Reporter's notebook: Walz, Vance continue orange bowling tradition with traveling press corps

Shawna Mizelle Shawna Mizelle | 10-09 11:26

"We need to roll an orange this weekend," I texted the group chat of reporters that pack their lives into a suitcase and embeds with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, traveling across the country with the Democratic vice presidential candidate. 

It's a decades-old tradition stemming back to the days of late President Ronald Reagan. The press corps traveling with a candidate rolls an orange up the aisle of the campaign jet with a question written on it. An answer is written on the orange and then rolled back to reporters.

Continuing the tradition with an almost-out-of-ink Sharpie, reporters on Sunday embedded with Walz asked him who his dream dinner guest was. 

I attempted to bowl the orange up the aisle of the Boeing 757-200, but it made it about halfway up the aisle and hit another passenger's seat. I motioned for the passenger to roll the orange up further, and once he did, it was lost. Or so we thought. 

On Monday night, the orange was returned to us in the press motorcade with Walz's answer: "Bruce Springsteen."

Walz has been open about his love of Springsteen's music. In March 2023, he declared "Bruce Springsteen Day" in Minnesota. 

Springsteen, a 20-time Grammy-winner, endorsed the Harris-Walz ticket last week in a video. 

"Kamala Harris and Tim Walz are committed to a vision of this country that respects and includes everyone, regardless of class, religion, race, political point of view or sexual identity," Springsteen said. "That's the vision of America that I've been consistently writing about for 55 years."

Reporters embedded with Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, former President Donald Trump's running mate, did their own orange roll Tuesday.

"To Vance: Fave song?" they wrote. 

"Led Zeppelin Ten Years Gone," the orange read when it was swiftly returned, according to pool reports. 

In what has been an intense presidential campaign, this was a tradition that gave reporters and candidates a chance to lighten things up. 

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Saudi Arabia jails cartoonist Mohammed al-Hazza for 23 years for insulting leadership, rights group says

Dubai — A Saudi artist has been sentenced to more than two decades in prison over political cartoons...

world | 58 minutes ago

Rain may have helped form the first cells, kick-starting life as we know it

Billions of years of evolution have made modern cells incredibly complex. Inside cells are small com...

science | 1 hour ago

The Science Quiz: AI in science, from neurons to nodes

Questions: 1. The functioning of organic neurons is the model for artificial neural networks. In bio...

science | 1 hour ago

Today’s top tech news: Meta’s U.S. legal troubles; Intel and AMD team up; Apple’s new iPad mini

(This article is part of Today’s Cache, The Hindu’s newsletter on emerging themes at the intersectio...

technology | 1 hour ago

AI firm Perplexity offers a peek into a new financial analysis tool

AI company Perplexity revealed a work-in-progress finance-centric platform that would let users look...

technology | 1 hour ago

Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max and Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra | Prices, specs, features compared

As the festival season rolls by, many shoppers in India are considering whether it’s time to take ad...

technology | 1 hour ago