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Gore Wins New Hampshire Beauty Contest
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Harry,
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I did catch the debate last night, as well as a fair amount of post-game
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analysis. First, if you didn't know who the two were and you were told that one
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of them was, as a youth, one of the great basketball players in the country,
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you wouldn't have picked Bill Bradley. Puffy, jowly, and tired, he looked
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pretty awful--is this heart thing worse than they're letting on?--while Gore
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had the full (pre-accident) Christopher Reeves look about him. The navy suit
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worked, I thought. [For Jacob Weisberg's instant analysis of the debate, click
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here.]
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I hate the pre-packaged zinger lines more than anything. Bradley:
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"Al, if you'd spent time in the private sector ..." Gore: "Bill, when you talk
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about weighted averages, it reminds me of the man with his head in the oven and
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his feet on a block of ice. His average temperature was fine but he wasn't too
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comfortable." Yuck. Bradley's "Washington bunker" line seemed particularly
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annoying from someone who spent 18 years in the Senate and now wants to live in
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... Washington. Gore's trifecta of supporting the Gulf War, opposing the Reagan
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'81 budget cuts, and supporting welfare reform seemed pretty effective to me.
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Bradley, though, was far more charming in the post-game show, where he told Tim
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Russert that he was going to get a beer. When Gore was asked if he, too, was
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going to get a beer, he paused and seemed to search for the best focus-group
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tested answer. "I might," he said. "Or a decaf coffee." Double yuck.
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Will Syria and Israel find peace in the land of the Hatfields and the
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McCoys? It must be weird when they hold top-level summit meetings in these
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small towns. I went through Glassboro, N.J. last year--home of the
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LBJ-Khrushchev summit in '64. I can only imagine what the Soviet premier made
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of his first cheesesteak.
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USA Today had a thing yesterday I thought was pretty interesting: How
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the glut of Oscar-worthy movies at the end of the year is turning off
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moviegoers. You know the drill: The studios release their Oscar-contending
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dramatic efforts at the end of the year because films from the end of the year
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tend to do better come Oscar Night in March. (This must have something to do
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with the fact that most academy members are septuagenarians.) Thus, we have
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Snow Falling on Cedars , Anna and the King , Magnolia ,
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The End of the Affair , and a bunch of other heavies inundating the
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screen. Have you seen Man on the Moon yet? I haven't but loved Larry
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Flynt and many of Forman's other flix. Did you know the late Andy Kaufman
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and do you have a take on this cult of personality that's grown up around him?
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And yet they continue to ignore the important work of Foster Brooks?!
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Later.
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--Matt
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