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During the primaries, several candidates
-- including John Edwards -- were asked: "Harry Truman said a man not honorable in his marital relations is not usually honorable in any other. Some voters don't feel comfortable supporting a candidate who has not been faithful to his or her spouse. Can you understand their position?" Couric's favorite is when she asked candidates, "What are you most afraid of losing?" Palin and Biden were asked to explain why Roe vs. Wade was a good or bad Supreme Court decision. They were asked to describe a Supreme Court decision that they disagreed with. They'll also be asked about Thomas Jefferson's writings on the separation between church and state. Kaplan said he felt Couric handled the Palin interview with "polite persistence." The veteran newsman, who has produced Peter Jennings and Ted Koppel among others, said he's never worked with a better interviewer than Couric. Her "CBS Evening News" interviews now are usually pointed and direct. Although Couric doesn't necessarily agree
-- she's proud of her Michael J. Fox interview from her first months -- initially it seemed she did some interviews simply for the sake of using that skill. "When you try to do those that are artificial, most of the time they blow up in your face," Kaplan said. One disheartening sign for CBS is that the broadcast hasn't moved much in the ratings. But Kaplan noted that CBS was second behind ABC for its coverage of the first McCain-Obama debate last week. "The joy for me is that she's getting her due now," Kaplan said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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