David von Drehle

More Time Obama Goo: 'His Genome Is Global, His Mind Is Innovative, His World Is Networked'

David Von Drehle’s marshmallowy cover story celebrating Time Person of the Year Barack Obama was fraught with too much bias for just one post. Here’s a few additional tidbits from the second half of the story, with the emphasis on conservatives. Time thinks Obama’s cabinet picks display a deep emphasis only on what works, not with turf battles and game-playing: " If you've got really smart people who are all focused on the same mission, then usually you can get some things done." Von Drehle was typically enraptured:

Stop and look back at those last few words, because they are a telltale sign of Obama's pragmatism. A persistent question during the campaign -- it became the heart of John McCain's message in the closing weeks -- was whether Obama was some kind of radical, a terrorist-befriending socialist masquerading as Steady Freddy. As he builds his Administration, though, he is emerging as a leader who just wants to "get some things done."

So the Obama years aren’t going to be ultraliberal? Think again.

Time: 'Prickly' McCain vs. Not Tough Enough Obama

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is "prickly" with the press, particularly Time magazine, reporters for the publication insist on the heels of a recent interview. Yet reporters for the same publication had a decidedly less confrontational chat last week with Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), although they did question if he was tough enough to topple McCain in November.

In the August 28 item, "McCain's Prickly TIME Interview," Time editors prefaced the transcript of James Carney and Michael Scherer's interview by lamenting McCain's less frequent engagement of the press as compared to his 2000 Republican primary run. They then insisted that McCain "quickly soured" and refused to "stray off message" during a Time interview:

McCain at first seemed happy enough to do the interview. But his mood quickly soured. The McCain on display in the 24-minute interview was prickly, at times abrasive, and determined not to stray off message.

By contrast, Time editors didn't add prefatory commentary to a relative soft August 20 interview, "Obama on His Veep Thinking" by Karen Tumulty and David von Drehle. That interview began with two questions on Obama's toughness, particularly from the perspective of nervous partisan Democrats: