Barack Obama. Me and D had both worked for the Obama campaign, and the idea of physically witnessing the culmination of our efforts was very thrilling indeed. D had also not been to DC since she was in 8th grade, and I used to live there, so in addition to witnessing history, I could go visit old college friends and show my girlfriend around what I considered to be my second hometown.

But it was still before 4 AM, and I have a hard time being really excited for anything before 4 AM. “It hasn’t sunk in yet. Ask me if I’m excited once we get to Wheeling” I said. Wheeling was the first stopover on the way to DC. We would then change buses in Pittsburgh, and makes stops in Hagerstown and Baltimore before the end of our journey. I slouched on my little bench, and tried to get a little bit of sleep before our bus was scheduled to arrive in a half hour.

Only the bus didn’t get there in a half hour. Our bus, without apology or explanation, rolled into the stop a fashionable hour and a half late. That’s just another one of the things they don’t tell you.

I tried to nap a little more once I finally got on the bus, but my seat made that pretty much impossible. Greyhound managed to construct a seat that’s uncomfortable, no matter how you sit in it. I tried reclining the chair, kicking my legs into the aisle, scrunching up in a ball, and hundreds of other positions over the course of our journey, but nothing worked. Just when I thought I was comfortable enough to take a quick nap, I’d notice that my right leg and half of my butt had fallen asleep. At least this time I was traveling with a friend. On my previous Greyhound journey, my seat mate was Jabba the Hut, who spilled into my seat, pinning me against the window with a wall of jiggling fat.

D didn’t seem to have any trouble falling asleep though, and was only just waking up when the bus rolled into the lonely downtown of Wheeling West Virginia. It was still pretty dark outside and downtown Wheeling wasn’t exactly aglow with skyscrapers and flashing neon. I’m not even sure if it was aglow from street lamps. “Where are we?” she asked me.

“I think we’re in Wheeling. I guess we’re just going to stop for a second, and then head to Pittsburgh.”

“Are you excited yet?”

I yawned and stretched. “Not yet. Ask me when we get to Pittsburgh”.

Truthfully, it wasn’t just my inability to catch a decent nap that was preventing the excitement from kicking in. We were still over an hour behind schedule, and we were supposed to change buses in Pittsburgh. If we missed that connection, there was no telling how long we’d be stuck there, maybe even an entire day. I was supposed to file a story “on my journey to DC” by 7 PM, and that would prove difficult to do if I didn’t actually arrive in DC before 7. I silently hoped that our connecting bus was late as well.

Our bus driver must have somehow heard my silent pleas. While D slept, and I turned to my iPod as a distraction from my worries, our bus thundered along the highway at speeds not even close to legal. Most buses stay in the righthand land and cruise close to the speed limit, but we darted around traffic as if we were a motorcycle, not a gigantic passenger bus. By some sort of miracle, we pulled into the bus station 15 minutes before we were scheduled to change buses. The driver got on the intercom. “Ladies and Gentlemen, you are many things. You are Black, White, Young, Old, Man and Woman…..but you are no longer late”. I could have hugged him.

The Bus station in Pittsburgh was very different than the Columbus station. Columbus isn’t much of a Greyhound hub, so their station is small and sparse, with a few dirty benches, some dingy overpriced vending machines, and old video games that nobody wants to play. Pittsburgh is apparently a major hub for all the entire east coast. If you’re in the midwest and you want to bus to the East Coast, you have to pass through the Pittsburgh Greyhound station. It had more than twice the number of gates as the last station, and everything looked new and clean. In addition to the typical vending machine fare, this station had flatscreen TV’s showing CNN and ESPN, and what looked to be a mini restaurant/convenience store. It was about time for a late breakfast, and there were probably some things we could pick up for our trip, so D and I stashed our packs by our gate, and went to explore the store.

