The RP’s now LIVE on Bloomberg Radio. Tune In!

From 2:30 PM to 3:00 PM EDT, the RP will be the guest on Bloomberg Radio, to discuss the debt ceiling crisis and all of the latest developments.

Click here, or on the logo below, to listen to the interview LIVE online.

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Media

The Politics of the Media

Twitter just announced that it will be adding a new “Possibly Sensitive” filter to alert users to questionable links. [Time Techland]

In a new commercial for his upcoming talk show, Anderson, Anderson Cooper rides his bike around the streets of NYC… without a helmet. Shame on you, Anderson! [NY Magazine]

Check out this analysis of the debt crisis, in Wordle form. [Poynter]

The media has the power to make deserving people famous– and it also gives people like Spencer and Heidi attention they don’t deserve. [Newsweek]

The RP: International Media Dude

Thanks to his internationally (!) well-received piece last week in The Huffington Post, “Debt Ceiling for Dummies,” the RP has been on a virtual international tour of radio and TV talk shows.

This morning, and earlier on Saturday, he appeared on CTV News, Canada’s version of CNN, making Mrs. RP (a native Canuck) very happy.  Click here for today’s story and click here or on the logo below for Saturday’s.

Friday night, he appeared as the primary guest on the Wall Street Journal’s “The Daily Wrap” with Michael Castner.  The subject — of course — was the ongoing debt ceiling crisis.

Click here or on the icon below to listen to the interview:

Why Some Tea Partiers Can’t Handle the Truth & What We Can Do About It

My latest column for The Huffington Post reflects one of my great frustrations about today’s politics:  The absence too often of rational, civil dialogue.  I try to explain why so many disaffected Americans — particularly those in the Tea Party — don’t accept many incontrovertible facts at the center of policy debates, and how the rest of us can become more engaged to dilute the influence of extremism and misguided politics.

Here’s an excerpt:

One of the critical lessons from the debt ceiling debacle is not to underestimate the Tea Party’s influence on Washington policymakers.

But perhaps even more alarming was the strikingly willful disdain many Tea Party activists demonstrated towards some of the rationally indisputable facts at the center of the policy debate.

I saw this phenomenon firsthand on the virtual pages of this very website.  Last week, frustrated by my failure to find my teenage daughter a simple explanation of the budget crisis online, I decided to pen one myself.  My column, Debt Ceiling for Dummies, was an attempt to provide a dispassionate, non-partisan guide to the sometimes archaic, and often complex, subject matter associated with the credit default debate.  As a former state Treasurer and CFO, I hoped to share what I’ve learned from a myriad of experiences dealing with concepts like debt limits and credit ratings.

But as is far too typical in today’s blogosphere, my article provoked an avalanche of bitter invective in the comments section of this site, my own blog, and even my personal Facebook page.  I was called a “liar,” a “fraud,” even an intimate of the international conspiracy to fool real Americans and rob them of their hard-earned savings.

My more than two decades of politics taught me not to take any of the criticism personally. But it’s hard not to be flustered when a not-so-insignificant segment of the body politic refuses to accept the incontrovertible fact that lifting the debt ceiling honors the debts we’ve already incurred through our prior spending, and does not require higher levels of future spending or borrowing.  Or that the inevitable U.S. credit downgrade that would result from a failure to lift the ceiling would inarguably worsen our national debt problems by dramatically increasing the cost of borrowing.

Click here to read my complete column in The Huffington Post.

The RP — International Media Dude

Thanks to his internationally (!) well-received piece in The Huffington Post, “Debt Ceiling for Dummies,” the RP has been on a virtual international tour of radio and TV talk shows.

Today, he appeared on CTV News, Canada’s version of CNN, making Mrs. RP (a native Canuck) very happy.  Click here or on the logo below to watch the interview:

Last night, he appeared as the primary guest on the Wall Street Journal’s “The Daily Wrap” with Michael Castner.  The subject — of course — was the ongoing debt ceiling crisis.

Click here or on the icon below to listen to the interview:

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Media

Google E-Books, a new venture coming in the fall, just got more buzzworthy. All of the Harry Potter books will be offered, meaning they’ll be accessible on cell phones, computers and more. [Time Techland]

Still have questions from the recent British tabloid scandal? The New York Times opinion page offers multiple reactions to media bias in the U.S. and abroad. [NY Times]

The newspaper industry’s response to perceptions of papers being a dying breed: smart is the new sexy. [NY Magazine]

What’s it like to work at Twitter or Google? Just read their interns’ blogs for a taste of the corporate culture. [Fast Company]

In honor of “The Daily Show” and its 15th birthday, here are Jon Stewart’s best media criticism moments [Poynter Institute].

