From First Read:
I gotta say I think this is intentional and brilliant. Barack Obama doesn't need attention from the national media. The last big media image emblazoned in people's minds was his big speech. Meanwhile, McCain's choice is getting scrutinized and picked apart. The CW among Republicans has always been that if the election is about Obama, then Obama loses. Chuck Todd has outlined that the Obama campaign's is best at controlling the image. It's almost a perfect situation. Meanwhile, Obama has a great image on the national stage and continues to run his targeted local negative ads on McCain and depends on his on-the-ground people to push the message when he's not campaigning there.
The media still hasn't figured out that the Obama campaign doesn't need to depend on them to get their message out. McCain's, on the other hand, is desperate for media attention.
*** Off the radar: While many folks are wondering how the GOP ticket is going to break through Gustav, it appears they'll get more attention than Obama-Biden right now. Attention to the Dem ticket is nearly nil. They are getting plenty of local coverage during their initial tour and will get some major play on "60 Minutes" tonight. But since the announcement of Palin and the strengthening of Gustav, coverage of Obama-Biden has slowed to a trickle. What this means for any convention bounce is unclear. There was always going to be a weird vibe to the post-convention trip for Obama-Biden simply because attention was going to go to McCain so quickly. With the naming of Palin, it accelerated the drying up of Obama-Biden national coverage.
I gotta say I think this is intentional and brilliant. Barack Obama doesn't need attention from the national media. The last big media image emblazoned in people's minds was his big speech. Meanwhile, McCain's choice is getting scrutinized and picked apart. The CW among Republicans has always been that if the election is about Obama, then Obama loses. Chuck Todd has outlined that the Obama campaign's is best at controlling the image. It's almost a perfect situation. Meanwhile, Obama has a great image on the national stage and continues to run his targeted local negative ads on McCain and depends on his on-the-ground people to push the message when he's not campaigning there.
The media still hasn't figured out that the Obama campaign doesn't need to depend on them to get their message out. McCain's, on the other hand, is desperate for media attention.