Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks with Jay Leno (Photo: PAUL DRINKWATER AFP/Getty Images)
It has become so standard for presidential candidates to visit all
kinds of TV shows to grab the attention of all kinds of voters that as
President Obama heads to an MTV forum on Friday, it's more notable who's
not going along: Mitt Romney.
On Wednesday, Obama visited with Jay Leno on his late-night chat show; last week he sat down with Jon Stewart on The Daily Show.
That's not to mention his appearances last month on The Late Show With David Letterman and The View, or his April slow-jamming the news with late-night host Jimmy Fallon.
Romney's last entertainment show appearance was on Live With Kelly and Michael
in September, accompanied by Ann Romney, where he seemed at ease
chatting about TV shows and other topics. Two weeks ago, he scrubbed a
plan to accompany his wife on The View. He last appeared on Leno in March and hasn't been on Letterman since 2011, when he appeared twice to read Top Ten lists.
Obama's appearance Wednesday on The Tonight Show gave him a
chance to criticize earlier remarks made by Indiana Republican Senate
candidate Richard Mourdock about rape and pregnancy.
"This is
exactly why you don't want a bunch of politicians, mostly male, making
decisions about women's health care decisions," Obama said.
Responding
to questions from the audience, Obama said trick-or-treaters can expect
candy if they knock on the White House door. He added that
trick-or-treaters from Ohio a key swing state in next month's election
can expect extra large Hershey bars.
Candidates dating back to
Bill Clinton, who played his saxophone on Arsenio Hall's show in 1992,
have gone on entertainment shows to demonstrate their charm in an
informal, fun setting with a generally friendly interviewer, and to get
in front of voters who may not be paying attention to the news. John
McCain, Al Gore, and John Kerry all sat on talk-show couches as
candidates. In 2000, George W. Bush appeared on Letterman via satellite. "The road to the Washington runs through me," Letterman told him.
For
candidates' wives, the appearances are more frequent: Ann Romney has
appeared with Leno and Rachael Ray, and Michelle Obama has chatted with
Letterman and done push-ups with Ellen DeGeneres.
Letterman has
joked about not being able to get Romney on the show. Executive Producer
Rob Burnett says both Romneys and vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan
have been invited. "Dave would love to chat with them. I don't know
what the problem is," Burnett says. "There's not a lot better use of
your time than sitting down next to Dave at this point in things. Dave
is culturally relevant, people trust him, he's funny but also smart and
will ask good questions."
Obama, while comfortable with the jokey
nature of talk shows, has gotten himself in trouble: He was criticized
for referring to the deaths of Americans in Libya as "not optimal" on The Daily Show, and in 2009, he apologized for making a disparaging reference to the Special Olympics during a Leno interview.
Entertainment
shows are also risky because while the questions may seem frivolous,
they are harder to predict than those in a news interview, said Jack
Pitney, politics professor at Claremont McKenna College in California.
"News reporters and campaign media people actually speak the same
language. They can pretty much read each other's minds."
The first candidate to dip a toe into potentially wacky waters was Richard Nixon, who made a cameo on Laugh In speaking the show's trademark "Sock it to me" line shortly before the 1968 election.
"The only potential downside is appearing to be less than serious at a
time when voters want their candidates and presidents to be more
serious," says Daniel Schnur, who in 2000 was communications director
for John McCain. That may be the Romney view: In September, the Romney
campaign criticized Obama for appearing on The View instead of
meeting with world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly. And
in a speech at a fundraiser the surreptitiously recorded video that
made headlines when Romney said he saw 47% of Americans as dependent on
government Romney said he had turned down Saturday Night Live because it "has the potential of looking slapstick and not presidential."
If
Romney is missing out on an opportunity to bond with potential voters
who get their political news from Jon Stewart, Obama may be spending
time talking to too broad an audience, Pitney says. Because the election
hangs on voters in a handful of swing states, "the question is whether
Obama would get more benefit for the time spent if he were actually in
Ohio and doing local TV."
"You can run a viable candidacy without
doing a lot of late-night comedy and daytime chat shows,"says Robert
Thompson, a professor of television at Syracuse University in New York.
"If you assess that you have certain skills and don't have certain
skills, it may be to your advantage to avoid them."
USA Today