posted at 12:45 pm on August 11, 2011 by Tina Korbe
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So  far, the Hot Air Express’ schedule in Ames looks like this: One  campaign event down, several more to go, plus the big draws of the  debate and straw poll. But, all of a sudden, no event looks to be more  exciting than the Iowa State Fair Friday — and not just because a  certain spotlight-coveting, fun-loving Alaskan will be there.
According  to the fair’s motto, “nothing compares.” Butter sculptures! Big-name  entertainment! Fair food! It’s really not that hard to figure out why  Sarah Palin would want to be there. Sure, she wants to stoke speculation  that she might still run for the presidency (even though my suspicion  is that she won’t), but she suggests she also just wants to stick it to a  president who admonished the American people to “eat their peas”:
In  an email to supporters, Palin said she was “excited to try some of that  famous fried butter-on-a-stick, fried cheesecake-on-a-stick, fried  twinkies, etc.”
“I’ll enjoy them in honor of those who’d rather make us just ‘eat our peas’!” she said, in a dig at President Obama.
Can  you really blame her for wanting to eat a fried Twinkie? (Michelle  Obama could and would, of course — before she’d go back to drinking her  milkshake — but that’s neither here nor there.)
Of  course, Palin won’t be the only prominent politician to appear at the  fair. Mitt Romney will speak at the opening ceremonies today and Michele  Bachmann will speak Friday, just before the crucial straw poll. But  Palin does have the distinction of being the only prominent Republican  non-candidate to put in an appearance.
Fair  food and speculation-stoking aside, why, really, does Palin plan to  attend? From the sound of the ad she released alongside her bus tour  relaunch, it might be for the purely patriotic reason of expressing  pride in small-town America. It could be for self-aggrandizement, for  the pleasure of standing in the spotlight just because she can. It could  be for a wholly unexpected reason — an endorsement, for example  (although that seems highly unlikely). Maybe Palin decided to appear as a  favor to the openly campaigning candidates in Iowa who will be somewhat  overshadowed by Rick Perry’s announcement Saturday. After all, her  considerable weight guarantees media coverage to the state that was  supposed to be the uncontested center of attention this weekend before  Perry’s people leaked his plans.
But  regardless of why Palin planned this particular trip to Iowa, thinking  about her in relation to this appearance makes me realize she is,  herself, a little like the Iowa State Fair in that she is entirely in a  class of her own. Like it, she boasts excellencies — a large and  apparently happy family, signature accomplishments in her home state of  Alaska, books, TV appearances, a clearly-and-compellingly-articulated  conservative message, beauty, charisma, energy, etc., etc., etc. Like  it, she boasts eccentricities — that memorable accent, her reality TV  show, the start-and-stop nature of both her governorship and this bus  tour, etc., etc., etc. She draws a big crowd, nobody feels indifferently  toward her and, sometimes, she palls on even her biggest fans. That,  perhaps, is the most important comparison: Just as it is distinctly  possible to stay too long at the fair, such that funnel cake tastes  sickeningly sweet in your mouth, it is possible to promote, to debate,  to discuss Sarah Palin too much (and I know I’m guilty of this, too!),  such that she becomes a caricature of herself instead of a real person  and even people who like her find the discussion cloying. But she owes  it to herself and we owe it to her, too, to remember and acknowledge the  reality of Sarah Palin just as often as we remember the myth. Like the  rest of us, she’s illuminated by talents, but also marred by flaws. No  one compares — and yet everyone does.