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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
31.03.2008
Barack Obama, Bowling Alleys, and Billy Joel

For the last two weeks or so, as my colleagues can attest, I've been asking everybody I know whether they recalled ever seeing Barack Obama stand outside a factory and greet workers as they walk in for their shift. It's one of, if not the, most cliched moments in poiltics. But I couldn't recall Obama doing it--and neither could any of my colleagues. I also didn't find any references to such events on Lexis-Nexis, either--although, in fairness, it's not so easy to search for that sort of thing.

I thought that was indicative of Obama's biggest poiltical problem: His inability to connect with working-class white voters. It was the reason he'd struggled in Ohio--and, I presume, the reason he's been so far behind in Pennsylvania. And while there's no simple fix, I've always thought Obama just needed to spend more time interacting with blue-collar voters and establishing the kind of relationship he now lacks.

Lo and behold, that's just what he doing. As Paul West reports in the Baltimore Sun, Obama's ongoing tour through Pennsylvania is a break with the recent past. He's not filling basketball arenas with thousands of activists and college students. Instead, he's hitting bars, bowling allies, and--yes--factories. 

As the article explains, he's also trying to fly under the radar, in the political sense. He's riding in an unmarked luxury bus, not a garish campaign caravan. He's making himself available to all sorts of local press, but not national. And his staff isn't even announcing all of these events early.

Some of this is expectation-setting, so that if he merely closes his double-digit gap with Clinton, it will seem like a win. But I wonder if this isn't also a conscious effort to downplay the idea that Obama is a rock star--and his campaign a phenomenon--and concentrate instead on his credentials as somebody who cares about, and is committed to helping, working class voters.

By the way, Obama will be campaigning in Allentown today, which gives me a chance to feature the classic Billy Joel song:

--Jonathan Cohn

Posted: Monday, March 31, 2008 11:20 AM with 15 comment(s)

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blackton said:

yay, Allentown named after William Allen, and yay Easton, named after William Penns estate Neston Easton, and yay Nazareth Pa. named after the rock group Nazareth, and yay for Bethlehem, named after Bethlehem Steel.

March 31, 2008 12:29 PM

adaglas said:

Don't forget about Hershey, PA, named after Adolphus J. Hershey, who in 1782 invented chocolate in his quaint Pennsylvania haberdashery.  I may be making that up, it's hard to tell.

As far as Billy Joel songs go, I suppose it's better than Obama driving through the state blasting "Big Shot," while Hillary counters with a rousing chorus of "Honesty"

March 31, 2008 12:33 PM

Rhubarbs said:

This kind of low-key listening effort is why Paul Wellstone was so popular among farmers and veterans. Also Mark Warner's popularity in rural Virginia. Of course, it depends on listening well, and following up with policy action, but still. If it's a start, it's a smart start.

March 31, 2008 12:44 PM

wildboy said:

As I recall from many years ago, actual residents of Allentown were none too pleased with Billy Joel turning their city into a by-word for industrial decline.  But maybe it has a certain nostalgic tinge nowadays.

March 31, 2008 1:31 PM

vcolatriano said:

Do I detect a fellow proud refugee from the Lehigh Valley, Blackton?  I'm from Phillipsburg myself, but can't come up with either an accurate or a witty report on the origin of the town's name.  Sigh -- the benefits of a PHS education, I suppose.  

March 31, 2008 1:46 PM

ironyroad said:

Most residents of anywhere are never pleased when some book or song gives a realistic account of what goes on.  Most people prefer cozy boosterism, in which only the positive is accentuated.

Later on, of course, the place milks the attraction stimulated by said book or song.

March 31, 2008 2:01 PM

ejbenjamin said:

Springsteen wrote a devastatingly sad song about industrial decline called "Youngstown," which is apparently now cheered loudly every time he plays Ohio.  People are weird sometimes.

March 31, 2008 2:08 PM

Jonathan Cohn said:

Springsteen's "Youngstown" may tell a sad story about steel country's demise, but the lyrics always struck me as proud and full of defiance. ("When I die I don't want no part of heaven; I would not do heaven's work well. I pray the devil comes and takes me to stand in the fiery furnaces of hell.")  So it doesn't seem so weird to me that people would cheer it.

"Allentown," on the other hand, is just mournful. I guess I wouldn't like it, either, if that's where I lived.

March 31, 2008 2:58 PM

blackton said:

vcolatriano, I am from Easton. You stupid Stateliner. I mean, what kind of name is that for a team; stateliners? Ha. just kidding, my great Uncle used to be kind of big in P'burg politics and was an aide to Gov. Meyner way back in the day. He founded the P'burg Free Press. So a good part of my family is from that area too.

March 31, 2008 3:00 PM

vcolatriano said:

Now you're bringing back memories, Blackton -- the Phillipsburg Free Press office was about a block away from my home.

And I wouldn't be throwing stones about my school's nickname, considering your team was called the Red Rovers.  Bunch of commie symps, if you ask me.  Then again, please don't ask me to identify what kind of animal our mascot, Suzie Stateliner, was supposed to be.

And as for the P'burg/Easton rivalry, all I can do is point you to the final score from my senior year (1982/83):  Stateliners 32, Red Rovers 0.  Of course, as a certified nerd, I had absolutely nothing to do with that victory, unless allowing the jocks to keep in shape by periodically pummeling me somehow counts.

I'm sure the rest of the talkbackers are enjoying our stroll down memory lane.  Sorry, everybody.

March 31, 2008 3:44 PM

psantillana said:

I hate that song and I hate Billy Joel and he was just jumping on the Springsteen bandwagon for that album, like "I can do that", like some Berklee hack working on getting his "jazz chops" down.

March 31, 2008 4:32 PM

Jonathan Cohn said:

psantillana-

Actually, the Nylon Curtain is widely considered BIlly Joel's tribute to the Beatles. You can hear it most clearly on songs like "Laura."

As for the Springsteen bandwagon, Joel said he first wrote the song as tribute to Levittown, where he grew up (and was also a symbol of the postwar boom). But he decided it didn't work well lyrically, which is why it became "Allentown."

That said, I once heard a bootleg of a mid-70s concert--I think it was at the Bottom Line in NYC--in which he did a damn fine Springsteen impersonation.

No disrespect intended for the Boss, whom I also revere (and has made cameos in my postings before).

Jonathan

March 31, 2008 4:45 PM

blackton said:

vcolatriano, I went to Notre Dame, but my mother went to Easton and my father to Wilson (named after Woodrow Wilson, 50 years before he became President, hey if it can work with Hillary)

yeah Cohn,  you better not diss the boss. we will come down there (wherever there is) and open a can of whup ass on you.

March 31, 2008 6:49 PM

The Plank said:

Last Sunday's Washington Post contained a humorous thought-procedural on media consumption in 2008

March 31, 2008 6:50 PM

Jonathan Cohn said:

blackton-

We're cool on Springsteen, but you might want to be careful throwing around Notre Dame references here on the big board, lest Chait hear about it.

March 31, 2008 10:09 PM