Sept. 15, 2005 | 10:40 p.m. EDT
Instant analysis and early reaction
Early reaction seems to be this: there will be local anger in this region (and many may find this frustrating) at the very portions of the speech meant to convey real and rare contrition on the part of the President. The anger may be in reaction to the government denials (of any major problems) and reassuring statements during that initial week of hell in this city. It truly appeared to be, as some branded it, a split-screen reality. During one particularly devastating briefing, Secretary Michael Chertoff appeared to be delivering a sunny and in-control message, especially when juxtaposed with the chaos that MSNBC, for one, was showing in the other half of the screen.
There will be the predictable chatter about the White House advance team's choice of the backdrop... one of the truly beautiful places in the Quarter (indeed in all of New Orleans). The other choices, a friend in politics points out: were devastation (a downer but real) or desolation (a compromise location that would match the reality on the ground here tonight). There will be locker-room deconstructions of that walk the President took (from his initial position behind the statue of former President Andrew Jackson) en route to the podium. I must say that taking the satellite delay into account and absent any real timing, I chose the path of least chance of on-air mess: I stopped talking and let viewers take in the solitary stroll prior to the start of his remarks.
more....
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8045532/