Sarah Palin appeared on Tuesday’s Good Morning America to promote her new book and hit back at liberal condescension from journalists, most notably attacking Katie Couric as arrogant. Speaking of her infamous interview with the CBS anchor during the 2008 campaign, Palin interpreted Couric’s question about what newspapers she read as "How up there in Alaska, in this kind of nomadic, Neanderthal atmosphere that you live in, how are you connected to the world?"
The former governor admitted to interviewer Barbara Walters: "Unfortunately, I was wearing my annoyance on my sleeve. And I shouldn't have done that. Because, it seemed to me that she was asking ‘Do you read?’" After noting that, at that point in the campaign, she had just completed an op-ed for the New York Times, Palin chided, "And that surprised me that [Couric] hadn't done that homework."
Walters conducted a mostly friendly interview with Palin, calling her "charming" and remarking that she "answered every question." The ABC host also gave the Republican an opportunity to respond to the current Newsweek cover that referred to Palin as "bad news" and featured her in running shorts.
Palin derided Newsweek as "cheesy" and instructed, "For me personally, it's a wee bit degrading. Newsweek should be more policy-oriented, more substance-oriented, than showing some gal in shorts on the cover."
Although Walters was often chummy with Palin, at one point she asked the ex-Governor about her daughter Bristol, who is a teenage mother. The journalist wondered, "If Bristol had wanted to have an abortion, would you have let her?" That type of question mostly comes to pro-life politicians. Liberal, pro-choice Democrats are not often asked if they would encourage their daughters to have an abortion.
The interview aired in two parts. A transcript of the first segment, which aired at 7:01am EST on November 17, follows:
DIANE SAWYER: And, of course, when it comes to Republicans, the undisputed center of the stage this week is Sarah Palin.
ROBIN ROBERTS: And as we said, ABC's Barbara Walters had a chance to sit down with her and talk about the book and so much more. Good morning, Barbara.
BARBARA WALTERS: Good morning. Well, she was very charming. Answered every question. And, of course, the most important thing is, what does she want for her political future? Well, here is the big question: Do you ever want to be president of the United States?
SARAH PALIN: That certainly isn't on my radar screen right now. But when you consider some of the ordinary turning into extraordinary events that have happened in my life, I am not one to predict what will happen in a few years. My ambition, if you will, my desire, is to help our country, in whatever role that may be. And I cannot predict what that will be, what doors would be open in the year 2012.
BARBARA WALTERS: Will you play a major role?
SARAH PALIN: If people would have me, I will.
WALTERS: To many, you are a possible presidential candidate. Steve Schmidt, McCain's campaign's senior adviser says publicly, and I quote, "She would not be a winning candidate. And if she was, the result would be catastrophic."
PALIN: Sounds like Steve Schmidt. I guess I really, really disappointed him. And she's the one who was in charged of that vetting, is I was told. So, everyone's entitled to their opinion, though. I know truth. And I'm fine with who I am and where I am.
WALTERS: One way you could have enormous influence is, of course, to have a talk show.
PALIN: I probably would rather write than talk.
WALTERS: Have you been offered your own talk show?
PALIN: There's been lots and lots of offers in these last months coming our way. Some bizarre things.
WALTERS: Like?
PALIN: Funny things. Reality shows.
WALTERS: You say no to that?
PALIN: Absolutely not. I would never. No, I would never want to put my kids through such a thing. Shoot, our life has become kind of a reality show.
WALTERS: Whether she joins the media or not, Palin, who was mercilessly lampooned during and after the campaign, will be associated with Tina Fey's iconic impersonation of her on Saturday Night Live. Did her impersonation of you harm you?
TINA FEY (as Sarah Palin): First off, I want to say how excited I am to be in front of the liberal elite media, as well as the liberal regular media.
PALIN: I think there was a blurred line there between what Tina Fey was parodying and saying. And what I was saying, for instance. She was saying, "I can see Russia from my house," pretending that she was me.
FEY: And I can see Russia from my house.
PALIN: Well, of course, I never said that. Of course, I’ve never said that. And yet, the line was blurred. And I think people because it was repeated so often, perhaps believed that I had said such a thing. I think she was funny, though. And I think she was very talented and spot-on.
