Walz Watch: Body Language and Deep Fake Edition
New York Magazine is taking a closer look at how and why Tim Walzâs body language may play a key role in connecting with peopleâeven from a distance. According to features writer Kerry Howley, he knows how to work a finger gun (âat a middle distance, he will deploy two finger guns; at a shorter distance, oneâ), he knows when and how to point like a pro (ââI love you,â someone shouts from the crowd. Walz points straight at him. âYou love America!ââ), and he is definitely the guy you want on our charades team (âIt is difficult to make policy physical, but Walz could mime the agenda if pressed. He has a lexicon of moves.â). The story also covers Walz lore from his teaching days and time repping rural Minnesota in Congress, but itâs Howleyâs understanding of political theater and staged communication that make this a fun read.
(Folks will now be able to analyze Walzâs physical mastery more regularly leading up to the election, as NBC News reports that Walz has been released from his âbubble,â with plans to stop by The View and The Daily Show in the coming weeks.)
Meanwhile, on the dark side of the web, aka Twitter/X, Qanon accounts have been circulating a deep fake video of a former student accusing the VP candidate of sexual assault. Itâs not real; itâs AI from a dude, DotNetYoutube, who Washington Post reporter Will Sommer says is âan up-and-coming new player in the âmaking things upâ corner of online Trumpworld,â noting that the âappearance of a cursor in a witnessâs key emailsâ suggests that âDocNetYoutube wrote it himself.â
Red Guy Living in a Sea of Blue Is More Than He Seems
Shawn Holster is just a Republican living in south Minneapolis, and thatâs hard, you know? In this (kinda, supposed to feel-good?) story from Winter Keefer at MinnPost, Holster says he wants folks to know that he gets along with his liberal neighbor, hasnât experienced any property damage since decorating his lawn (âIâve had a Trump sign in my front yard⊠and I havenât had a single brick through my windowâ), and he, like many Republicans, is âjust like you. We have the same concerns.â
But what the story only mentions briefly is that Holster isnât just some friendly guy with GOP signage on his lawnâheâs president and chair of the Minneapolis Republican Party. One of his first moves as leader in 2023 was to host a âRockân Barbecueâ party in the former Clubhouse Jager space. The North Loop spot, owned by Julius DeRoma, closed after it was discovered that he had donated to ex-Ku Klux Klan grand wizard (and surprise Jill Stein supporter) David Dukeâs 2016 U.S. Senate campaign. Holster told Racket at the time that he thought DeRomaâs support of Duke âwas a dumb idea,â but also assured us that his orgâs âcalendar doesnât include doing Klan shit anytime soon.â
Holster is also a former political candidate; in 2022 he ran for District 63âs Minnesota Senate seat, ultimately losing by 71 points to 25-year-old DFL rival Zaynab Mohamed. A quick perusal of his Twitter account suggests heâs anti-trans, thinks the Strib is run by communists, and is a voting trutherâyup, sounds like some bipartisan âsame concernsâ to me!
A Sweet Labor Story About Sugar Beet Farmers
In 1973, the Red River Valley Sugarbeet Growers Association purchased the American Crystal Sugar Co., making them not only the biggest sugar beet producer in the country but also the first sugar beet agricultural cooperative. In this labor story from Workday Magazine, Amie Stager checks in with Mark Froemke, president of the West Minnesota Area Labor Council/Red River Valley, AFL-CIO, who has been working in the sugar beet industry since the 1970s. âI never lost that, the thrill watching them harvest sugar beets,â he confesses. Froemke also reflects on the ACSâs 22-month worker lockout from 2011 to 2013, possible changes in child labor laws in the meatpacking industry, and the challenges of advocating for workersâ rights in a red region.
37 Years Ago Today, the Twins Opened Game 1 of the World Series
This World Series opening segment has it all: an aerial shot of the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome; liberal use of the Field of Dreams soundtrack; Al Michaels describing the World Series as a âthoroughly movable feast, and your town never knows itâs coming your way until days before.â I wasnât even living here when this happened, yet I feel nostalgia watching it.
On this day in 1987 Al Michaels opened Game 1 of the World Series in dramatic fashion and it was glorious⊠pic.twitter.com/nvPMxz4oH0
â Jeff (@MNTwinsZealot) October 17, 2024
Finger guns honestly rock no matter the context so Iâm into it