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Posts Tagged ‘State of the Union’

INTERVIEW: The Day After—Analysis of President Obama’s State of the Union Address

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

INTERVIEW: The Day After—Analysis of President Obama’s State of the Union Address

The stakes were high for this year’s State of the Union address. We ask speechwriting impresario Dan Gerstein for a rhetorician’s take on the big speech. (8 min.)

 

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SOTU, Steve Jobs speeches offer lessons in CEO communication

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Corporate speechwriters will want to check out speechwriter and faithful Vital Speeches correspondent Jeff Porro’s fine piece in the Washington Post online today.

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Most speechwriterly analysis of SOTU

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

At Dan Gerstein’s Gotham Ghostwriters blog, Presidential speechwriters and other rhetoric pros tackle the SOTU from every angle that we care about.

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SOTU drinking game

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Here at Vital Speeches, we take the State of the Union speech seriously, so you don’t have to.

But sober or not, join your speechwriting mates and rhetoric chums (and me) during the speech, on the Gotham Ghostwriters’ real-time SOTU yak-off.

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State of the Union speech: President Obama, as Harry Houdini

Monday, January 25th, 2010

With the State of the Union speech in the immediate offing, Chicago Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg compares President Obama to Harry Houdini.

On Wednesday Obama “faces his first State of the Union address Wednesday night, a locked trunk if ever there was one: The biggest effort of his first year in office—health care reform—is in peril of failing completely. His Republican opponents are mobilized and gleeful. The nation faces problems in every direction you look.

Delivering a speech in clutch situations is what Obama does best. He burst into prominence in 2004 with an electric keynote address at the Democratic National Convention. When his association with the divisive and doddering Rev. Jeremiah Wright threatened to hamstring his candidacy, Obama unspooled a memorable speech on race. …

I’m torn between being excited to see how he pulls this one off, and dreading the possibility that this time the stunt will be beyond his abilities—the feeling, I assume, that all those vaudeville patrons felt when they went to see Harry Houdini escape. Will he emerge from behind the spangled cloth, holding the unlocked manacles high above his head, beaming and wet and triumphant? Or will the disaster that he has been courting for so long finally catch up with him? We’ll find out Wednesday night.

Likely the result of the speech will be less cut-and-dried than, “Did he escape the trunk or didn’t he?” Still, this is a pretty good framing of the situation.

Though Steinberg might have pointed out, we’re all in this trunk together.

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