Well. I said she was sort of interesting, you said semi-interesting, we can probably work out compromise wording. I admit that it can be iffy to read too much into body language. I thought Judy Woodruff looked like she would rather not be doing this. HC wrote a book, HC is an important historical figure, so, I hear her saying, I suppose we have to give her a spot to promote her book. Later they gave Ken Burns a spot to promote his film about the Vietnam war. That spot was more interesting. I'm not sure I can sit through ten hours [oops, 18 hours, my bad] about the war, but I'll give it a shot.The ten minutes or so on HC was about my limit. The Frost interviews with Nixon came to mind. I was driving in to work, the radio was replaying an excerpt. My immediate reaction was "I don't have to listen to you anymore" and I turned it off.
And being more gracious than Donald Trump? It would take some thought to come up with an appropriate analogy to that one, but talk about damning with faint praise.
Brooks and Shields spoke right afterward and both of them spoke well of the book. They have read it, I haven't.
Her assessments were of the "Round up the usual suspects" sort. I forgot to mention the DNC. And probably others, she had quite a long list of who was to blame. There are questions that are both interesting and important about what happened. I did not think the interview broke any new ground whatsoever.
You probably saw the Alexandra Petri column on the first line of the book.
https://www.washingt...m=.0b914b779d4b
I am working on what to make of it. Perhaps part of my problem is that I did not know who Kelly Clarkson is.
Perhaps the interview could be seen as a clue to what happened. Something that was billed as a one-on-one conversation with JW and HC struck me as a pre-packaged pitch for her book. I think that a large part of the Clinton campaign struck many people in a similar way. You listened, but something was off. This is not to say that voting for Trump was the proper way to deal with that.