Khue Bui for Newsweek By Holly Bailey
It's a dilemma
that pops up every four years: reporters, stuck on buses and planes all day with
endless access to junk food but no time for exercise, fret about the pounds they
pack on covering the presidential campaign.
Normally the realization that
Pringles is not a part of a healthy diet doesn't kick in until closer to
Election Day, but reporters covering John McCain's presidential run may have
gotten the big hint already. McCain, who is campaigning in Southern California
this week, was leaving an event outside San Diego Monday when the press bus got stuck
pulling out of parking lot. The problem: it was too heavy. The front wheels
ended up slightly suspended in the air (imagine a less dramatic version of the
bus jump from the movie "Speed"), while the back end rode so low to the ground it
literally wasn't moving. As the bus blocked a lane or two of traffic, campaign aides fretted about what to do.
For the record, this reporter was
tailing the motorcade in a rental car, while NEWSWEEK's photographer, greatly
amused at the situation, shot pictures of the scene (above) and shouted helpful
suggestions on how to remedy the predicament: "Make them get off the bus! Less
weight!" In the end, nobody had to disembark. A random set of McCain fans,
hanging out in the alley hoping to score the senator's autograph, jumped behind
the bus and gave it several healthy heave-hos, and the press again was on its
way. Indeed, many reporters on the bus later claimed to have had no idea there
was any problem whatsoever. "What?" one innocently
claimed. "This happened today?"