I find it baffling to read even marginally positive reviews of Sarah Palin’s performance in last night’s debate:
“The 90-second format, with little time for follow-up, favored Palin. She has one answer. She doesn’t appear to have a second one, and she never had to give one. To the television audience, she no doubt looked in command.”
I saw it the same way noted political commentator Roger Ebert did:
“Listening to her voice, you could also sense when she felt she’d survived the deep waters of improvisation and was climbing onto the shore of talking points. When she was on familiar ground, she perked up, winked at the audience two of three times, and settled with relief into the folksiness that reminds me strangely of the characters in Fargo.”
My movie comparison was to a bit in This Is Spinal Tap when Nigel is propped up by a roadie after a solo left him flat on his back. Upright once again, there’s something giddy in his expression suggesting that he’d instantly forgotten how foolish he’d looked just a few seconds earlier.
Palin’s struggle was evident, leading to a visible release of tension mixed with unearned, self-satisfied triumph.
It’s no surprise; she’s basically a local politician thrust on a national stage.
As Ebert wrote:
“If that had been me facing Joe Biden with the same preparation, I don’t know if I could even have walked onto the stage.”
Also, here’s a joke I bet you’ll hear in the coming days, most likely from Jay Leno:
“Sarah Palin said she favors a two-state solution for Israel: New York and Florida.”

In the fifth chapter of his 2007 book Evolution for Everyone: How Darwin’s Theory Can Change the Way We Think About Our Lives, David Sloan Wilson writes:
A foolish person doesn’t recognize that one can learn much from opponents. So liberals have begun to understand that they need God on their side as much as the Christian Right does.
I am admittedly writing mostly from ignorance, but I can’t see any way that the
In the opening of 28 Weeks Later, Don (Robert Carlyle) faces a dilemma: He can leave his wife to die and run like hell on the off chance that he might outrun the “infected,” or he can stay with her and face a gruesome end.
In Davis Guggenheim’s documentary An Inconvenient Truth, a high-angle shot of George W. Bush is followed by a shot of Al Gore looking down out of an airplane window. The juxtaposition delivers a subtle but forceful message: Al Gore is God, gazing in harsh judgment on this Republican president.
The film’s subject makes it bluntly political, yet Syriana nearly demands multiple viewings to even understand its plot, let alone its meanings. It is intended to illuminate that the business of oil is a dirty one, yet even people who pay close attention to the movie will come away from it more confused than enlightened.
Box Office Power Rankings: September 26-28