I woke up this morning to a front page article in The New York Times all about how Carly Fiorina, the newly minted Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in California, dissed the incumbent Barbara Boxer’s hair in one of those “open mike” comments, the kind that percolate up when a candidate speaks without realizing the comments would be overheard. The press has jumped on this as a window into Fiorina’s character. Never comment on a woman’s hair, one pundit said. A stylist was quoted as saying that a woman’s hair is her personality. Maybe so. I am bald and a man so I just don’t know.
Now, I thought Fiorina did a terrible job at HP. It was five years of non-stop drama and she almost drove the company into the ground. To top it off, she is trying to claim credit for Mark Hurd’s subsequent success. That said, shouldn’t open-mike comments be out of bounds for reporters (although in a YouTube age they probably will always circulate to some degree.) Do we really learn anything from candidates’ off-hand remarks?
I am old enough to remember the ruckus Ronald Reagan raised when he tested a microphone by announcing that the bombing of the Soviet Union could begin. It turned out that Reagan was the least war-like of all our presidents in the last 30 years (though there were fewer military casualties in the Clinton administration).
Based on her tenure at HP, I think Fiorina is going to have a “character problem” because apparently a lot of people who have worked with her don’t like her and she seems to have gotten off on the wrong foot with the press as well. But should the voters of California choose their senator based on who has the best hair or what one candidate says about the way the other candidate looks?
Below are images of Carly Fiorina (before her bout with cancer and chemotherapy) and Barbara Boxer from 2007. So who has the best hair? As they say, “we report, you decide.”




















In “Free for All”, longtime scholar of digital media Elliot King begins with a brief history of the technological development of news media from the appearance of newspapers in the sixteenth century to the rise of broadcasting and the internet. Within that context, King demystifies the emergence of online communication and social media as the third major technological platform for news, making the current pace of change appear less vertiginous. “Free for All” provides anyone with an interest in the future of journalism the grounding necessary for an informed discussion. Elliot King, a veteran technology reporter, has been on the cutting edge of communication technology since he opened his first e-mail account in 1984. He is professor of communication at Loyola University in Maryland, founder of his school’s digital media lab, coauthor of The Online Journalist (2000), and special editor of three volumes of the Electronic Journal of Communication about journalism and the internet.