The back corner of the mini mart was labeled “The Greyhound Grill”, which advertised your typical burgers and pizza fare, along with hot breakfasts. After inspecting the menu, I decided that some pancakes would taste delicious, and stepped up to place my order. Only nobody was there. I peaked over the counter, waited some more, and then shuffled around the Grill area uncomfortably.

A voice from across the mini mart had the answer. “Oh, they don’t open that until 12:30 I think” said a greyhound employee. “You can only buy the prepackaged foods here at the minimart”

“If you don’t open until 12:30, why are you selling breakfast foods? Why is there no sign?” I really had my heart set on some pancakes. The picture looked so inviting.

“I don’t know. I’m just the cashier lady.” We sighed, bought some four dollar muffins (that only provided maybe a dollar fifty of hunger relief), and went to board our next bus, which was set to take us across Pennsylvania, into Maryland, and finally Washington DC.

It was light for the first time, so I finally got a chance to glimpse at some of my fellow passengers. Like my previous Greyhound adventures, it looked like we had quite the cast of characters. I could see a man trying to sell little American flags to everybody on the bus. “Please help me out here guys. I’m going to the Inauguration and this is how I’m going to pay for my ticket back” (We didn’t buy any). I saw a few people that looked like college students, a few ambiguously sketchy folks, and dozens of people wearing Obama buttons or paraphernalia (including two people that were wearing way too much Obama paraphernalia. I couldn’t tell what color their coat was supposed to be, it was so covered in buttons). At the time, I didn’t really have a reason to be particularly interested in any of my fellow passengers. I made a quick phone call, then decided to flip through the book I was reading.

Apparently, the seats are not the only part of the bus that had less than stellar craftsmanship. I looked up from my book to discover that our bus was no longer humming along a highway in Pennsylvania, but was sitting in a mall parking lot. My fellow passengers were exchanging worried looks, so I started to get worried. The bus driver got up to the intercom and started to talk.

Ladies and Gentlemen, it appears we have a small problem with this doodad here in the engine system, and now our brakes aren’t working so well. We’ll have a replacement bus coming to pick you up in about an hour or so. We apologize for the inconvenience, and thank you for riding Greyhound. Actually, I have no idea what he said, because the bus intercom system hadn’t been updated since the Carter administration, so it came out like the teacher’s voice in a Charlie Brown cartoon. Regardless, we now had an unexpected pit stop in Monroeville Pennsylvania.

According to my extensive research[2], Monroeville is a suburb of Pittsburgh, with a population of roughly 30,000. Apparently it had been quite the prosperous little town back when coal and steel were huge industries, but from my window, all I could see were vacant strip malls and fast food joints. That’s okay, because I didn’t buy a bus ticket to go see the sights and sounds of Western Pennsylvania…and after sitting in that bus for 4 and a half hours already with nothing to eat but a crappy, overpriced muffin, I was ready for some fast food.

The new bus wasn’t coming for at least an hour, so a few of us passengers walked a few blocks to a Panera to grab some lunch. I grabbed a seat next to a window, and spread my notebooks and paperwork across the table, next to my delicious turkey sandwich. If I was going to be stuck here for a few more hours, I might as well get some work done. I tried to write down a few notes from the trip so far, to maybe use in one of my newspaper articles, but my thoughts kept drifting to our bus situation. I kept checking the window every few seconds; to make sure that the new bus hadn’t arrived yet. This absolutely drove D crazy.

“Are you seriously checking again? It’s been what, 7 minutes?” she asked more than once.

I couldn’t help it. What if we were left here? I needed to think of some sort of contingency plan. Perhaps that’s another thing they don’t tell you about Greyhound buses, I mused to myself. Always think of a backup plan.

Thankfully, I didn’t have to employ any of my poorly hatched doomsday backup plans. Maybe fifteen minutes after I walked out of Panera, another Greyhound rolled up next to ours in the Monroeville Mall parking lot, ready for the next leg of our journey.

