This was the final interview I did on the final day before I left. Grace was shy about doing the interview but James convinced her to do it and I think she was spectacular.
If there was a person who put the feeling of what CPAC meant to all the average conservatives who spent their hard earned money to come here it was Grace.
In the last of my congressional interviews Stacy and I talk to Patrick Murray running for Congress in the Virginia’s 8th district:
As I mentioned in the interview there are an awful lot of ex military that seem to be running for congress. That’s a good thing. This is also the second to last video from CPAC waiting to go up (not counting the field guide to bloggers).
Oh and if you are wondering why there was so much background noise, the answer is here:
And we got hit with a fair amount of it this morning. Really wet heavy stuff.
I had a little digging this morning but a whole lot less than I should have since my neighbor across the street decided to snowblow the heavy wet stuff out for me. This person doesn’t just have the milk of human kindness, he has it homogenized and pasteurized.
Can you believe he did all that work for me?
I was actually in a hurry to get to Romano’s since he had agreed to let me film him actually making sausage, however because it was so slow by the time I got there he had already made it.
The freshest sausage you can get.
Next week I’ll be sure to get there at 9 a.m. I’ll also see if I can catch him making the corned beef for St. Patrick’s day. He has hundreds of pounds of it already on order from customers.
When I got outside I was surprised to see a cameraman filming across the street from the place.
Live from the Romano's parking lot!
So knowing me what do you think came next, you guessed it…
What I think is even more interesting than that 120-1 ratio between film shot and film left on the cutting room floor would be the editing process. How does one decide which 60 seconds are the best 60 seconds for a broadcast?