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Category: Conway Daily Sun
In the Middle
Well, I was right, Herman Cain moved to the middle seat next to Mitt Romney in the G.O.P. debate at Dartmouth last night. This morning among the slew of candidate emails I got (They must have thought I was watching. I wasn’t. I had to do laundry…) were attacks on Cain’s 9-9-9 economic plan from both Bachmann and Huntsman.
The panic to clamber on top of rivals is interesting, but it misses the more important point — who would make a good president. We’ve met several of the candidates at the Sun, and neither of the two we were most impressed by were even allowed on stage last night. It’s a shame. But at least we know who many in the media consider the fringe and who they consider a serious candidate — all you had to do was look at who sat where at the table.
Michele
So I found out today I had been spelling Michele Bachmann wrong. I had Bachmann right, but there is one L in Michele. I’d been using two.
I also found out some New Hampshire voters are not pleased she waited so long before visiting.
Bachmann is now a margin-of-error candidate in the Granite State. In June and July she was polling as high as 18 percent, second only to Mitt Romney. Now she’s hovering around 2 percent. Not a good sign, but in some ways it’s still early.
Not that she should be concentrating on New Hampshire anyway. She’s a strong candidate in Iowa and South Carolina, where social conservatives have a louder voice. Up here Independent voters and even Democrats can opt into the primary, making it tough for a candidate with her views to win. Plus the frontrunner owns a house here and governed one state a way. And libertarian Ron Paul has a strong network here. To expect Bachmann to make serious inroads is too much.
Still, not visiting for four months might be too long for someone serious about a White House bid. I met fans of her’s today who were cautious about her for exactly that reason.
If she pulls off another strong debate performance, however, she could easily shoot upwards. Still three months to go. Can’t wait to find out where things land.
Hopefully you caught my NHPR piece this morning. If you didn’t, I’ll post a link soon. I’ll have coverage in the Conway Daily Sun too, so don’t miss it.
Holiday Weekend
The weekend is here, which means what? More candidates!
Michelle Bachmann is in North Conway on Sunday, and I should have an NHPR story for it by Monday. Try to tune in.
Vacation, Candidates, and a lot more Radio
So I was gone last week out to Colorado for a family visit and some mountain fun. Now I’m back and things are no slower than when I left. Michelle Bachmann is going to be here this weekend, and I’m covering her visit for both the Sun and for NHPR. The day I got back a man’s body was pulled from the Swift River (always a depressing story), and the municipal budget cycle is starting to heat up.
I left for my week off amid another flurry of stories — Hurricane Irene, an NPR tape sync, coverage of an emergency town meeting — not really needing a vacation. The variety and the pace of coverage lately, from presidential candidates to a natural disaster to what at times appears to be impending economic doom, has kept me entertained. I go to work every day looking forward to what story I’m about to find. Sure, it was great to get away with my wife and visit my brother and his fiance, but it was a nice break, not a needed one.
I did, however, pack an extra radio story and some NPR work into that last week. Now I’m doing the same. I can’t help it though, when there is a chance to cover a cool story, I’m going. Now it’s just time to see what’s next.
More Radio
It’s my last few days before I leave for a week of vacation in Colorado, and I’ve been cramming in as much work as possible. Today I pulled together three Conway Daily Sun stories (all bypass related, which is always interesting), finished an NHPR Hurricane Irene update and pulled my first gig for NPR. Not a story, but a technological trick called a tape sync. NPR reporter Howard Berkes interviewed a guy in Madison by phone while I sat there with my microphone in his face. Then I shipped the quality audio recording to Berkes, who can pull sound from it that won’t sound like a telephone call.
And on Tuesday I got to chat with a reporter at NHPR about a story idea about I-93 that I’m in no position to do. I can’t complain when I’m having so many ideas that I can’t even get to all of them. That’s a bit how it feels at work know, which I love. Every day is guaranteed to be fast-paced.
Throw in a little radio and I’m in heaven. Now I have to get to sleep so I can do it again tomorrow.
More to do…
Things just don’t seem to get any less busy.
F.E.M.A. is in town to help clean up after Irene, and the police department has a crisis on its hands that requires a special town meeting. Today I tried to write complex stories that just didn’t seem to be able to find a way out of me. If I were to sit down and explain it to readers one-on-one it would work, but with all the twists and turns it felt like I kept running into dead-ends. Luckily toward the end of the day it all started coming together.
These have been crazy weeks lately. I’ve got piles of stories I’m sitting on because they aren’t time sensitive and I don’t have the time. A month ago I had the opposite problem. I guess too much to write about is better than too little, but I’m looking forward to the weekend!
Lost in Movies
I went on the local public access television station several times recently with my friend Alec, who is the movie critic for the Sun, to critique movies. He put the first show up on YouTube the other day, which was on journalism movies. Check it out.
Part One:
You can see part two here.
Audio Irene
I spent the long weekend not relaxing so much as chasing down one more chance to tell the story of Irene. Much of it was from the same neighborhood I’d visited during the week: Transvale Acres in Conway. But this time, instead of a pen and notebook I took a microphone. Here’s what came out of it:
The full link to the NHPR’s page for the story is here.
One Lane
This is the bridge D.O.T. has installed over the Sawyer River on Route 302. It went in yesterday. Before that, people had to climb down into the debris and then out.
I saw a guy walk his bike over it and then continue on, so obviously it’s working. Not as well as some people would like, however. The guys working there said they expected to get the temporary bridge in and operational in three weeks. It will go on the foundation of the old bridge, which I was told got taken down 40 years ago.
So people are making do. It isn’t ideal, and a number of people have told me they can’t go to work because of the damage, but the darkest days are likely past.
Check out my Conway Daily Sun coverage so far:
And surely more to come.