I didn’t think it was possible for a bus to be even more dilapidated and uncomfortable than the one we took to Pittsburgh, but our replacement vehicle managed to break all the records. The “new” bus was a little bit smaller, but managed to cram in four more seats. This made anything resembling foot room nothing but a vicious rumor. There was some sort of fan built in right above my seat, making an obnoxious WRRRRRRR sound the rest of the trip. It was maybe 35 degrees outside, and the bus certainly wasn’t warm, so the fan didn’t seem to serve any purpose besides annoying me. Customer satisfaction is clearly a priority of the Greyhound Bus Company.

I don’t think I was the only passenger who noticed the less than stellar condition of our new steed. Before we could pull out of the mall parking lot, one of the passengers in the front stood up and said something to the bus driver that I couldn’t hear. Then he stood up in the front of the bus and asked us to bow our heads, because he was going to pray.

“Dear Lord, we thank you for watching over us and blessing us every day. We ask that you pour out your blessings onto our bus driver, and this bus, that we might safely and quickly arrive in DC to see the inauguration of our new President. Amen”. A few passengers let out scattered “amens”, and the man went back to his seat.

Despite being a religious person myself, I’m normally a little uncomfortable with public community prayers like this…but not then. The way this trip was going, we needed all the help we could get in order to get to DC on time, and if that meant publicly asking The Big Man to watch over us, I could live with that.

The bus was also filthy. My seat was dotted with what looked like fossilized Cheetos. The floor hadn’t been cleaned in ages, making your shoes stick to the floor with every step. It was like walking in some sort of tar pit, or maybe a movie theater. The windows still had the residue of dead bugs (did they leave them there to set an example for other bugs?). I swept as much trash off of my chair as I could, pulled out my book, and tried to find some semblance of normalcy for the rest of the trip.

This proved difficult to do, because I was starting to see that some of our fellow passengers on the trip were anything but normal. Greyhound passengers typically fall into two groups: college students/people who cannot afford plane tickets, and people who don’t stand a chance of passing the required security checkpoints on airplanes[3]. I was maybe 15 the first time I ever rode on a Greyhound, and on that short trip between Columbus and Cleveland, my fellow passengers tried to sell me drugs no less than three times[4]. Nobody tried to sell drugs on this trip, but that didn’t mean we didn’t have a few characters on the bus.

Perhaps the most interesting of my fellow travelers was “The Baby Lady”. The Baby Lady seemed normal enough. She was maybe a few years older than me, and had the most adorable, outgoing little baby boy, who would make faces at some of the other passengers and laugh. I taught the kid how to drum on one of the bus seats, much to the chagrin of some of the other passengers. On a long trip through the doldrums of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, The Baby Lady’s baby was a welcome diversion.

But then somewhere outside of Monroeville, The Baby Lady decided she wanted to take a nap. She curled up as best she could in the terrible bus seat, passed her baby to two random passengers next to her, and went to sleep. She slept through half of Pennsylvania, and her laughing child slowly made the rounds along the side of the bus. I don’t profess to have any great paternal instincts, but after watching a child get passed along a Greyhound bus like a teenager crowd surfing at a rock concert, something deep within me stirred. I don’t know much about raising children, but this cannot be right. I turned and looked at my girlfriend, who appeared to be having the same reaction. After watching another group of passengers try to feed the baby some of those fossilized Cheetos, I wanted to leap out of my seat, grab the kid, and find the nearest Social Services Agent. I hope that poor kid had all of his shots.

The bus rolled past Breezewood[5], and into Maryland, and I started looking for new ways to entertain myself. I had finished my book, my iPod was low on batteries, and my girlfriend had managed to defy all known laws of Physics, and had fallen asleep. I had an article due only a few hours after we were scheduled to arrive in DC, and I noticed that my notebook had precious little in the way of actual, usable notes [6]. I overheard a few people talking about the upcoming inauguration, so I decided to introduce myself, and join the conversations.

It turns out that many of my fellow travelers were quite interesting, and not just in the drug trafficking/reckless child endangerment sort of way. More than half of the bus passengers were headed to the inauguration, and all of them had a story. One woman flew in from England, without an inauguration ticket, and knowing that she had to be back in England in three days. This baffled many of her fellow passengers. Most of us could understand why an American would want to travel to see Obama (after all, that’s what most of us were doing), but Obama wasn’t even her president! When faced with these questions, the lady would just smile, and said that even foreigners can appreciate the major history. “Electing somebody like Obama is a victory for us all” she said.

Another passenger was a law student from Kansas, who had been on buses for two straight days, having weathered another bus breakdown in Missouri. Despite having to endure 24 hours of bus, he was in good spirits, and never complained once.

Perhaps the most interesting to me were two travelers a few rows up from me. They were about my age, and were from Fresno California. They had been on Greyhound buses for three straight days, and were going to make that same journey home the day after the inauguration. I thought that international conventions prevented this sort of thing from happening. I incredulously asked them why they would want to come so far, and spend so much time in so uncomfortable a setting. They just grinned, and held up a copy of that day’s USA Today. The headline read “JUST FOR THE FEELING OF BEING THERE”. I smiled, nodded, and made that my lead for my first article.

I met a few other passengers on the bus. Sometimes I spoke, or asked questions, but mostly I listened and took notes. I didn’t tell anybody I was a journalist, I just stepped back, and let other people tell their stories that they were so eager to share. Maybe that’s something that Greyhound ought to play up a little more. Ride Greyhound, come back with a story. That’s something they certainly didn’t tell me about.

After one last hiccup (a huge traffic jam on Interstate 95), we finally arrived at Union Station in Washington DC. We were only about two and a half hours late, which isn’t actually all that bad, if my other Greyhound trips are any indication. [7] It was starting to get dark, but we still had plenty of time to walk to the nearest Metro stop, and head to a friend’s apartment, where I could file my story on the journey and appease my hungry editors.

My confirmation email was pretty simple. It told me to arrive at the station in Columbus at 3:30 AM, and to bring my email and confirmation number. The email told me that a bus would take me to Pittsburgh, and then to Washington DC, and it left a number I could call in case I needed a refund. That was it. Nobody said anything about the optional customer service, or how arrival times were merely fluid suggestions, not rigid schedules. Nobody told me I would leave the bus trip with a notebook full of stories either. [8] I guess there is quite a bit they don’t tell you about Greyhound buses.


[1] Excuse me. I have a horizontal driver’s license. I am NOT a kid.

[2] And by extensive research, I mean I looked up Monroeville on Wikipedia. Turns out Dawn of the Dead was filmed at the same mall where we were stuck. I guess that’s pretty fitting. Monroeville seemed like a good place for a Zombie attack.

[3] For example, typically, when a passenger on an airplane tries to light his shoe on fire, it becomes a national news story, and the passenger is thrown into prison. On a Greyhound? They call that Thursday.

[4] They were pretty friendly, and started some small talk before they go to pushing their goods. They asked me what I was going to do up in Cleveland. I told them I was attending a church Boy Scout conference. You would think that they would have figured out I wasn’t likely to be their customer then…but nope.

[5] Breezewood isn’t a real town. It sits at the interchange of Interstates 70 and 76, making it really one huge Disneyland for trucks. There are no homes, just truck stops, fast food joints, and the neon glow of motel after motel. I bet when you went to DC in 8th grade, you stopped for lunch in Breezewood.

[6] Mostly it was full of things like WONT SOMEBODY PLEASE THINK OF THE CHILDREN, “I can’t feel my legs”, and “I hate Greyhound Buses”

[7] The arrival times on Greyhound tickets are apparently like the points system on Whose Line Is It Anyway? They really don’t matter.

[8] Or a huge crick in my back. I swear, riding on that bus for 10 hours took a year off my life.