WALTERS: At the time, what Palin did say to Charles Gibson, was that there's an island in Alaska where one can see Russia. And this strategic proximity was part of her foreign policy experience. Her response to that question came back to haunt her again, in an interview with Katie Couric, as did Couric's question about what she reads.
[From Couric interview] KATIE COURIC: What specifically, I'm curious?
WALTERS: Why didn't you answer?
PALIN: Unfortunately, I was wearing my annoyance on my sleeve. And I shouldn't have done that. Because, it seemed to me that she was asking "Do you read? How up there in Alaska, in this kind of nomadic, Neanderthal atmosphere that you live in, how are you connected to the world?" When I had just done an op-ed in her hometown newspaper, the New York Times, when I had just been interviewed by all those national media outlets. And that surprised me that she hadn't done that home work. Very unprofessional of me, though. My fault, my bad, that I answered the way I answered. And that was with that proverbial roll of the eyes. Like, are you kidding me? Are you really asking me that?
WALTERS: But the result of that interview, which Palin says was unfairly edited, was that she was considered unqualified to be vice president. Palin says in her book, this impression was reinforced by deliberate leaks to the press, by some anonymous members of John McCain's staff. Towards the end of the campaign, the press reports quoted unnamed McCain aides, calling you a diva. You know this. A whack job. A narcissist. Why do you think these people were trying to destroy your reputation?
PALIN: For some people, this is a business. And if failure in this business was going to reflect poorly on them, they had to kind of pack their own parachutes and protect themselves and their reputation so they won't be blamed. I'll take the blame, though, because I know at the end of the day what the truth is. And if it makes them feel better to be able to say, "She's the one that caused the downfall because she had a lousy interview," then, so be it.
WALTERS: You know, Governor, it has been said, though, that no candidate was picked on and made fun of as much as you were.
PALIN: Oh, there's so much bull crap out there. About my family. About my record. About my state. And it really hurts when I hear the negativity about the state of Alaska. And, of course, my family. So, a lot of bull.
WALTERS: It's still going on, this kind of ridicule. David Letterman, who is not your best friend, here is the latest:
DAVID LETTERMAN: That brings us to a little segment we call "things more fun than reading the Sarah Palin memoir." Things more fun. Take a look. Watch this.
ANNOUNCER: Number 14, driving into a tree.
WALTERS: Can you just shrug this kind of thing off?
PALIN: Well, I can ‘cause those aren't even funny.
WALTERS: Would you like to go on the David Letterman show?
PALIN: I don't think I'd want to boost his ratings. I do want him to sell my book, though. So, I hope he keeps it up.
WALTERS: Smart girl.
ROBERTS: I know. She is. Going Rogue. And she was very critical of the McCain aides. What's been their reaction?
WALTERS: Well, she says they muzzled her, that they wouldn't let Palin be Palin. They say her book is total fiction.
ROBERTS: You spent some time with her. She has had a tumultuous up couple of years. Up and down. Up and down. Up and down. How did you find her, Barbara?
WALTERS: Very confident. Very appealing, whether you agree with her or not. And when she says bull crap, I went, what? But, you know, she says she tells it like it is. And I think that's what made her to so many people and the people who do like her, makes her so popular.
ROBERTS: Yeah. She has been through a lot. And has handled it. You're going to come back in our next half hour. You have other questions that you ask her about President Obama, even.
WALTERS: About President Obama. And you will meet two of her children. [Laughs.] I laugh because what they like most, as you will hear, is something I won't want to eat.
ROBERTS: That is a tease. She is teasing us. Okay. We'll see you.
SAWYER: I'm suspecting it involves moose.
WALTERS: How did you know?
SAWYER: Just guessing.
—Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center.





















Editor at Large
Comments Policy
Interviews..
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 15:44 ET by RukusBaba Wawa: 1
Cup Kate: 0
Gary
Old media species: Moonbat-a-saurus-rex. Getting more endangered by the day.
This is freaking amazing!!
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 18:40 ET by Patriot II"How up there in Alaska, in this kind of nomadic, Neanderthal atmosphere that you live in, how are you connected to the world?"
