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Over the Oval Office door ...

Here's a few of the many McClatchy cartoons from the week. If you want to see more, check out the roundup at www.mcclatchydc.com.

 

Post-presidential election healing II

The race for president has been heated and emotional, to say the least.
How can President-elect Barack Obama help the country heal and move forward? How do you feel about the future? What did you think of John McCain's gracious concession speech?

Palin's exceptional femininity, etc.

What's on the minds of 30 N&O readers as the election season winds down.

"The Choice Is Yours"

Wow, the 1991 hit by old-school North Carolina hip-hop duo Black Sheep makes an absolutely perfect campaign ad.

Meanwhile, just to keep this balanced and non-partisan, I'll also pass along the tidbit that Aerosmith's Joe Perry has unexpectedly endorsed the other candidate.

(Thanks, Leigh.)

Danger, fright and sin

Nearly 20 readers have their say on more election issues.

Health care and crap-shooters

Find 25 more letters about the election issues that are reverberating this week (other than Sarah Palin's wardrobe, we mean). These letters appear online only.

Campaign photos

 

We have been getting some criticism from readers about our selection and presentation of photos of Barack Obama and John McCain. 

Some of this reminds me of when I was covering one of my first campaigns more than 30 years ago.  I started getting calls from readers who were measuring each story about a State Senate race in Southwest Virginia. If one of the candidates was getting an inch more of type, I heard about it. The most partisan supporters on each side assumed I was in the tank for the other guy, and that explained any discrepancies in the amount of coverage.  

Sometimes, it just worked out that way because the other guy had more to say that day. 

Anyway, we got a complaint from some readers because we ran a photo of Senator Obama kissing a woman at a campaign stop in Ohio on Oct. 12. The photo ran on Page 3a. The woman was white. One reader emailed us: 

"Who was the person responsible for putting a photo of Obama kissing a blond, white woman on the cheek? Whoever did is either ignorant of the southern racist undertones that still exist today in NC, or wanted to enflame those same racist feelings purposefully."  

This reader said "you better watch out, your Republican bias is showing."

It is not often we are accused of harboring Republican bias. That notwithstanding, I think this reader is selling North Carolinians short.

I also thought it was an interesting photo that showed the candidate interacting with voters, which is what happens on the trail. If we decide that we can't show Senator Obama doing the same things that any presidential candidate would do on the stump because we are afraid it might provoke bigots, then we are giving him special treatment. 

Let's deal with him journalistically for what he is, a politician running for office. Not an African-American politician; just a politician. 

We also caught heat from a reader about the selection of photos that ran on Page 3a on Saturday, Oct. 18.  The photo of Senator Obama, at the top of the page, showed him at the podium with arms outstretched.  The photo of Senator McCain was downpage on the right hand side of the page. The photo of Senator Obama was a fairly conventional one, with a straight-on perspective. The photo of Senator McCain was shot in a more dramatic fashion, from below. 

Here's what the reader said:  "The cropping of the second photo, below the fold, of Senator McCain with his head at the bottom of the photo and a large blank area above was appalling. It showed a total lack of respect for the Presidential candidate." The reader cancelled her subscription as a result. 

 

Steve Merelman, the editor in charge of our copy desk, emailed the reader back.  Here is some of what he said: 

"....I am looking at the very page and I cannot say I agree with your analysis of the pictures. It is true that the picture of Sen. Obama is higher and the picture includes his slogan, though I doubt at this date that its inclusion will sway any votes. I think the picture of Sen. McCain is actually rather flattering. Photos taken from below, as this one is, emphasize the stature of their subjects. And that's not blank space: It's the American flag."

I think the best way to approach this is the way that our folks approach it.  The photo editors and page designers have conversations about campaign images - those taken by wire services like AP and those taken by our own photographers. They're paying attention to positioning on the pages, to the way the photos are cropped, and to a balanced presentation. 

I don't pretend that everything comes out perfect every day, but things should even out over time.  

 

 

 

 

 

Disappearing signs

Last week, OrangeChat reported an Obama campaign sign stolen from a front yard in Carrboro. Political campaign signs are going missing all over the Triangle, the state and, indeed, all over the country. And it's not limited to signs promoting presidential candidates Obama and McCain. On Tuesday Kevin Wolff, who has twice run for mayor of Chapel Hill and is now running for a seat on the Orange County Board of Commissioners, reported some of his signs stolen from the corner of Highway 54 and Barbee Chapel Road near Meadowmont.

GASP ... choke ... what?

Help me understand "Girlfriends Appalled about Sarah Palin." "It felt a bit like any old woman will do," says one of the Raleigh women insulted by John McCain's choice of a running mate. Gender was not the main attraction.

Joe Six Pack and stem cells

Find out what readers find appalling and despicable about the latest election shenanigans. These letters appear online only.

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