Can You Spell 'Succinct'?
By Aaron
Pressman
Issue Date:
Aug 03 2000
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush gives an online chat on AOL and touts the
virtues of using spell check.
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PHILADELPHIA - The Bush family has kept a low press profile at
this week's Republican National Convention, but Wednesday night America Online (dossier) reeled in Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush, brother of the presumed nominee, for a brief online chat.
Propped on a tall chair and peering down at a laptop screen
through silver reading glasses, the younger Bush answered a dozen questions
from AOL subscribers who were gathered virtually in the service's special
politics chat room.
The chat was run from AOL's crowded skybox at the convention,
situated almost behind the podium in the convention center - a much smaller and
less visible presence than the boxes of the major TV and radio networks.
Jeb was the most prominent member of the Bush family to make an
online appearance. On Wednesday and Thursday, rumors circulated that the
candidate himself, George W. Bush, might walk through Internet Alley where
online political Web sites are based, but all was quiet at midday.
During Bush's online chat, he focused like a laser on the
questions and carefully formulated his answers (dictated to an AOL staffer
sitting at the laptop). Just below, the convention floor was going wild in
anticipation of VP nominee Dick Cheney's address.
In a playful mood, Bush reacted in mock alarm when the typist
misspelled the word "succinct" in one of his answers. "Don't you
have a spell check in AOL?" he asked.
The questions were mostly softballs, including topics like gun
control, Bush's interest in politics and advice for young people interested in
running for office. Like more typical press conferences with journalists, the
online chatters wanted Bush to answer "just one more" as he prepared
to leave. "They even have 'one more question' on the Internet," he
noted.
AOL officials said they wouldn't know how many subscribers
attended the online session for a few days but estimated the number to be in
the thousands.
As he left, Gov. Bush made a prediction to the AOL staff that the
Internet would have a greater place in future elections. "Four years from
now, you'll be in the primo spot," he said earnestly, but the staff
laughed. "That's why I came early," he added, emphasizing his
seriousness.
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