Politics are becoming very insular.
Wes Boyd: I think politics was getting very insular, and it's not . . . of course it's not just us. The technology. . . the communications technology has enabled new groups, new actors to be involved in politics and bring in a much more diverse group of folks into the mix. I believe that politics was getting too insular, that you have this sense of a broadcast politics where a few leads in Washington discuss things in dinner parties perhaps; and then that becomes the story of the day n the broadcast media. And what we watched . . . what all of America really watched politics for was the game -- the horserace -- not . . . not how we're actually solving problems we all face. 
Recorded on: 7/5/07
Wes Boyd: I think politics was getting very insular, and it's not . . . of course it's not just us. The technology. . . the communications technology has enabled new groups, new actors to be involved in politics and bring in a much more diverse group of folks into the mix. I believe that politics was getting too insular, that you have this sense of a broadcast politics where a few leads in Washington discuss things in dinner parties perhaps; and then that becomes the story of the day n the broadcast media. And what we watched . . . what all of America really watched politics for was the game -- the horserace -- not . . . not how we're actually solving problems we all face. 
Recorded on: 7/5/07