TNR BLOGS

December 01, 2008 | 12:42 PM
December 01, 2008 | 12:30 PM
December 01, 2008 | 11:48 AM

December 01, 2008 | 11:22 AM
December 01, 2008 | 11:10 AM
December 01, 2008 | 9:57 AM

July 26, 2008 | 2:24 PM
July 23, 2008 | 1:55 PM
July 17, 2008 | 3:56 PM

December 01, 2008 | 12:00 PM
November 29, 2008 | 3:23 PM
November 29, 2008 | 2:18 PM
COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
07.10.2008
The Palin Doodle Backstory, Plus More Palin Chicken Scratch

OK, I admit it--I was surprised by all the interest in those Palin doodles I brought back from Wasilla. But if it's Palin doodles people want, Palin doodles they shall get!

Last night I spoke with Laura Chase, the former Palin city council colleague who managed her 1996 campaign for mayor. Chase is the person who gave me the doodle sheet and she had this to say about its origins:

That [the doodles] was the first document she [Palin] gave me when she first came over and talked to me about managing her campaign. She wanted me to turn it into a poster. It was like, "Uh-uh. This is like a circus ad." There was so much in it. What I did was sit down with her and I pulled out different components. And we--I told her we needed to brainstorm the total campaign. We needed a slogan, we needed to devise the look, the image. We needed all of that information. We sat down and started talking from that point. That’s where we came up with "energetic, positive, determined." I developed actually a few different types of pieces. I would take, for example, "You would be my boss" and we'd have a postcard. Essentially, this [the doodles] is all she had. She walked over, handed it to me ... a "flyer" was what she called it. It was like: "Uh-uh. No way. It wouldn’t be effective."

Chase then e-mailed me later in the night--after some more digging--to append the following:

There were two initial documents--Sarah's draft flyer layout [the doodles] and this two page document--that Sarah brought over to me when I agreed to work on her campaign. 

The two-page document is a handwritten letter addressed to "friends," in which Palin lays out the rationale for her campaign in prose form (more or less). Among other things, Palin says she supports term limits and opposes tax increases, mayoral raises, conflicts of interest, and construction of a new city hall. Overall, Palin says, she wants to prevent Wasilla from becoming a "mini-Seattle." (Mission accomplished there--believe me.) Perhaps the most telling riff in the letter comes at the very beginning, when Palin writes: "The five years I spent outside earning my college degree solidified my love and desire for Wasilla. I’m raising my children here and I plan to live here as long as the Good Lord allows!"

Click here to read the entire letter in the original Palin chicken scratch, and here to read a typed version. Also, you can click here and here to see how Chase translated the doodles into bona fide campaign literature.

--Noam Scheiber

Posted: Tuesday, October 07, 2008 5:32 PM with 13 comment(s)

Comments

You must be logged-in to comment.

Not a subscriber? Click here to get a digital or print and digital subscription to The New Republic!

dylanposer said:

In the highly unlikely event that I am ever chosen to be a president's running mate, or for that matter any elected official, I must admit, I too would be fucked.  I have a history of doodling extremely unbecoming caricatures of certain history, arithmetic and English teachers, set to grotesque carnival backdrops.

October 7, 2008 8:00 PM

adaglas said:

For once I find myself in agreement with the Mayor of Frostbite Falls.  Would that the Good Lord allow her to live in Wasilla for many, many more years, unbroken by any stints in the decidedly charmless Naval Observatory.  

October 7, 2008 8:08 PM

simon greenwood said:

Why's Palin using Seattle-style zoning law perjoritively?  Is there some controversy about how Seattle zones things?  The only fights I can remember were whether the city was too restrictive about where new strip clubs could be built, and some NIMBY stuff about adding a new runway to the airport.

October 7, 2008 8:16 PM

fougasseu said:

The debate just ended. John McCain mentioned Joe Lieberman three times...no mention of Palin.

Bye, Sarah.

October 8, 2008 12:16 AM

JEFF FREY said:

There is a great debate in the Mat-Su Valley about whether any kind of zoning laws are Communist and thus anti-American. No shit -- I heard such a debate several years ago when public radio broadcast a Mat-Su Borough Assembly (= county supervisors) meeting as I was driving through. That might have been as long ago as the late 90s, but I don't remember for sure.

And it is a shame that the Naval Observatory's reputation has been run into the gutter by Cheney. I'll be glad to go back to thinking about time transfer and precision astronomy and geodesy when I hear the words "Naval Observatory".

October 8, 2008 12:58 AM

paytonc said:

I suspect that "Seattle" would be Northwest (and, by extension, Alaska) code for "evil big city." In the burgeoning North Carolina suburb I grew up in, "we don't want to become Atlanta" was one of the NIMBYs' rallying cries -- never mind that the resulting low-density sprawl looks exactly like Atlanta.

October 8, 2008 1:55 AM

Lyn39 said:

Can we have this vetted by a handwriting analyst?

October 8, 2008 1:55 AM

The Plank said:

Professor Obama Schools McCain , By Noam Scheiber Barack Is Finally Getting Comfortable With The Idea

October 8, 2008 10:21 AM

The Plank said:

On a recent reporting trip to Alaska, TNR senior editor Noam Scheiber came across a piece of paper from

October 8, 2008 1:38 PM

jblum8156 said:

I thought it might be signed "Love, Sarah," but apparently there is no signature, unless you count NRA as a signature.

October 8, 2008 1:44 PM

adsprung said:

Palin casually uses apostrophes correctly and is otherwise literate.  Her ideas are clear and well articulated.

October 8, 2008 10:21 PM

The Plank said:

From Jane Mayer's excellent article on the Palin pick in this week's New Yorker : From the start

October 20, 2008 12:51 PM

equinexus said:

And now they have had "this vetted by a handwriting analyst"...

www.cnn.com/video

November 18, 2008 12:45 PM