CSPAN THE MUSICAL-Volume I February 11, 2009

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resident Obama is sitting at his desk. His tie is loosened, and he is obviously stressed

OBAMA:
My first day in office certainly wasn’t that hard
The only hiccup was Roberts inability to read from a card
but now crisis are mounting, folks are beating down my door
this certainly wasn’t the change I had hoped for.

The media is pounding me, and I can’t relax
because nobody I hired paid all their taxes.
Then the economy descended into insanity,
and my idiot press sec said I’d grab beers with Sean Hannity
Hopefully my stimulus bill can get some momentum flowing
Lemme check CSPAN and see how thats going…

Cut to: PELOSI’S OFFICE
Nancy Pelosi is meeting with her staffers, and other high level Democratic House members. They are giddily throwing around monopoly money.

PELOSI:
When we asked for children’s insurance, they laughed in our face
but now I’m in charge, and we’ll put the GOP back in it’s place
to hell with bipartisanship, they didn’t show any here
so lets load this bill up with our wishlist from the last 8 years!

Guys? What are your problems?

INTERN
In a few months, me and my girlfriend are having a baby
and we’re worried about money, since you really don’t pay me

PELOSI: 300 MILLION FOR PLANNED PARENTHOOD!!

AIDE
I’ve finally got some time off, but I don’t know what to do
since i’ve already watched everything in my Netflicks queue

PELOSI:
ANOTHER 600 MILLION FOR HOLLYWOOD!!

OTHER AIDE
Oh, I have something that requires me to vent
I hit a pothole driving to work, now my BMW has a dent!

PELOSI: (clearly drunk with power)
ELVENTY BILLION BUCKS TO BUILD NEW ROADS! Bwahaha

CUT TO: Republican Meeting

CANTOR: For 8 years we spent money like drunken fools
and hoped that nobody would notice, or read the news
now we’re hopelessly out of power, so its time to pretend
that we know anything about how to responsibly spend

BOEHNER: Let us make the most outlandish statements we can make on the floor!
Its easy to take a stand, when you don’t matter anymore!

Mike Huckabee: I sent out a letter to everybody on my mailing list
saying this bill is an abomination, and its making God pissed

Mitt Romney: I’m against this bill too! It’s certainly no fun
it gives no money at all to any company I run

Glenn Beck: LOOOOUD NOISES! I DONT KNOW WHAT WE’RE YELLING ABOUT!

(cut to: Obama, facepalming)

OBAMA: I thought my first 100 days were supposed to be a honeymoon?
If its all going to be just like this, I hope its 2012 soon….

I swear, this is my last inauguration piece January 25, 2009

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I feel like I’ve been beating a dead horse a little bit here. Over the last few days, I think I’ve written 4 articles, and close to 3,000 words on my brief trip back to DC for the Obama inauguration. I’ve been looking through my notesbooks that I kept on the trip though, and I think there are still a few things I would like to flesh out, now that the pressures of deadlines and stylistic rules have passed.

Or at least I think so, because my notebooks are nearly incomprehensible, even to me. When I’m writing on deadline, my I frantically take notes, with little regard to things like “finishing thoughts”. I kind of take the “House” approach, where I frantically throw sentence fragments up on the whiteboard, bounce them around people around me, and see what sticks. Sometimes this works out pretty well…other times, like when I’m covering sports stories, I sit down at the computer, frantically turn through 11 pages of notes, and go “What the hell does G 42—+8 3-11 HIT mean? Was I taking notes of a Battleship game??”

A few of them still make sense. The words “Just for the feeling of being here” are circled and underlined, which kinda became the thesis of my first piece. Other fragments never really made it into the articles.

One was a circle that said Greyhound: Pass The Baby. I’ve done a fair amount of traveling these past few years, and since I don’t often have the money (or the foresight) to fly, I end up taking a lot of Greyhound buses. I don’t know how many of you have experience on those wonderful buses, but those of you who have know what I mean when I say you always meet characters. I’ve had folks try to sell me drugs in Milwaukee, heard prophesies on the end of the world in Pittsburgh, and sat next to many an Amish guy on the route from Columbus to Cleveland

(funny aside. last time I road with Amish guys, I caught them playing the Deer Hunter video game at the Columbus bus station. They were really getting into it too…high fiving each other and yelling. It was the funniest thing I ever saw, since these same guys had been glaring at me something fierce when I had the audacity to send text messages in front of them on the way back.)

