Archive for the ‘campaign’ Category

Influential Under 40

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Let’s hear it for post-1970 babies!

Most don’t expect too much from the “youngsters”, and I use that term lightly, so when Bob Schieffer’s web-only show, Washington Unplugged, did a show on a 30-year-old who’s shaking things up in the non-profit world I had to take a look.

Justin Fishkin gave up his stockbroker life here in NYC, headed back home to Washington D.C. and started The Holster Project.

His goal is to bring art and power to boost charitable giving.

Watch the video below:

Watch CBS News Videos Online

Essay: What a Country

Thursday, October 1st, 2009
Today we step away from “Blogitics” and remember why we should care so much about the fate of our country.
Our afternoon producer, Martin Untrojb, has officially become my countryman and I am so happy to call him one. The essay below is from him:
The father of the late Tim Russert used that phrase a lot to describe this nation of immigrants, where anyone can be anything he or she wants to be.
The recipe is simple: hard work, dedication, and your dream is within reach. What a country indeed.

It may not seem like much if you were born here, unaware of what goes on in other parts of the world. But for the countless number of people who left behind family, friends and possessions behind in search of a dream, this country is like no other.

Where else can a man born in Germany escape restrictive schools and Nazism to become the greatest science mind of the 20th century?

Where else can a woman born in Czechoslovakia grow up to become our first female Secretary of State?

Where else can a music composer Born in Russia create classics like “God Bless America” and “White Christmas”?

Where else can an Austrian bodybuilder with the thickest imaginable accent become not only a movie star, but the Governor of the most populous state in the U.S.A.

Where else can a woman refuse to give up her seat on a bus, and become a symbol for a civil rights movement that eventually led to the first African-American to be sworn in as President earlier this year.

The stories are countless, the limits non existent, in a nation where the promise of a future is always there. All it asks in exchange is for each one of their citizens to do their best.

My story in the U.S. dates back to the final days of 1986. I came in to the United States as a teenager with my immediate family, having lost all our possessions in the collapse of the Argentinian economy.

For years, I felt like an uninvited guest. I guess that’s the way many immigrants feel when they come here seeking a better life. You fear you will get deported. You fear you will not make it. You fear going back to a place you left knowing this was better.

There are numerous barriers along the way. Language and culture are just two of them. But the carrot that keeps you going is the same one that has been bringing immigrants to this nation for centuries now. Do your best and you will succeed.

Today I sat in a room with 256 other people from all corners of the world. Our stories couldn’t be more different, and yet we all had the same goal, the same dream. It’s amazing how people so different can have so much in common. That room represented this nation. Men, women and children, all religions, languages and races imaginable. So different, and yet so much alike.

What other nation has the power to do that? To bring so many together, while offering each one the freedom to be an individual. The freedom to politically agree or disagree.  The freedom to believe in a god or none at all. A nation of laws with no one above the law.

The judge who administered the oath said it best. It all sounds good on paper. But along with the rights of citizenship comes the responsibility to make the promise of this nation become a reality. It is our responsibility to participate in the political system. To defend the rights of all, regardless of race, religion or gender.

As politicians fight over health care, wars, and petty party differences in Washington, I wonder if they ever stopped to see this country the way so many immigrants see it.
As a place like no other in the world, where the real American dream is not to own a home, but to be free to choose your path. The freedom to succeed. The freedom to be who you are.

It’s what our forefathers came looking for more than two centuries ago. It’s the dream that became reality for me and 256 other people in a Brooklyn courtroom this morning.

What a Country….
- Martin Untrojb

Rahm Emanuel on CBS’ Face the Nation

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

President Obama’s Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel talks with CBS’ Bob Schieffer about the week’s events and who Emanuel thinks the leader of the GOP is.

Covering the Plane Crash

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

This post is from our Afternoon Drive Anchor Wayne Cabot.

The now-familiar “Miracle on the Hudson” was a perfect story from beginning to end. Drama, suspense, exhileration, heroics, luck, skill — all in the middle of my airshift! 
 
To go without a net (no commercials, features, etc) and run with a compelling story is a thrill, even after 22 years of doing all-news.
 
Getting e-mails from listeners as the story unfolded inspired us to bring on our producer at 6:50 for a behind the scenes rundown of how the news broke.

We in the newsroom all agree — the story was a gift from the news gods.

And we are all thrilled to get such positive reviews:

“Your coverage was much stronger than the nationals, especially early on because you had people all over. Whoever is in charge of putting reporters at the scene did a great job. And actually I was pretty amazed how important traffic and weather reporting became during the story. Great coverage all around.”
- Janet Green, Oldwick NJ
 
“You guys sounded like you’d really nailed it.”
- Adrienne Mitchell, Washington DC

“Yet again you and the rest of the staff at WCBS-AM kicked the bejeezus out of everyone. Thank you. I had the sound off on the TV and listened to your coverage…which I always do when something happens at home. Thanks again to everyone at WCBS-AM for their unmatched excellence.”
- Richard Flaker, Texas
 
“Good…..both individually, but also as a team…….you complimented each other very well.”
 
