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The smooze radio
The smooze radio















Sure, a lot of this relates to his position on the issues and his experience as a governor. To be perceived as a fellow with such social skills does help a candidate become president. Gore is not? Is a good mixer going to make a better president? No - to me - this is a quality that has little relevance to the presidency. Now should it make any difference whether George W. But press people will tell you that he's certainly not one of the guys.

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Clinton twice and kept him afloat in the face of scandals that would have wrecked a silent and very remote Cal Coolidge.īut I've also been watching Al Gore on TV as he works a room and chats, and it's very clear to me that mixing with people isn't his game. And this quality, more than any other, has elected Mr. He's able to make press and public alike feel he's one of us. What's his special quality? "He's one of the guys," is the way one of my colleagues explained it the other day. The problem has been growing with the years.īut Bill Clinton perfected the art: He is the quintessential schmoozer. I don't know when schmoozing became such an essential requirement.

the smooze radio

I should know: I had a half-dozen interviews with the former president, three at his office in Kansas City, Mo., and three at his library in Independence, Mo. And while Harry Truman related so very well to the common man and to many members of the press, he always kept people (except his cronies in Congress) at arms length. I don't know when schmoozing became the fashion for those seeking the presidency. Yet he kept winning, again and again - a dignified father figure who, although remote, had soon become a presence for all Americans. And there was no television to make us at least think we are getting close to our candidates. He certainly was physically detached from the voters. Always, it seemed, he was having a warm, often joshing, exchange with someone in the audience.īoy, was he good at this. A pat on the shoulder here, an embrace there. Bush move through a crowd, smiling and shaking hands. I had been watching on C-Span a personable George W. Or, at least, this would be a decided political disadvantage. I was thinking about how today's presidential candidates needed to schmooze with the voters and members of the media and, if they weren't good at this, they probably wouldn't go too far. I hadn't started out this column by intending to write this much about FDR.

the smooze radio

So then we praised him for being so valiant. So only late in FDR's terms in office did it sink in that here was a paralyzed man who simply had resolved never to let his disability show. But his cheery voice would convince us that these must be stories planted by adversaries. And it had never been mentioned in the papers. In my world back in the Midwest, we hadn't even heard he was an invalid - or that he had to be held or braced up when we saw him standing. In those pictures he was always looking so vital. He was so very remote my only glimpses of him would be in still photos or on the Pathe News silent shorts when I went to the movies. Had he lived, would there have been a fifth term or even a sixth?Ī mystique - a kind of mystery and reverence - had built up around Roosevelt over the years he occupied the White House. Our main tie with FDR was the radio, and, through his talks with us, we got to know him and trust him and keep reelecting him. Historians now are rating him among our greatest presidents.

the smooze radio

Roosevelt, the president who brought us through the Great Depression and World War II. Just with his voice and words he quieted our fears and renewed our hopes.















The smooze radio