Anyways, this trip to DC was no different. We had a woman sitting in front of us who had the most adorable little baby boy. He was quite the ham, and was entertaining everybody sitting around him (I tried to teach him how to drum on the seat). Sometime after we passed Pittsburgh, the woman fell asleep, and passed her baby around to other passengers on the bus to hold. Total strangers! Random Greyhound people were bouncing him around, trying to feed him cheezy poofs, etc, while I just sat there, horrified.

The other note that I didn’t really get a chance to write more about just said “Homecoming?” Washington DC will always be a special place to me. Its where I first became independent, first became intellectually aware, and on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, last March, where I wrote my first facebook note, and had the audacity to think that *maybe* I could be a writer.

The first time I was in DC, I joked that I thought the Potomac was full of Root Beer. Now, sitting on those steps, I could see it was filled with ice. My transfer from American to OSU was ugly and hard, and I used to tell everybody that I still considered myself a DC guy. But every time I go back, despite always loving it, my over-romanticism becomes more apparent. Its taken me a few years, but now I finally feel that Columbus is my home. DC is a place that I visit (with a grin plastered to my face the whole time), and I’m okay with that. The homecoming wasn’t so much when I stepped out at Union Station…it was when I went back to High St.

So, another 1,000 words later, I think I’m ready to finally put this story too bed. There will be new adventures, new political beats to break, and its time for me to move on to them. My only regret is that I still can’t spell inauguration right on the first try.

Post Election Hangovers December 8, 2008

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If you enjoyed the last few entries, you’ll prob like this article I wrote for The Lantern. Check it out today
http://tinyurl.com/6ntdtj

Starting in Jan, I should be running a weekly feature there.

Traveshammockeries in Nashville October 8, 2008

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I wasn’t going to let myself watch the second Presidential debate alone. Oh no, leaving the politics junkie alone might prove dangerous to our personal property (our new plasma TV might find a few pens stuck in it). I sat down with my roommate Tony, and my buddy Blake, to break down this latest “Must See Political TV” event.

First, this whole debate format is completely crazy. Nobody is allowed to directly question each other, follow up questions are going to be discouraged, and everything is pre-screened and sanitized. Thank heavens we at least have Tom Brokaw in charge here, to keep this from getting too stupid.

I’m surprised to see Charlie Gibson watching everything at Bowling Green University. Is he running a focus group up there with a bunch of students? I’m pretty sure having 75% of your sample infected with syphilis might mess up your data.

Okay, enough jibber jabber. Notes from the actual “debate”…

…First, I notice that both Obama and McCain have little yellow notepads next to their chairs. What are they for? What are they writing? Wouldn’t it be great to get a camera down there, to show the public what they’re doing? Is Obama doodling? Is McCain channeling his inner John Madden? Maybe their notes look like my debate notes, littered with non sequiturs and various profanities. The public needs to know! Or at least I do.

Who is that dude asking the first question? He looks like Paul Shaffer’s demonic brother. Letting Paul Shaffer ask some questions might spice this up a bit…

…right off the bat, we’re seeing both canidates have absoluetly no regard for the actual question. Whats that? did you ask me about the economic bailout? Thanks for your question, but my notecard says I’m supposed to talk about energy policy! Also, I’ve noticed that nobody seems to give a crap about the time constraints. I bet Tom is thrilled.

…Question: Who would you pick to be treasury secretary? McCain “Not you Tom”. Ha! Funny…then everybody runs right back into jibber jabber mode. Warren Buffet, you might want to get your resume ready, you seem to be in high demand. I’d like to point out that I also plan on applying for the job, and like all good hispanic immigrants, I’ll do whatever Buffet will do, but for half the cost.

