In his speech about race and religion today, Barack Obama dodged the question of when he became aware of the worst statements by his preacher, Jeremiah Wright.
Gen. David Petraeus was diplomatic in his answer, but the head of U.S. troops in Iraq left little doubt that if a new president wanted to pull out sooner than he thinks wise, Petraeus would be happy to go home.
How's this for a balanced "Today Show" panel to discuss the impact of Jeremiah Wright's extremism on Barack Obama: two left-wingers who agree it shouldn't hurt him and one who suggests it might even help?
CNN's Anderson Cooper is frustrated by the focus on the outrageous statements of Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama's spiritual adviser. Cooper said such reports have "nothing to do with actual issues."
On "The Today Show" of March 12, financial expert Jim Cramer got choked up over the plight of his friends, New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer and wife Silda.
Washington Post editorialist Ruth Marcus wants people to know that Silda Wall Spitzer, the wife of New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, is a "serious" person, not a stand-by-your-man type.
If Hillary Clinton's gambit of floating Barack Obama as her vice president had been a play and "The Today Show" crew the theater critics, they would have left at intermission to begin penning their critique.
ABC's David Wright thinks it's a problem that Hillary Clinton's "It's 3 a.m." ad about presidential experience worked effectively against Barack Obama.
Democratic National Committee chief Howard Dean called "complete nonsense" the suggestion by NBC's David Gregory that a Democratic nominee chosen by party elites would be undemocratic.
Appearing on "Hardball," Newsweek's Evan Thomas claimed that contrary to Hillary Clinton's "it's 3 a.m." ad, at that hour she would be angry or icy, not steady and cool.