4.30pm - By DAVID USBORNE in New York
Reality television just gets better. On Thursday (Friday NZ time), viewers in America will be invited to watch a live special, called the 'Presidential Debate', that promises to be so compelling that every network will broadcast it simultaneously. It will star two middle-aged men competing for one prize: the White House. Best of all, it is the viewers who will ultimately decide which of the two contestants, George W. Bush or John Kerry, is the winner.
Between Thursday and then, there will be two more episodes as well as a bonus feature when their running mates will get to play their own version. As always in reality TV, it will not just be the contestants' words that will matter. Almost as important will be their demeanour.
Who will the viewers most easily connect with? Will Kerry impress or send us running to the fridge for beer? If Bush stumbles on his syntax, will we wince or barely care? The ties they choose, the frequency of their smiles, how they use their hands - all could be deciding factors.
From now until Thursday, the normal campaigning rhythms will come almost to a standstill, as both candidates disappear into semi-purdah to get ready for the 90-minute ordeal.
Senator Kerry, the Democrat, is at a resort town in Wisconsin, huddled with aides and image consultants, while President Bush began his preparations at the weekend at his ranch in Crawford, Texas.
Rarely has a series of presidential debates generated such an intense level of anticipation.
Pitted against one another will be two men with much in common, including their well-heeled backgrounds and experiences as students of a former Yale University oratory professor who coached both of them on debating. Yet they are men with starkly differing political personas.
The President is good at folksy while Kerry suffers from seeming too clever. And if Kerry is clever, then Mr Bush can on occasion run the risk of turning his affection for making things simple and straightforward into seeming intellectually simplistic.
Of the myriad pieces of advice that both men will be hearing is this: don't be afraid.
For Bush it could mean appearing flustered - and mangling his words. For Kerry, nerves usually lead him to chop his hands through the air in a way that is distractingly out of kilter with the words coming out of his mouth.
The stakes may be highest for Mr Kerry. Thursday's debate and the two others to follow - one in Missouri and one in Arizona - could be Mr Kerry's last chance to up-end the race before it is too late. Voters know him least well. If he outscores the president - on substance and on likeability - he might just vault over him in the polls and capture a lead that he could consolidate in the final weeks until polling day.
As requested by the Bush camp, the topics for debate at their first face-off will be foreign relations, terrorism and Iraq. This was meant to be the president's strongest turf, but recently Mr Kerry has signalled that he considers it ripe for exploitation.
For ten days now, he has been fiercely attacking the president's "stubborn incompetence" on Iraq and accusing him of failing to come clean on the mess there. Iraq will leave little scope for levity, even as historians admonish that wit and humour can be a debater's best weapons.
This is tricky for Mr Kerry who has been told to smile more and look less grave - even though he cannot help his heavy eyelids and almost basset-hound facial droop. But there may be a trap here for Mr Bush, whose appeal is his chummy conviviality. His smile could become a smirk.
"If I were prepping Bush," said Paul Begala, a former Clinton aide and Kerry advisor, "I would warn him about crossing the line from self-confident to cocky. People like his self-confidence but there are moments, particularly when he's jacked up on adrenaline, when he crosses that line."
The Republican spin on Iraq is that Mr Kerry would be a hesitant leader, too weak to win the war or deter terrorists. Mr Bush, by contrast, is portrayed as resolute and unerring.
Indeed last night, he was due to say on Fox News last night that he has no regrets about declaring 'Mission Accomplished' on an aircraft carrier last May, even though the months that followed showed that the conflict in Iraq had actually barely begun.
But if Mr Kerry hit his mark, Mr Bush's more-resolute-than-thou script may fray.
"His strongest quality is also a kind of weakness to be exploited, so you don't know how this is going to play out," said Wayne Fields of Washington University in St Louis.
"If all of a sudden the situation looks more complicated, and Kerry is able to show he can take things on and master them, then this could turn against Bush."
Neither side, meanwhile, is under-estimating the opposition. It is a quirk of history that both men have drawn over the years on the teaching of their shared Yale oratory professor, Rollin Osterweis.
Both men were at Yale two years apart from one another, and both took classes on oratory and debating skills with the professor. It was Mr Kerry who became one of his star pupils. Most famously, in 1966 Mr Kerry took on a travelling British group to debate the relevance of the United Nations. Mr Kerry championed the world body and defeated the visitors.
Fully aware of his debating prowess, the Bush camp is playing the game of lowering expectations.
"Senator Kerry has been preparing his whole life for this moment," commented Dan Bartlett, the White House spokesman.
"He was an all-star debater in prep school and an all-star debater in Ivy League. He was 20 years in the most august debating society in years, the United States Senate."
"Will President Bush step on his own line and maybe not pronounce a word right? I bet he will. But, I think after the 90 minutes, there won't be any ambiguity on his positions."
- INDEPENDENT
Herald Feature: US Election
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Americans look forward to presidential debate
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