Newt Gingrich is a TV Host Now. Which Failed 2012 Candidate Did Himself the Most Good?

Covering a presidential campaign can be a soul-deadening exercise. But it can be unpredictable. Anyone paying a little attention might predict which candidate will win a party’s nomination (Romney in 2012, obviously, from the get-go), but who thought Rick Santorum would rebuild his public image by camping out at Iowa Pizza Ranches? Who, in 2008, thought that Ron Paul would launch a national movement? Most media organizations were too busy embedding with sleepy Fred Thompson’s campaign to notice Paul.

I’m thinking of this in the wake CNN’s announcement that it will relaunch Crossfire, and Newt Gingrich will be one of the co-hosts. A cynic might say that the other co-hosts — S.E. Cupp, Van Jones, Stephanie Cutter — suggest that Gingrich has fallen to earth. But c’mon, a struggling cable network is giving him its new tentpole politics show! That wouldn’t have happened without Gingrich’s 2012 bid.

With this in mind, here’s an ordinal ranking of the 2012 GOP candidates and how much good they did themselves by running for president.

11. Michele Bachmann. Before she launched her campaign, Bachmann was the resilient star of Tea Party politics. Once she affixed a “kick me” sign for national reporters and embeds, she imploded, and nearly lost re-election to her House seat. (This after running a bowing, scraping campaign focused on what she could do for the district, the opposite of her national campaign rhetoric.) She’s retiring next year instead of losing to a well-funded Democrat.

10. Thad McCotter. Actually, he fell even further than Bachmann, but from a lower starting point. McCotter gave up a House seat he’d basically drawn for himself in order to blow a bunch of money on the Iowa Straw Poll, get fewer votes than people who didn’t show up, and bungle his re-election campaign by submitting too few signatures. He also squandered his reputation as a congressional wit by letting national TV viewers actually see and hear him.

9. Mitt Romney. Maybe the least-loved losing candidate of either major party since Michael Dukakis. There is no Mitt Romney legacy in the GOP — Paul Ryan was an iconic figure before Romney got to him, and tarred him with the loser brush.

8. Rick Perry. No campaign has fallen apart as spectaculary as this one. Rudy Giuliani’s 2008 bid was always going to run up against the barricades of GOP social conservatism. Perry was a perfect-on-paper candidate who ran when it was too late, and after he had gone loopy from undisclosed experimental back surgery. He returned to govern a state that’s still booming, but he’s diminished as a national figure.

7. Gary Johnson. Had he run in 2008, Johnson’s social-focused libertarianism might have beaten out Ron Paul’s and defined that sector of the American right. Johnson’s delay meant he existed in Paul’s shadow, settling for a third-party campaign as a popular fringe figure.

6. Tim Pawlenty. Would the Financial Services Roundtable have hired him had his profile not been boosted by years of running for president? He’s benefited financially from the campaign like no other candidate.

5. Ron Paul. He did the most good for himself in 2008, but in 2012 Paul came within spitting distance of two caucus wins (Iowa, Maine) and his movement consolidated control of several state parties. Plus, he turned his Fed and gold stances into Republican orthodoxy.

4. Jon Huntsman. The press loves Republicans who Speak Truth to Power (i.e., tell Republicans that they should take positions that appeal more to the press), so the utter failure of Huntsman’s campaign did not stop him becoming a reasonably-well-cited centrist pundit and No Labels… leader? Is that the word?

3. Herman Cain. By quitting the race as a sex scandal brought him down, by not fighting on, Cain retained most of the fandom he’d won in his primary debates. His “CainTV” empire isn’t impressing anybody, but his radio show is, in the words of still-consigliere Mark Block, “kicking ass.”

2. Newt Gingrich. See above.

1. Rick Santorum. I vividly remember the 2008 Values Voter Summit in D.C., when I ran into an incredibly bored-looking Santorum manning an exhibit hall booth. He was running an organization that offered to place Christian-specific V-chips in TVs, and trying to end conversations with teenagers who wouldn’t stop talking. Five years later, he’s enough of a national figure that reporters will quote his opinion when the Supreme Court rules or the Congress kills a bill. He’s received, for the first time, sympathetic press coverage about his personal life (namely his disabled daughter, who has long outlived doctors’ pessimistic predictions). He’s doing okay, thanks to his awareness that being “the non-Mormon guy who didn’t have an affair” would be a great position in the stretch of a primary season dominated by Mitt Romney.

via Weigel http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2013/06/27/newt_gingrich_is_a_tv_host_now_which_failed_2012_candidate_did_himself_the.html

Do We Need Rules To Make Sure We Don’t Pollute Mars?

The cost of sterilizing spacecraft for Mars is just too damn high, researchers say. And then there is the issue of how bad we are at it anyway.

At NASA, there is an entire office dedicated to preventing any living Earth creatures (think bacteria, not people) from inadvertently landing on other planets. But two astrobiologists argue in the latest Nature Geoscience that the Office of Planetary Protection–which functions sort of like the EPA of space–should give up trying to fully sterilize spacecraft for Mars. If transfers of life to Mars are even possible, Alberto Fairén and Dirk Schulze-Makuch write, it’s probably already happened.