I cannot believe that even this ignorant no nothing bimbo would be so stupid as to make a remark like this?? These dum bass liberals never cease to amaze me.....they need to be in a home somewhere, they are not safe to be out alone....... !!!
Heard on Rush
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 15:46 ET by mattm"First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, and then you win." - Ghandi
mattm... Heard that as
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 15:54 ET by bigtimermattm...
Heard that as well, words of wisdom indeed.
Great tagline as well.
'Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea'~Breitbart
Yes
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 16:01 ET by ChaitealoverBecause, it seemed to me that she was asking "Do you read?"
She was.
Liberals believe that Conservatives are too dumb to read. That's why they want a second non-fiction Best Seller list in the NY Times, the current single one is overrun with conservative books, which to them proves that conservatives don't read [their "logic" being that if Conservatives actually read those books, they'd know they weren't true].
Chai
“The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed, and hence clamorous to be led to safety, by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.” —H.L. Mencken
Obama is dumber than Sarah
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 03:15 ET by rfpzzzzzLook at his promises and his stimulus fiasco, look at his obsession with health care while jobs continue to plummet , how about telling us doctors cut off peoples feet just to make a couple of extra bucks, look at Joe Biden... I could go on....Obama is obviously dumber than Sarah.
Who?
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 16:04 ET by BlondeSteve Loser Who? Why should I care what this idiot says? What has he done well? Why do I neither know nor care who this idiot is?
I hope he fails, too.
That's the guy that lost
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 19:09 ET by Willis_Leon_JohnsonThat's the guy that lost mcKainnedys election and needs to blame somebody that doesn't have the power to destroy any chance of continuing his career as an election loser.
It's lonesome at the bottom, and he likes the solitude.....
"no matter how low you set the bar, liberals can never quite measure up." -Me
http://gjresult.com
PALIN: Sounds like Steve Schmidt
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 19:17 ET by ThisnThatPerfect Palin. Everybody had better watch out. She's not going to pull any punches, no matter who's the target. Good for her. RINOs take note.
__________
"mmm, mmm, mm. Barrack-Hussain-Øbama↓." - The liberals coolaid drinking song
Another way to spell “Loser”: Steve Schmidt
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 23:00 ET by needle“She would not be a winning candidate.”
An interesting call by a guy who was McCain's campaign's senior adviser and I assume thought McCain was a winning candidate.
- Relying upon the State Run Media for your information is like relying upon an embezzler for your portfolio management.
- I didn't leave the Republican Party; the Republican Party left me.
If McCain's people really
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 16:18 ET by Radical1979If McCain's people really did let Couric have constant access to Palin (as she described on Oprah, coming off a rally after shaking hands for a long time etc), they messed up. They should have taken a page out of Obama's book. Instead of trying to control Palin they should have controlled the media.
Just goes to show, Rad
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 16:19 ET by BlondeMcRino's campaign people were truly morons (squared).
I hope he fails, too.
The McCain campaign was a
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 16:41 ET by deerjerkydaveThe McCain campaign was a disaster and I saw it from miles away along with many of my fellow conservatives. I like Sarah Palin but she was green to national politics and the McCain handlers only paralyzed her. Of course the liberal news was going to sandbag their interviews with Palin and unfortunately she was unable to roll with the punches. Sarah, the liberal media think that ALL conservatives are neanderthals, not just Alaskans. Liberals don't understand conservatives nearly as well as conservatives understand liberals. You have to learn to challenge their premise and correct the record. They may not accept it but the viewers who make up America will.
Sarah, the liberal media
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 16:44 ET by bigtimerSarah, the liberal media think that ALL conservatives are neanderthals,
not just Alaskans. Liberals don't understand conservatives nearly as
well as conservatives understand liberals.
Precisely!
Did you ever sum it up...succinctly.
'Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea'~Breitbart
Conservatives
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 18:56 ET by iveseenitallRight on, deer and BT. Ironically,the most intelligent, most well-educated and most honest people I've known in my life were (are) conservatives. But the most immature, ignorant, stupid, dishonest people I've known were (are) so-called "liberals" (a misnomer). Sad.