..Tom Brokaw just laid the hammer down on everybody.  I wonder if I can vote for him…

…I am totally loving this side camera action, where we get to see what one guy is doing while the other is talking. Obama is strolling around the stage, talking to the crowd about taxes or economic policy…and McCain is making this very strange face. Is he trying to fart? Does he need Oops I Crapped My Pants Adult Diapers? I can just picture him talking in a few seconds….My Friends…I have just taken the Browns to the Super Bowl, and would like to request a brief recess.

…I love it when John McCain starts getting all indignant about earmarks. My Friends, we have too much pork barrel spending in this country. Obama just asked for 3 million dollars for a projector in Chicago. We need to take that money, and use it for useful projects to help America get back on track…like bridges in Alaska.

And Tom Brokaw strikes again! John McCain tries to punt on a question, saying that he will fix social security, our energy crisis, and medicare all at the same time. Brokaw says he’s full of crap. I like this guy. Now, if he would only get all indignant every time either of these guys tried to dodge a question, we’d have a real debate on our hands.

McCain: We’re not rifleshots. We’re Americans. Thanks. I get that confused all the time.

Talking about health care, McCain announces “That he knows Obama’s Secret”. Obama’s face bugs out on the other side of the screen. Whats the secret? Is he gay? Is he a Muslim? Is he a Weatherman? How did McCain know? I bet its on that notepad.

Obama just took a potshot at Deleware’s banking rules. Dude, did you forget where your running mate is from? Maaaaaybe leave them out of this.

…Tricky foriegn policy question here…do you respect the soverignty of Pakistan, or do you go in there and take care of the terrorists? Tony makes a brilliant suggestion here…why not do both? How, you might ask?

Snake? SNAKE?!? SNAAAAAAAAAAKE!!!!!!!

Debates ends with a pretty good question…”What don’t you know, and how will you learn it?” Judging from both candidate’s non-answer, I think its safe to assume that they clearly know everything. Good thing we got that cleared up…I was worried.

Well, who won? Did Obama, who looked youthful and strong compared to McCain, “win”? Did John McCain get enough mojo to right his sinking campaign ship?

Who knows? I think the clear winner here was Tom Brokaw…the only guy to play by the rules. I wonder if he’s busy for the next four years? At the very least, the Treasury might be hiring….

Born to Run October 7, 2008

Posted by Matt Brown in Uncategorized.
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Living in one of the nation’s premier “swing states” certainly has some drawbacks.  Our airwaves are so saturated with campaign ads that you can’t watch a baseball game for three seconds without being reminded that Barack Osama plays poker with pedophile terrorists and John McCain feasts on the flesh of the living. I can’t take more than a few steps outside of my apartment without being mobbed by a group of well meaning volunteers reminding me to vote (and could you maybe stop by the field office and do some data entry for a few hours?).  I can’t even read a national newspaper without seeing every tiny corner of my state overanalyzed into oblivion (Hank Smith, 51, of Van Wert, Ohio is hinting that he might vote for Obama. McCain camp in tailspin. Film at 11).

But it’s not all bad. Sometimes important people come to your town! Last cycle, I couldn’t drive to my neighborhood IGA without running over John Kerry (George Bush hung out here a lot too, but you couldn’t get in to see him without signing a loyalty oath to the GOP….so I didn’t go). This year, I’ve already been able to hear Obama, Biden, and every significant Democratic politician from Ohio (including my idol, John Glenn). But Monday, somebody came rolling into town far bigger than any of those names.

Yes. I’m talking about Bruce Springsteen. The Boss himself (sadly, sans his E St Band) was coming to the Oval at THE Ohio State University (a mere few blocks from my apartment) to give a free concert. Take THAT New York. Important people only show up there when they want money!

