read more about this amazing woman
That makes some sense. The incoming presidential couple, Barack and Michelle Obama
, bear superficial resemblance to John and Jacqueline Kennedy of the 1960s Camelot White House — charisma, vigor, her fondness for sheath dresses, for instance.
(picture under cc-license by zoepf )
But maybe the most obvious similarity is that many Americans are as excited and curious about her as they are about him.
“People will be riveted,” predicts Donna Brazile, Democratic strategist and CNN analyst. “She is going to set a record in the amount of attention she will receive.”
President John F. Kennedy once jokingly introduced himself, during a news media-frenzied visit to France, as “the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris.” Some day, the president-elect may have occasion to say the same.
Americans are seeking to learn more about Michelle Obama
and sort out what kind of first lady she might be.
The role of first lady
“The first lady has always been a helpmate and sounding board for the president, his most trusted adviser, and that’s always a given,” said Ann Stock, a White House
social secretary under President Bill Clinton.
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December 21, 2008
she might be the perfect stimulus for the fashion industry…
Michelle Obama will soon be the nation’s first lady and mom in chief, but others are expecting even grander things from her, like saving the fashion industry.

The flagging fashion industry, for one, is hoping that the future first lady will inspire women to keep on buying despite the dour economy.
“We’re all obviously trying to look at the silver lining,” designer Norma Kamali told ABCNews.com. “Where do we look for hope, an opportunity to create good feelings for the customer? There is real hope with Michelle Obama. I think she can keep women interested in purchasing.”
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November 21, 2008
the whole family is fashionable
!
It turns out that Michelle Obama may not be the only fashion trendsetter in her family.
After 10-year-old Malia Obama appeared on stage Tuesday night in a red silk taffeta dress made by Biscotti Inc. , the high-end children’s clothing label says it started receiving calls from retail buyers seeking to order the piece.
“Stores are going crazy all over it,” says Carrie Martin, spokesperson for the Oakland, Calif., label, which plans to put out a press release noting that Malia wore its $110 bubble-hemmed dress on election night. Unfortunately for the label, whose $50 to $120 girls’ dresses are sold by retailers such as Neiman Marcus, it had sold out of the style well before Tuesday. “It would have been nice to get some sales out of it,” says Bernadette Reiss, co-owner of Biscotti. At Neiman Marcus, which sells the dress online, spokeswoman Ginger Reeder says the Web site “saw a blip” in sales of the piece yesterday.
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November 7, 2008
Let´s hope the youth in Iran will have it´s say
If Iran’s Westernised youths were given the choice of Barack Obama or Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in a free election, an overwhelming majority would back the American.
That, at least, may be the sneaking suspicion of Tehran’s ossified leaders who harbour a gnawing, corrosive mistrust of their own people. Why else would they obsessively screen candidates in their bogus elections to prevent the annoyingly popular liberal reformers from standing?
Yet in a nation where two thirds of the population are younger than 30, Iran’s authorities have almost ended their fruitless efforts to ban satellite dishes. They turn a blind eye while countless teenagers enjoy American films and music.
The regime denounces the United States as the “Great Satan”, but bookshops outside Tehran University sell dictionaries of “American idiom” and even guides to adopting American accents.
This is American cultural power, perhaps the most important dimension of national strength. Until this week, America’s “soft power” was confined to the appeal of its fashion, music and films. Young Iranians could still unite behind their regime in reviling America’s leaders, especially President George W Bush.
Mr Obama’s victory has changed all that. At a stroke, America’s cultural appeal now extends all the way to the charisma and oratorical prowess of its new leader.
Even the full name of the president-elect, Mubarack Hussein Obama, might be calculated to appeal to Iran’s youth. Hussein was the revered founder of the Shia tradition of Islam, while every Muslim knows that Mubarack is Arabic for “Blessed”.
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November 6, 2008
I think the White House will become more fashionable
The Obamas’ first official appearance as first family-elect will be long remembered for many weighty historic reasons, but it could also signal another new beginning: An entirely different fashion sense in the White House.
The Obama family took the stage in Chicago Tuesday night in color-coordinated outfits, all with touches of red or black.
For Michelle Obama, no stuffy suits or demure pastels here: Instead she wore a striking red-and-black dress designed by well-regarded, but not-so-mainstream, Narciso Rodriguez.
President-elect Barack Obama wore the same style dark-navy suit custom-made by Hart Schaffner Marx that he wore at the Democratic Convention, the company says, accompanied with a deep red, striped necktie.
Older daughter Malia wore a red bubble-hem dress, while the younger Sasha wore a black dress with an oversized bow on the front.
Together, they made a pleasing picture of coordination and confidence, style-watchers say.
“One of the things about Michelle and Barack is that they have classic American style,” said Pamela Fiori, editor in chief of Town & Country.
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November 6, 2008
quite entertaining article
So this week Americans go to the polls to select their new president. Standing in the booths, punching their ballots, they will consider the economy, they will consider policies, and they will consider – clothes.
Clothes? Despite the assertion by the McCain-Palin campaign spokeswoman Tracey Schmitt that “with all the important issues facing the country, it’s remarkable we’re talking about pantsuits and blouses” (in reference to the news that the Republican National Committee spent $150,000 on Governor Palin’s wardrobe) the truth is, in politics as in everything, we have a lot to say about clothing because our clothing has a lot to say about us.
And nowhere has this been more obvious than in the case of the two other highest-profile women in the US presidential election, Cindy McCain and Michelle Obama. Almost without exception, their style choices offer a clear commentary on where their respective husbands and parties stand. To examine the prospective first ladies’ wardrobes is thus not to ignore “the important issues” in America today; it is, on the contrary, to confront the vast differences between Senators John McCain and Barack Obama – differences in values and vision that define this campaign and will determine its winner.
Of the two women’s fashion statements, Cindy McCain’s are probably the easiest to decode, as they visibly embody four basic Republican principles. The first – consistent with her husband’s Bush-aligned voting record – is Continuity. Mrs McCain, like Laura Bush, favours Oscar de la Renta, who has long been the designated White House couturier, and who dressed both ladies for the opening night of the Republican National Convention. Like her other campaign-trail ensembles, the gold shirtwaist Cindy McCain donned for that occasion reflected the formula Nancy Reagan developed in the 1980s. Brightly coloured and unfailingly feminine, McCain’s frocks and suits project an image of soignée, conservative womanhood. (This look couldn’t, significantly, be farther from the aggressive, pant-suited feminism of one-time Democratic presidential hopeful, Senator Hillary Clinton.) Thus attired, the former Arizona rodeo queen is rebranded as the perfect Republican helpmate: Nancy 2.0.
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November 3, 2008
wow
! She is a real fashionista
!
Last night Politico.com broke the story ‘RNC shells out $150K for Palin fashion’. The astronomical amount of money has been spent to dress Sarah Palin and her family since she was appointed as John McCain’s running mate in late August.The McCain campaign released a statment a few hours after the story broke on the internet to say that the whole affair was so trivial: “With all of the important issues facing the country right now, it’s remarkable that we’re spending time talking about pantsuits and blouses,” said spokesperson Tracey Schmitt. “It was always the intent that the clothing go to a charitable purpose after the campaign.”
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October 22, 2008