The RP in the Washington Post, Wall Street Journal…

It’s a tough day to be a recovering politician…

Just when he thought it was safe to get his political ego in check, the RP appears in two of the largest, most prominent publications in the country.

First, the Wall Street Journal online version re-published the RP’s “Debt Ceiling for Dummies” piece which appeared earlier on this site and last night at The Huffington Post.

Then, the Washington Post, via its popular political columnist, Chris Cillizza (aka, “the Fix”) name-dropped the RP when discussing the rapid rise of No Labels, the new grassroots movement uniting Democrats, Republicans, and Independents who believe that on occasion we need to put aside our labels to do what’s right for the country:

Given all of the above, advocates of a third party — or at the very least another viable option in the 2012 presidential race — seem to be sprouting up all over.

The two most prominent are Americans Elect, a group aimed at winning ballot access for an eventual third-party candidate, and No Labels, an organization filled with high-profile names — including former George W. Bush media consultant Mark McKinnon and former Kentucky state treasurer Jonathan Miller — designed as an online home for the politically disaffected. “If you build it (ballot access), they (candidates and voters) will come,” McKinnon said in an e-mail.

No Labels says it advocates for bipartisan solutions to problems and not a third-party presidential candidate.

Click here for the full Washington Post piece.

Please note that the RP — like the No Labels movement in general — is not an advocate of a third party or a third-party presidential candidate.  He was an early supporter of Barack Obama in 2008 and remains a strong supporter of his reelection.  Other No Labels members support one or another of the GOP presidential candidates.  They all agree, however, that particularly in light of today’s extraordinary debt ceiling crisis, it is important that we come together in times of national import to arrive at bipartisan compromise in the country’s interest.

Finally, the RP’s beautiful tribute to Diana Ross — his friend and the mother of the victim of domestic violent murder — was reprinted in today’s Lexington Herald-Leader.

Enjoy the great reads, and take our advice:  Avoid the RP today at all costs; his recovery from the limelight is suffering from a significant test.

Join the RP on No Labels Radio NOW, until 3:00 PM EDT

RIGHT NOW — until 3:00 PM EDT, the RP is co-hosting No Labels Radio.

The discussion will be on the ongoing debt crisis, and his guests include some of the nation’s top political and economic experts.

No Labels is a new grassroots movement of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents who are united in the belief that we do not have to give up our labels, merely put them aside to do what’s best for America. No Labels Radio will offer a weekly dose of news and interviews with the policymakers who are working to find bipartisan answers to the otherwise intractable problems our country faces.

Follow this link to tune in RIGHT NOW.

Join the RP for No Labels Radio at 2 PM EDT Today

As the clock counts down toward a possible national credit default, Washington policymakers are abuzz.  The RP has already shared his opinions on resolving the crisis.

Today, at 2PM EDT, the RP has the chance to ask some real political and economic experts about the ongoing debate.  Join him for No Labels Radio, with his guests including Jennifer Hoelzer, Chief of Staff to U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, and Rob Shapiro, a top economic advisor to President Bill Clinton.

No Labels is a new grassroots movement of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents who are united in the belief that we do not have to give up our labels, merely put them aside to do what’s best for America. No Labels Radio will offer a weekly dose of news and interviews with the policymakers who are working to find bipartisan answers to the otherwise intractable problems our country faces.

Follow this link to tune in at 2:00 PM EDT.

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Media

Sean Hoare, one of the first journalists to go on the record and allege phone hacking at News of the World, was found dead Monday. His death is not thought to be caused by foul play. [CNN]

Follow the rise and fall of British journalist Rebekah Brooks, one of the News of the World editors thought to be responsible for the recent phone hacking scandal. [Newsweek]

Speaking of Rebekah Brooks or Rebecca Black? See if you can tell the difference between these two newsmakers in a handy quiz (and if this is hard for you, we have a bigger problem). [Esquire]

Check out 21 up-and-coming reporters who are using technology and social media to tell important stories. [NY Magazine]

More bad news for Gannett: the media conglomerate reports a 22 percent drop in its second quarter income. [Poynter Institute]

The Recovering Politician Bookstore

     

The RP on The Daily Show