Executive
Communications Coach Has Advice for Bush's Inaugural Address
Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) January 11, 2004
-- Even Bush's most ardent admirers, when pressed, will admit
that our current Commander in Chief is not exactly what you
would call an orator. Some of his detractors would go so far
as to say he is an embarrassment behind a podium. Executive
communications coach LeeAundra Temescu falls somewhere in the
middle. “He has yet to make a truly awful gaffe in any
of his important speeches but I still cringe a lot when I hear
him.” And his second inaugural address on January 20?
“Well, that’s about as important as it gets speech
wise. He better not mess up,” she adds bluntly.
A national award winning public speaker
and speechwriter, Temescu is also a political commentator and
author of the forthcoming “POTUS Flubs: Lessons from the
Ten Not-So-Greatest Moments of Presidential Rhetoric”
and this time of the year is always an exciting one for her.
“The inaugural address and the State of the Union are
really two of the only occasions for pure oratory left today.”
Presidential speeches like inaugural
addresses are also the only real opportunity most Americans
get to see an unfiltered view of their president before he’s
been chopped up into ten second sound bites. That means the
stakes are high.
So is the bar. Temescu notes that many
of our most famous presidential quotations come from inaugural
addresses. “We have nothing to fear but fear itself”
was uttered by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his first inaugural.
Thirty years later, in his inaugural address, John F. Kennedy
exhorted Americans to “ask not what your country can do
for you. Ask what you can do for your country.” And if
those precedents weren’t intimidating enough, consider
that the speech many experts consider to be the finest in American
history was Abraham Lincoln’s second inaugural.
With all that weight on his shoulders,
what’s a "rhetorically-challenged” president
like Bush to do with his upcoming second inaugural?
Temescu has been watching Bush closely
for four years now and has some advice:
Keep it simple – “Bush is
at his best when he’s using plain, folksy language"
Temescu says. "Sometimes his speeches, though beautifully
written or perhaps because they are so beautifully written,
aren’t right for him. He needs to forgo the lofty, exalted
passages that his speechwriters love and talk to us in simple
words.” Does that mean sacrifice eloquence? “Absolutely
not” asserts Temescu. “Reagan showed us you could
be simple and eloquent at the same time. He had speechwriters
who understood his natural style and wrote to it. Bush and his
writers need to follow that example.”
Keep it above the fray – “The
Inaugural address is less about the political process and agenda
and more about a vision of how our President sees the nation
and the role of the presidency in that narrative.” While
Bush’s father famously sniffed at the “vision thing”,
Temescu insists that is it vital this President Bush recognize
the need for a compelling narrative that flies far above partisan
bickering. This year, that’s even more important. The
campaign trail and even the State of the Union are more appropriate
forums for throwing “red meat” to the core. “The
inaugural is a ‘grown-up’ speech.”
Keep it hopeful – Americans are
by nature an optimistic people. President Carter learned the
hard way with his infamous “general malaise” speech
that you can’t give a downer address. “While you
mustn't ignore reality, you've got to give people a reason to
hope for a better future. That was FDR’s gift. Even in
the grimmest days of the Great Depression and World War II,
he conveyed a sense of promise, of what America has been and
can be. This is what Bush must do.”
Temescu also has some tips for a more
presidential delivery style: He has to enunciate more clearly.
“His diction is really atrocious sometimes. When he says
‘fer’ instead of ‘for’ it’s very
un-presidential.” He could also benefit from speaking
in a lower register. Bush inherited his father’s thin
reedy voice and “unfortunately”, says Temescu “we
associate that with weakness”.
The Contrary Public Speaker is an executive
communications coaching firm based in Los Angeles. Founded by
national award winning public speaker, author and commentator,
LeeAundra Temescu, it provides high-level presentation skills,
in-the-moment training and executive presence for senior level
managers and professionals.
Contact Information:
LeeAundra Temescu
The Contrary Public Speaker
(310) 578-9212
www.thecontrarypublicspeaker.com
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Press Contact: Leeaundra Temescu
Company Name: THE CONTRARY PUBLIC SPEAKER
Email: pr@thecontrarypublicspeaker.com
Phone: 310 578 9212
Website: www.thecontrarypublicspeaker.com