| Meanwhile, CNN’s insta-polling showed that just 65 percent of viewers had a positive view of the speech. Before you object that 65 percent sounds high to you: It’s the lowest figure CNN has recorded in the past quarter-century, according to The Washington Post.
“The message now is that the public is wrong and must be ignored, for the sake of democracy,” writes Matt Taibbi in Racket News, where he provides a rundown of some of the more “hilariously ostentatious ass-kissing ceremonies” in the wake of Biden’s speech, including from MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell (“just astonishing“) and Mika Brzezinski (“an incredible moment“).
Look, I get it. Biden gave an objectively competent speech and the media love a comeback story. And if you’re someone who believes that Biden’s historically low approval figures have more to do with the “vibes” than with any tangible policy, maybe it’s tempting to go all-in on trying to shift those vibes.
For Times columnist Ross Douthat, the lack of establishment consensus for Biden’s polling struggles explains “why, perhaps, there was a rush to declare his State of the Union address a rip-roaring success, as though all Biden needs to do to right things is to talk loudly through more than an hour of prepared remarks.”
Is it possible that polls in the coming weeks will show a shift in voters’ opinion of Biden’s presidency as a result of the State of the Union address? Sure, but I’m going to be skeptical until I see actual evidence that Biden’s speech mattered to anyone whose job doesn’t require watching it.
Oops! One of the more striking moments during the Republican response to Biden’s speech, delivered by Sen. Katie Britt of Alabama, was a harrowing story about a woman who’d been kidnapped and repeatedly gang-raped by members of a Mexican drug cartel. Britt’s speech attempted to tie the awful incident to the recent chaos along the U.S./Mexico border, but it actually happened nearly 20 years ago—and on the Mexican side of the border.
Confronted with those facts during an appearance on Fox News over the weekend, Britt suggested that the story should be taken seriously, if not literally.
Oscar night. Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer won big Sunday night at the 96th Academy Awards. The biopic about one of the inventors of the atomic bomb claimed seven awards, including best picture, best director, best actor (Cillian Murphy), and best supporting actor (Robert Downey Jr.).
Mstyslav Chernov—the director of 20 Days in Mariupol, which won for best documentary feature—delivered a moving speech in which he said he wished he’d never had a reason to make the film about the Russian military’s destruction of a city in eastern Ukraine. Human Rights Watch estimates that more than 10,000 residents of Mariupol died during the first year following Russia’s invasion.
“I wish to be able to exchange this to Russia never attacking Ukraine, never occupying our cities,” Chernov said. “The people of Mariupol and those who have given their lives will never be forgotten because cinema forms memories and memories form history.” |