Since some of you may have missed Michelle Obama’s speech yesterday, here’s something inspirational to start the day. Per CNN:
First Lady Michelle Obama denounced the caustic campaign style of Donald Trump on Friday, demonstrating a new willingness to wade into this year’s messy political battle while arguing for a Hillary Clinton presidency.
While she didn’t mention Trump by name, the first lady aimed squarely at the Republican candidate’s most pronounced positions and tactics, including his persistent challenges to her husband’s eligibility for office.
“There were those who questioned and continue to question for the past eight years, up through this very day, whether my husband was even born in this country,” Obama said in Fairfax, Virginia, during her first solo campaign appearance for Clinton. “Well, during his time in office, I think Barack has answered those questions with the example he set by going high when they go low.”…
In her half-hour-long remarks, she argued Trump’s brand of politics should be kept far from the Oval Office, predicting his bombastic style of campaigning wouldn’t mellow if he wins…
… “If a candidate is erratic and threatening; if a candidate traffics in prejudice, fears and lies on the trail; if a candidate has no clear plans to implement their goals; if they disrespect their fellow citizens, including folks who made extraordinary sacrifices for our country; let me tell you, that is who they are. That is the kind of president they will be, trust me.”…
At her campaign rally, Obama worked to convince her and her husband’s supporters that Clinton is also worthy of their votes. The rally on the campus of George Mason University was timed ahead of the commonwealth’s October 17 voter registration deadline.
“When I hear folks saying they’re not inspired this this election, I disagree. I am inspired,” she said, urging the crowd to register to vote and actually cast ballots for Clinton…
And that reminded me, what with one thing and another, I never got around to sharing Variety‘s recent interview with the First Lady:
… Obama, 52, calls herself âa product of pop culture.â She is convinced of its influence on the public consciousness â in her case to build awareness of her signature policy initiatives, specifically ones tied to healthy eating and exercise, girlsâ education, support for military families, and college advancement…
âWhat I have never been afraid of is to be a little silly, and you can engage people that way,â Obama says in an interview with Variety in her upstairs White House office, decorated in an eclectic mix of abstract art and framed mementos from her tenure. âMy view is, first you get them to laugh, then you get them to listen. So Iâm always game for a good joke, and Iâm not so formal in this role. Thereâs very little that we canât do that people wouldnât appreciate.â
Has it worked?
The first lady is convinced that it has.
A case in point: The Carpool Karaoke segment highlighted one of Obamaâs key initiatives, Let Girls Learn, a worldwide plan of action to promote girlsâ access to education. She and Corden also sang âThis Is for My Girls,â which songwriter Diane Warren wrote several years ago but was recorded as an anthem for the initiative, with Elliott, Kelly Clarkson, Janelle Monae, and others participating, and AOL Makers producing….
Obama explains that as she launched the initiatives, she knew it would take âreaching people where they lived on a day-to-day basis, and the next step was, âHow do you do that? Where are the people?â Well, theyâre not reading the op-ed pieces in the major newspapers. Theyâre not watching Sunday morning news talk shows. Theyâre doing what most people are doing: They are watching TV.â
She adds: âA lot of our audiences are kids and teens, and they want to be in on the joke. And theyâll listen again. Weâre just a little looser with this stuff than most traditional first ladies.â…
What’s on the agenda for this fine fall day?