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The Snowman more fun than the Scotsman [Archive] - FreeConservatives

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DesertFox
09-15-2006, 08:22 AM
Covering the White House is not an easy beat. The hours are late, the travel can be brutal and the tug-of-war between the White House spin machine and journalists can wear down even the toughest reporter.

But White House spokesman Tony Snow, who has been on the job four months, might very well be out to change all of that and to put the “fun” back in “fundamentally, a frustrating job.”

Yeas & Nays reviewed the press briefing and press gaggle transcripts from Snow’s first four months on the job and compared them to those of Snow’s predecessor, Scott McClellan, during his first four months.

Under Snow, there were more than 330 percent more instances of laughter — as defined by the transcriber’s insertion of “(Laughter)” in the transcript — than under McClellan.

Have reporters fallen for the former Fox News commentator’s woo and charm? And — gasp! — could Snow actually be making the notoriously curmudgeonly task of covering the White House fun?

“It’s not that Tony’s necessarily a laugh riot,” says Ron Hutcheson, who covers the White House for McClatchy newspapers. “But he engages, and it’s a lot more fun to be in the room with somebody who’s engaging reporters.” Hutcheson says that McClellan, on the other hand, “was just cautious, cautious to a fault. He would retreat to the talking points and it was almost as if he didn’t listen to the question.”

Snow says that his humor is not intentional. “It’s just doing what I do, the way I do it,” he says. “For me, the job is a blast. I love the job and I think that’s part of it. And I enjoy the people out there. It’s not like I feel as if I’m among strangers. You’ve just got to be yourself when you’re doing a briefing.”

But is there any danger in being a bit too humorous?

“Well, I do like to have fun, but at the same time you don’t want to be doing stand-up as the spokesperson of the president and the leader of the free world,” he says.

Source (http://www.examiner.com/a-287267~Yeas_and_Nays__Friday__Sept__15.html)

Lazarus
09-15-2006, 09:21 AM
Not to cast dispersions on McClellan - Im sure he's a bright, dedicated professional - But Tony Snow has that combination of charm, ability to communicate, and superior intelligence that Ronald Reagan had... I am not suprised that Snow has done well in the job... I expected nothing less when I heard he was being considered...

Snow is precisely the right person for that job... Which means he has the tenacity and intelligence to take control and direct the course of the Briefing Room...

Tony Snow is a remarkable conservative and Im glad Bush brought him on board...

DesertFox
09-15-2006, 11:33 AM
Snow feels at ease in those surroundings. McClellan never did.

Patriot Heart
09-15-2006, 11:34 AM
I agree. I always thought McClellan had the "deer in the head lights" look on his face. He was never a proper choice for the endless hazing and stupid questions presented at the briefings. I would have to duct tape my head just to be in the same room as those jackasses.

Lubbock
09-15-2006, 12:22 PM
What Laz said, word for word.

DoctorDoom
09-15-2006, 12:32 PM
It must be challenging for any press secretary to have to deal with that gaggle of hostile hyperliberal assmites. God bless him!

Lubbock
09-15-2006, 12:38 PM
Did anyone happen to watch the President go toe-to-toe with David Asswipe Gregory today?

The Prez did a pretty darned good job himself.

His remark to the NYT Twit was priceless.

DesertFox
09-15-2006, 12:59 PM
So what was the remark?

Lubbock
09-15-2006, 02:10 PM
Paraphrase: The Twit told the President the NYT was a fair/balanced newspaper. The President questioned the validity of the statement in a way that caused the crowd to fall down laughing.

In other words: the President let the Twit know what he thought about the NYT.

The Twit even had to laugh.