Me and my buddy Blake hurried to the concert spot early, as to avoid the throng that would surely come later. I had enough time to pick up a T-Shirt that had Obama and Springsteen on it…thus validating my brilliant idea a few posts ago (that Obama and Springsteen ought to run together). You think this is a blowout now, but with The Boss instead of Biden, we’re winning everything except Utah County.

But before Bruce could step out in front of the adoring masses and play Thunder Road, we had to listen to the lukewarm opening act of all celebrity-driven political rallies…the democratic under card. While I understand the political necessity of having various house and local candidates speak (No offense to David Robinson and Mary Jo Kilroy, who I’m sure are fine candidates…but they aren’t drawing 5,000+ on a Sunday), its still somewhat of an emotional buzzkill….watching obviously uncomfortable professionals stumble through jokes, talking points, and Springsteen related puns. I’d like to put out a standing offer to all my friends running for office…I will be happy to write jokes for you, free of charge. Don’t use your own material.

Personally, if I was running the whole show, I think I would have tried to grab an all-star OSU band or something, to warm up the crowd. Something with a name like John McCain and the Keating Five or maybe Charles Barkley and the Real Mavericks. Don’t even tell me that isn’t an awesome name for a band.

Finally, after introductions from everybody from the mayor of Columbus to candidates for Ohio State University Undergraduate Senate, the man, the myth, the legend, Bruce Springsteen, took the stage. And to think, not 24 hours ago, I was aimlessly tossing around a football at the very spot. If presidential elections inspire my musical idols to swing by my hometown, I wish we had presidential elections every year. It’s a risk I’m willing to take.

Bruce didn’t play a very long set…maybe just 6 songs, along with some talking after every number. I didn’t care, because I would have happily stood outside all day just to hear The Rising live (which he played) and Thunder Road (aka the finest song ever written). I was more than happy to listen to the Boss politely exhort us all to do a little more to help Obama get elected.

And then I felt a twinge of guilt. Outside of voting, and perhaps writing a pro-Obama facebook note every now and again, I really haven’t done a whole lot. I could certainly credibly claim a lack of time. I’m working two jobs, taking a full course load, and balancing a church calling, work with my fraternity, and basic hygienic functions. Obama campaign workers seem to want you to devote more than just a little bit of time, and I’m not sure I can give it, no matter how much I support the cause.

I also admit, I hate canvassing and cold callings. I did it once for a school levy, and I did it again as an LDS Missionary. I think only God could get me to knock doors again, and he would have to ask really nicely.

But there’s really another, bigger reason that I’ve somewhat kept my distance. Perhaps the biggest draw to Obama for anybody is his appeal to our sense of hope…he represents the idea of turning away from the negative attitudes we might have picked up over the last 8 years, or from politics as usual, and that craven cynicism that clouds over everybody who has ever watched more than 15 min of CSPAN.

I worry that if I got myself too deep into the nitty gritty of this race, I might lose some of that. I don’t want to say I’d lose my objectivity, because I never claimed to really be objective in the first place. I don’t write for the AP wire, or the BBC. I’ve picked a side, and I’ve been honest and upfront about that. Perhaps I’m worried about losing my independence. I guess if I get too deep into the logistics of the campaign, I’d lose my ability to criticize something I didn’t like. Not working for anybody gives me a lot more freedom. heck, if I wanted to, I could go off the reservation and endorse Chuck Baldwin, even though I’m pretty sure he’s issued a Fatwa against both Mormons and Latinos. Besides, if I started getting training for things like message control, I’m sure I’d lose my grip on this whole hope and change business.

But it’s difficult to explain any of that to the woman who’s working the Obama booth on 15th and High, or at least not without getting a terrible case of Liberal Guilt (how can you make snarky comments when kids can’t read in Chicago???? You’re so selfish…you might as well be a…a….Republican!!!).

Oh well, I bet Bruce would understand. The Boss wouldn’t be the Boss if he was say, the Communications Director in the Obama White House. I know how it is…you can’t fence people like us in. Tramps like us….we’re born to run (sorry).