“If Earth life cannot thrive on Mars, we don’t need any special cleaning protocol for our spacecraft,” Fairén wrote Co.Exist in an email. “And if Earth life actually can survive on Mars, it most likely already does, after 4 billion years of meteoritic transport and four decades of spacecraft investigations not always following sterilization procedures.”

Read Full Story

    

via Fast Company http://www.fastcoexist.com/1682448/do-we-need-rules-to-make-sure-we-dont-pollute-mars?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

This 22-Year-Old Just Landed $25 Million for a Secret App

This 22-Year-Old Just Landed $25 Million for a Secret App

Lucas Duplan dropped out of Stanford, brought a bunch of his buddies with him, and got to work on something daunting: creating an app that lets you pay for things with your phone. This is daunting because so many other things let you do it. Despite this, and the fact that his app is a total mystery, powerful VCs just handed him $25 million.

Duplan’s company—which isn’t available for anyone to actually use—is called Clinkle, and all we know about it is that it looks like this:

This 22-Year-Old Just Landed $25 Million for a Secret App

Which is a mix of a lot of apps that already exist. Details are scant: you can use it to send money to other people or businesses, sort of like Square, PayPal, Google Wallet, Venmo, and many, many more. TechCrunch has an anonymous source saying the “uses high frequency sound to communicate between devices,” which would be something unique, and Business Insider says Duplan has “secured a number of patents for his technology,” but there’s no listing for any relevant patents awarded to Duplan, Clinkle, or his attorneys.

None of this stopped Intel, Accel, Andreessen Horowitz, Intuit, Peter Thiel, Marc Benioff and Diane Greene from partying down on a $25 million joint investment in Clinkle, which its PR reps say is the “largest seed round in Silicon Valley history.” This is trumpeted as a categorically great thing for the mystery startup, with zero self-awareness over how similar grandstanding has embarrassingly exploded in everyone’s face before. Biggest means best in these parts, and it’s in Clinkle’s interest to focus on the mega money, rather than telling anyone outside of a venture capitalist cabal why the app is worth more than five dollars.

Clinkle’s website shows it’s already ready to put that cash to use:

This 22-Year-Old Just Landed $25 Million for a Secret App

Laser tag first, products later.

via Gawker http://valleywag.gawker.com/this-22-year-old-just-landed-25-million-for-a-secret-a-597986864

Public transit patent trolls get thrown under the bus

In a field of horrible, amoral scumbags, patent troll ArrivalStar is an exceptionally awful enterprise. They have a huge portfolio of ridiculous patents for obvious ways of tracking where public transit vehicles are and using that to coordinate schedule information, and they use that portfolio to extort massive sums from public transit systems in cities across America. After a years-long reign of terror — which included the Electronic Frontier Foundation getting one of their patents gutted on rexamination — the The American Public Transportation Association and the Public Patent Foundation have filed suit to get the whole portfolio knocked out. Good luck, APTA and PubPat: our cash-strapped cities need you.

    

via Boing Boing http://boingboing.net/2013/06/27/public-transit-patent-trolls-g.html

Is This the NSA Leaker’s Special Travel Document?

The Spanish-language television network Univision has obtained what appears to be a copy of the special travel document granted to Edward Snowden by Ecuador to replace his cancelled American passport.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/confusion-over-n-s-a-leakers-special-travel-document/?_r=1&

Bert Stern, Elite Photographer Known for Images of Marilyn Monroe, Dies at 83

Mr. Stern helped redefine advertising and fashion art in the 1950s and ’60s.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/arts/bert-stern-elite-photographer-known-for-images-of-marilyn-monroe-dies-at-83.html

Wendy and the Boys

In Texas, the 11-hour filibuster by State Senator Wendy Davis and companion protests were “like a made-for-TV movie.”

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/opinion/collins-wendy-and-the-boys.html

Fight With Verizon Over Ending Landline Service Has New Front: Catskills

On Wednesday, the state attorney general’s office sought to prevent Verizon from “illegally installing” a device that allows a standard home phone to run over a cellular network.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/nyregion/fight-with-verizon-over-ending-landline-service-has-new-front-catskills.html

Same-Sex Marriage Law Could Mean Wedding Bells for Straight Hollywood Couples


Some star-powered duos have stuck to their pro-gay principles — others meant well, but reneged on their pledge.

read more

via Hollywood Reporter http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/same-sex-marriage-law-could-575872?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thr%2Fnews+%28The+Hollywood+Reporter+-+Top+Stories%29

U.S. Scoffs at Snowden Middle Name Mixup

The Justice Department isn’t buying the idea that a mixup over NSA leaker Edward Snowden’s middle name can be blamed for his flight from U.S. justice.

via Washington Wire http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2013/06/26/u-s-scoffs-at-snowden-middle-name-mixup/?mod=WSJBlog&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+wsj%2Fwashwire%2Ffeed+%28WSJ.com%3A+Washington+Wire%29