Obama in Berlin
At Fran's sort-of-request :)
I don't follow German media all that closely but it hasn't escaped my attention that Obama's upcoming visit is getting considerably more coverage than Bush's trip in June. Sunday newspapers devoted much attention to Obama. Tomorrow, major German TV stations are expected to broadcast Obama's speech live.
Not surprisingly, Chancellor Merkel's statement that Obama should not speak in front of Brandenburg Gate received considerable attention in Germany. While the Chancellor does not decide where in Berlin Obama can or can't hold speeches (the city of Berlin does), Obama understandably did not want to upset Merkel, and the agreed upon solution was to set up the stage not at the gate but close enough that it will be seen in photos and TV shots.
There is some speculation as to why Obama picked Germany to deliver a major speech and hold talks with the Chancellor, while planning relatively low-key visits to France and the UK. I am not going to engage in this speculation.
German media follow the US election campaign quite closely (especially compared to the non-attention German politics gets in the US), hence it's not surprising that the weeklies and magazines are spending a lot of ink on Obama's trip.
The latest issue of Der Spiegel has a cover story on Obama - the title is "Germany meets the Superstar", a riff on "Germany seeks the Superstar", the German version of American Idol. Rather appropriate I thought.
Spiegel Online has an article on Obama's visit, of which I unfortunately can't find an English translation. The title is "Berlin speech has Obama aides worried"; the article talks about a fear of gaffes (especially since Obama is followed by so many US journalists) and Obama's difficult balancing act in pleasing the Europeans without offending Americans and vice versa. After all, it's American votes that Obama needs, not German ones.
Tomorrow we'll know if Obama's German visit was a success... my own gut feeling is that it will be - not that that's worth anything.
I don't follow German media all that closely but it hasn't escaped my attention that Obama's upcoming visit is getting considerably more coverage than Bush's trip in June. Sunday newspapers devoted much attention to Obama. Tomorrow, major German TV stations are expected to broadcast Obama's speech live.
Not surprisingly, Chancellor Merkel's statement that Obama should not speak in front of Brandenburg Gate received considerable attention in Germany. While the Chancellor does not decide where in Berlin Obama can or can't hold speeches (the city of Berlin does), Obama understandably did not want to upset Merkel, and the agreed upon solution was to set up the stage not at the gate but close enough that it will be seen in photos and TV shots.
There is some speculation as to why Obama picked Germany to deliver a major speech and hold talks with the Chancellor, while planning relatively low-key visits to France and the UK. I am not going to engage in this speculation.
German media follow the US election campaign quite closely (especially compared to the non-attention German politics gets in the US), hence it's not surprising that the weeklies and magazines are spending a lot of ink on Obama's trip.
The latest issue of Der Spiegel has a cover story on Obama - the title is "Germany meets the Superstar", a riff on "Germany seeks the Superstar", the German version of American Idol. Rather appropriate I thought.
Spiegel Online has an article on Obama's visit, of which I unfortunately can't find an English translation. The title is "Berlin speech has Obama aides worried"; the article talks about a fear of gaffes (especially since Obama is followed by so many US journalists) and Obama's difficult balancing act in pleasing the Europeans without offending Americans and vice versa. After all, it's American votes that Obama needs, not German ones.
Tomorrow we'll know if Obama's German visit was a success... my own gut feeling is that it will be - not that that's worth anything.