“You are all doing a extraordinary job of covering this story.”

Working from Home

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Today is MLK Jr. day, and ideally everyone would be out performing some sort of service to their community…I, however, am not. Honestly, it’s just too cold to be out doing anything except running from subway to home.

What I’m doing instead is working from home…which I am thoroughly enjoying!

It’s 11:20 am, and I’ve already put up a handful of stories while in my pajamas and watching the Martha Stewart show. Yup, I could get used to this.

My main focus today is our Inauguration Page, which I built a while back…but now has top-billing on our homepage. So, I need it to look sharp and up-to-date.

Tomorrow, I’ll be heading over to Columbia University to check out the scene there as well as Times Square and create a little video for you all to get a sense of what the mood is here in the city.

Stay tuned!

Rainbow of Emotions for President Bush

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Yesterday, President Bush delivered what we think may have been his last news conference of his presidency and he took a wide variety of questions and showed lots of different emotions.

I’ve seen many of his news conferences and this one was by far the most interesting.

From his playful “Oh, why me!?!”  comment to his defiance on how Katrina was handled.

Watch the full news conference for yourself!

Watching the Web Roundup - Midday Edition

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Here are some articles and columns from today about New York State and City politics:

 No More Space at City Hall to Watch Inauguration (City Room)

Dud on Arrival: Paterson Speaks Softly and Carries No Stick in State of the State Address (NY Daily News)

The Un-Campaign of Andrew Cuomo (Politicker NY)

Stated Meeting: Council Approves Firearm Reporting (Gotham Gazette)

Hillary’s Path to the Nomination So Clear That She’s Already at Work (NY Magazine)

Watching the Web Roundup - Midday Edition

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

Here are a list of columns and articles from today that concern New York state and city politics.

Sweet on Caroline (New York Times)

Kennedys to Bloomberg: Quiet, Please! (Politicker NY)

Sources Say Video Shows Sen. Hiram Monserrate dragging lover, who looks ’scared out of her mind’ (NY Daily News)

Term Limits Approval from Feds Not Filed For by City (Queens Crap)

Closes Jan. 10: The Art of Politics at the Brooklyne Public Library (Only the Blog Knows)

Obama’s Win

Monday, November 10th, 2008

For the past week, politicians, pundits and voters alike have been talking about the historic win. Historic not just in the sense of our President-elect’s race, but also the landslide with which he won.

President-elect Obama is heading into the White House with the type of mandate that this country hasn’t seen in years.

Let’s look back the last few elections at the numbers:

2008: Obama - 53% (362 Electoral College Votes) 65,175,487
McCain - 46% (162 Electoral College Votes) 57,286,957
(Facts: CBS News)

2004: Bush - 51% (286 Electoral College Votes) 62,040,606
Kerry - 48% (252 Electoral College votes) 59,028,109
(Data from CNN)

2000: Bush - 48% (271 Electoral College Votes) 50,456,169
Gore - 48% (266 Electoral College Votes) 50,996,116
(Data from CNN)

1996: Clinton - 49% (379 Electoral College Votes) 47,402,357
Dole - 40% (159 Electoral College Votes) 39,198,755
(Facts from FEC)

1992: Clinton - 43% (370 Electoral College Votes) 44,909,806
Bush - 37% (168 Electoral College Votes) 39,104,550
(Facts from USAElectionatlas.org)

1988: Bush - 53% (426 Electoral College Votes) 48,886,597
Dukakis - 45% (Electoral College Votes 111) 41,809,476
(Facts from USAElectionatlas.org)

These numbers get forgotten quickly after their election, but I think it’s always good to look back and get a sense of where the country was at  those points in time.

 We can see that President George H. W. Bush never came into office with the type mandate Obama has been voted in with. 2000 was the court-contested election, and the 2004 popular election numbers were only three million votes apart.

 President Clinton never broke the 50% threshold… so it seems like that last time there was a strong mandate was when President Bush Sr. was elected in to office in 1988.

Wow. Twenty years ago.

Sunday Morning Round-Up

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

This morning while drinking my coffee and eating a waffle, I flipped between the stations to watch the Sunday morning news talk shows. Here’s who had who…

ABC: This Week with George Stephanopoulos - Rep. Rahn Emanuel

Fox News Sunday: Chris Wallace - Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA)

NBC: Meet the Press - Valerie Jarret, Sen Mel Martinez (R-FL), Rep. James Clayburn (D-SC)

CBS: Face the Nation - Rep. Rahm Emanuel, Politico’s John Harris, NY Times David Brooks

Themes talked about this morning:

Transition

Rep. Emanuel

Cabinet Appointments

Economy

Future of Republican Party