NEVER,NEVER trust a "liberal"
Evening isia... More than
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 18:57 ET by bigtimerEvening isia...
More than sad...I pray we win big time in '10 and '12...we must.
I fear what all the left is already doing with Census, redistricting... Acorn and all their other intimidating tricks at the polling booths, let alone their outright voting fraud in numerous ways including not counting the military, which should always be counted First and Foremost in my opinion. ..plus lawsuits at the ready.
'Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea'~Breitbart
Yes, exactly
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 23:14 ET by needleThere is some dingbat NYT editor named Sam Tanenhaus who has recently written a book called The Death of Conservatism. He must be like the weatherman who refuses to look out the window. What about all of those hundreds of town halls and thousands of unprecedented tea parties? This guy and Obama must be about the only people in the country without a clue.
- Relying upon the NYT for your information is like relying upon an embezzler for your portfolio management.
- I didn't leave the Republican Party; the Republican Party left me.
The entire McCain Campaign
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 22:23 ET by doug1950appeared to me to be a ruse from start to finish. At times it was as if he was deliberately sabotaging his own chances of gaining or winning. Along comes Sarah, puts more fire and life into it than even he could believe so they tamped her down and put her in impossible situation after situation. If I were a suspicisous man I might suspect they threw the game just to put Obama in. How the hell did McCain even get the nomination. Every conservative I personally know said they would have put him dead last or near the end of the line for their choice. McCain had no stomach or energy for the slug fest he needed to do to win. He rolled over when he should have struck back, stopped campaigning in the early fall which was the critical moment to return to D.C. for WHAT? He could not have done worse if he tried. He zigged when he should have zagged. He has all the appeal of a dial tone. I sure hope the poeple of AZ send his butt home next year.
Walters: [Palin a]nswered every question.
Tue, 11/17/2009 - 23:20 ET by needleGood catch, Barbara. Sarah does not triangulate. That is another thing that spooks Liberals.
- Relying upon the Liberal Media for your information is like relying upon an embezzler for your portfolio management.
- I didn't leave the Republican Party; the Republican Party left me.
Warning - I am a Troll
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 11:59 ET by PTWJust out of curiosity...what media outlets do you read? Tell me your favorites. One of mine is newsbusters...I really enjoy the subject matter and perspective though I may sometimes disagree.
Thanks.
Yep, admitting you have a problem is always the first step
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 12:01 ET by R D Helm:-)
-Dave
Our elected representatives have failed us.
Problem..what problem?
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 12:56 ET by PTWthat I'm a troll or I read ;)
Did you actually think that Palin was insulted by the question? Everytime a president or candidate holds a book in their hands it becomes a best seller. What candidates read has some news value in that it gives us a sense of their curiosity, interests, values, etc. If that was a gotcha or veiled dig then it was a pretty lame attempt.
→ PTW
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 13:04 ET by Cool ArrowSo you're saying Nancy Pelosi should have been running for something when she released her book,
"Know Your Power: A Message to America's Daughters"
Better hurry, only 5 left in stock. She sent the other one to Perez Hilton.
LYDSEXICS UNTIE!
Hey Cool
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 13:09 ET by PTWWhat I'm saying is that if someone asked me what I read...I'd tell them. You know, the classics like the Little Red Book, Audacity of Hope. ;)
→ Lest we forget
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 13:13 ET by Cool Arrow"Dreams Of My Deadbeat Dad"
LYDSEXICS UNTIE!
It depends upon
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 13:17 ET by Chaitealoverthe tone in which the question is asked. Is it just a curious "what interests you" kind of question, or is it an "are you smart enough to read what I consider worthwhile publications" kind of question?
With Couric asking, it's the latter.
Chai
“The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed, and hence clamorous to be led to safety, by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.” —H.L. Mencken
ok..you didn't like her tone
Wed, 11/18/2009 - 13:43 ET by PTWhow would you answer the question if you were running for VP? Could there have been the slightest chance that Palin drew a blank as all of us have...and then cover up that blank with some BS about how the question was insulting.
And I have a perfectly legitimate theory as to why she didn't answer. She didn't want to say she read newspapers because they are completely biased therefore alienate her base. That's far more plausible than be insulted.