Richard Reeves
Jet Lag: The Travels of a Bicoastal Reporter

Jet Lag: The Travels of a Bicoastal Reporter

Containing some of the best critical reporting and analysis of American government and media, Jet Lag is a personal commentary from a man who, as one of the nation's major political writers, molds political action at the top level.

In this richly textured collection of original and previously published pieces, Richard Reeves identifies America's emerging East-West rivalry and warns of its harmful effect on the democratic system because "politics, after all, is about dividing up the resources of a society."

Reeves straddles this cultural tug-of-war by dividing his time between New York, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C., and studies the battle from the unique perspective of one above the fight. Readers will relish his insights into everything from politics to TV imperialism, hot tubs, and million-dollar real-estate firms.

Long before others of the media, Reeves predicted that Ronald Reagan would capture the presidency, and in Jet Lag he forsees a time when television technology will permit direct electronic voting.


Reviews

"Dick Reeves is one of the best political reporters in the country." Edwin Newman, NBC News

"He has the snappiest typewriter east or west of the Potomac with no mercy for knaves or fools." Fred Friendly, professor emeritus, Journalism, Columbia University

"Reeves is a pleasure to disagree with." William Safire, New York Times


Latest Column

Obama So Far: Good Job!

LOS ANGELES — This is about what I think, expressed cleverly by another columnist, Froma Harrop of the Providence Journal:


Column Archive

A Congressman Reaches Out -- And Ducks!

RESEDA, Calif. — Rep. Brad Sherman, a Democrat from the 27th District of California in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles, is a congressman who is obviously not afraid of his constituents. Many are these days, but Sherman takes out advertisements in local newspapers urging people to come and reason with (or yell at) him at "Town Hall" meetings.

Naturalized On The Fourth Of July

LOS ANGELES — Among the charges leveled against King George III on July 4, 1776, in the Declaration of Independence was this one:

The Special Relationship Is Very Special

WASHINGTON — The 300th British soldier was killed in Afghanistan last week, which means that, proportionately, Great Britain is paying a higher price in manpower and money out there. That's 300 dead in a 10,000-troop commitment compared with the United States' 1,126 deaths with a commitment of more than 94,000 troops right now.

Let Us Now Praise Famous Conspiracy Theories

WASHINGTON — Last Saturday morning, Mike Allen's Politico Playbook, the early-morning blog Washington whisperers wake up to, began this way:

The California Winners: Corporate Power

LOS ANGELES — You can't fool all the people all the time, only about 48 percent. That, rather than the triumph of women billionaires, may be the abiding lesson of California's spring elections this year.

Where Does The Buck Stop?

LOS ANGELES — President Obama, in an impossible position, decided to take a page from the Harry Truman-John F. Kennedy playbook as oil fouled the Gulf of Mexico and the second year of his presidency.

The Republican Political Bubble

LOS ANGELES — In a rather charming video at randpaul2010.com, the Republican candidate for the United States Senate from Kentucky, Rand Paul himself, a libertarian by birthright, says that he was not named for Ayn Rand. The writer is acclaimed as a prophet by many libertarians, although she once said she would rather vote for the Marx Brothers than a libertarian.

Pentagon Papers II

NEW YORK — Henry Fairlie, the British-American contrarian who wrote for The New Republic and The Washington Post, among many others, derided the publication of the Pentagon Papers as nothing more than a summary of what Americans already knew about the war in Vietnam. To prove his point in those pre-Google days, Fairlie spent hour after hour plowing through newspaper, magazine and government archives, finding stories and public documents revealing the same information the Defense Department was classifying during the 1960s.

Events Are In The Saddle

NEW YORK — Let us now praise famous cliches.

California's Stimulus Package: Meg Whitman

LOS ANGELES — There is a sweet little proposition on this year's California ballot, 15 by number. Authored by state Sen. Loni Hancock, a Democrat from Berkeley, Proposition 15 would institute public financing for one state office, secretary of state.

Are We A Nation Of Crooks?

LOS ANGELES — In this country, you are innocent until proven guilty. OK, so Bernie Madoff is a criminal. But a lot of other people on Wall Street and beyond are only crooks — so far.

Obama In The Quagmire

WASHINGTON — Is Hamid Karzai really nuts? Or are we?

The Lady Of The House

SAN FRANCISCO — Nancy Pelosi was a Democratic Party activist practically from the moment she was born, the daughter of a Maryland congressman. But at 47, the mother of five children had never run for public office — and did not think she ever would. She had promised herself she would never even think about it until her youngest finished high school.

The Power Of Zero

DALLAS — Remember the good old days? Remember when a Republican senator, Olympia Snowe of Maine, said she heard history calling? Well, history did call and not a single Republican answered in Washington. Zero in the Senate. Zero in the House.

Obama's Secret Weapon: The Tea Partiers

LOS ANGELES — The Republican Party of California met in convention last weekend and listened to five candidates for governor and United States senator in the state's June 8 primary election. They fell all over themselves trying to sound like tea partiers.

Students Wake Up In California

LOS ANGELES — Thousands of California students, from graduate students to kindergarten kids, walked out of their classrooms last Thursday to peacefully (mostly) demonstrate against the decline of education in the Golden State. Could this be the start of something big? Something bigger than tea bags?