White House Lawn
In our continuing effort to keep you informed about the White House grounds – not because those 17 acres are important in the grand scheme, but because it’s our beat!
From the Washington Post:
On Aug. 27, Trump delivered his address formally accepting the Republican nomination on the South Lawn before an estimated 1,500 supporters seated on chairs. The president spoke from an enormous stage built in front of the South Portico of the White House. It was flanked by massive television screens and illuminated by scores of hulking spotlights — all particularly heavy equipment to position on grass.
So the turfgrass there has to be redone.
Two nights earlier, first lady Melania Trump delivered her convention address in the newly reconstructed Rose Garden, with dozens of supporters seated in chairs. *Turf was laid atop the grass as a protective measure, according to one White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because aides were not authorized to discuss some details. *Emphasis added; interpret it as “wtf?”
More new sod is needed.
CNN had the story, too. “The Trump campaign told CNN ‘The tab for the repairs to the grass will be paid for by the Trump campaign.’
No comment from ME. But y’all go ahead.
“Great American Lawn” on CBS Sunday Morning
So I know this isn’t “60 Minutes,” where exposés are a regular feature. I know “Sunday Morning” is for feel-good stories, but I have to vent anyway. Their story about lawns, with correspondent Martha Teichner, includes:
- Lawns like these. On the left is a lawn on top of a 24-story building in Chicago.
- Ted Steinberg, author of the excellent book American Green, saying that “Coronavirus has made Americans lawn-care crazy” and “You could argue that the perfect lawn is the perfect coping mechanism in a world that’s turned upside down.” Wish he’d been used to touch on the problems. But again, not “60 Minutes.”
- Then it turns into a full unpaid (or maybe paid?) ad for Scotts Miracle-Gro:
Called the company that “rallies the weed warriors,” Scotts ads are shown while we’re told its annual sales are $3 billion/year but that its lawn and garden product sales are up 24 percent this season!
I wonder – did they just coordinate with the Scotts PR team without a moment’s research into the company? They sure didn’t read my round-up of valid reasons the company is SO HATED in the gardening world: Who’s more controversial, Michelle Rhee or Scotts Miracle-Gro?
And they sure didn’t see this take-down of the company in Espoma’s brilliant video launching its organic lawn care products.
- Finally, we meet a real “lawn nut” who creates perfect shapes as he mows – like the American flag above. Sigh.
But wouldn’t it be nice to see mentions of the “Great American Lawn” include the whole picture, like how Scotts ads promote unnecessary and harmful use of synthetic fertilizers, especially in the spring? Not to mention promoting the need for perfect, monocultures in the first place, instead of lawns like Ted Steinberg’s, which Teichner describes as “not perfect.”
I DO appreciate the opportunity to show off this photo of correspondent Rita Braver with her crew, my coaching client and me in 2007.
Here’s Rita sitting on my front porch during an unexpected visit. After the planned filming in a coachee’s garden, she asked to see MY garden and filmed the show’s opening from my porch. That required first moving a used toilet from said porch, where it was ready to be carted away. Glamorous times!
Lawn in the News: White House Troubles, a CBS Promo for Scotts originally appeared on GardenRant on September 11, 2020.
The post Lawn in the News: White House Troubles, a CBS Promo for Scotts appeared first on GardenRant.
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