Michael Calderone catches some choice excerpts from the NYT's interview with Caroline Kennedy ("NC" is Times reporter Nicolas Confessore, "DH" is Times reporter David Halbfinger, and "CK" is Caroline Kennedy):
NC: Could you, for the sake of storytelling, could you tell us a little bit about that moment, like, where you were, what you said to him about your decision, how that played out?
CK: Have you guys ever thought about writing for, like, a woman's magazine or something? (Laughter)
DH: What do you have against women's magazines?
CK: Nothing at all, but I thought you were the crack political team here. As I said, it was kind of over a period of time, you know, obviously we talked about politics, we talked about what's going on, we've been watching the team that the president-elect is putting together - Hillary Clinton is going to be a spectacular part of that team, you know, then there was a vacancy here, you know, just like everybody else, you know: who's going to fill it, isn't that interesting, there's a lot of great candidates, you know, obviously I have become much more politically involved than I have in the past, so you know, I figure, why not try, I really think I have something to offer.
NC: I guess another way of thinking about it is that Jennifer Aniston movie, where she tells her boyfriend, 'I want you to want to do the dishes,' you know? And I wonder if Senator Kennedy wanted you to want to do it.
DH: "The Break-Up."
CK: (Laughter) I hope you're going to put this in the article, not just the answer. OK?
That's what it's come to for our media: political campaigns are regularly compared to Jennifer Aniston movies that no one has ever seen. And maybe I'm wrong, but it seems to me that a male candidate would not be subjected to this type of People magazine silliness.
Perhaps a celebrity candidate invites celebrity journalism, but I don't think that's a valid excuse here. |