Off Course

Weighing In on the 2012 Presidential Campaign: A View from the Links

As the 2012 presidential campaign gets underway, providing the electorate plenty of time to confuse itself before marking its ballots fourteen months from now, a hot question among Republican pundits is whether or not New Jersey’s famously hefty governor, Chris Christie, will enter the race.

Too Big to Fail?

Piers Morgan asked the well-known political analyst Brooke Shields if she thought an overweight person could be elected president, given our well-known obsession with slender celebrities.  (To give Shields credit, she found the question sad and perplexing.)  The whole enquiry expresses a paradox in American culture: the fatter the people get, the skinnier we expect our idols to be.   This is a corollary of the curious belief among people earning fewer than fifty thousand dollars a year that they will somehow benefit from tax breaks for the rich.

Michael Kinsley of Bloomberg Views was viciously blunt about Christie’s chances: “Christie cannot be president: He is just too fat. Maybe, if he runs for president and we get to know him, we will overlook this awkward issue because we are so impressed with the way he stands up to teachers’ unions. But we shouldn’t overlook it–unless he goes on a diet and shows he can stick to it.”

But we’ve had fat presidents, some even elected to more than one term.  Grover Cleveland, although a New York resident when he was elected to his two non-consecutive terms as president, was a New Jersey native with a build similar to Christie’s.    Both William McKinley, whose term was brief because he was assassinated, and his successor, Theodore Roosevelt, were bulky men, although Roosevelt was also famously fit.

The fattest of them all, however, was William Howard Taft—also the only president to also serve on the Supreme Court.   Taft weighed well over 300 pounds when he was in the White House.   Taft was also our first presidential golfer, playing twice a week.  Roosevelt is said to have despised Taft’s golfing hobby, even though there were rumors that TR himself had a secret golfing habit.

President Taft's Pure Putting Stroke

Portland physician Jim Puterbaugh, whose brother is the well-known teaching pro from San Diego’s Aviara Golf Academy, Kip Puterbaugh, recently published an article about the health benefits of walking 18 holes, especially if you carry your clubs.  (He also denounces golf carts as health hazards.) Full Story

Power Spot - Michigan - True North

Power Spot – True North – Northern Michigan

- Where Heaven ends, Earth begins, & Dreams come True -

In 2008 I spent much of the summer in Michigan – the land of my birth – exploring dozens of her finest courses, and playing countless rounds of twilight golf at Palmer Park in Detroit, where I learned to play in my youth. In August, after the PGA Championship at Oakland Hills, I was invited on a media trip to play the finest golf courses in Northern Michigan. The highly regarded Arcadia Bluffs, Bay Harbor, and Treetops were spectacular, and Alister McKenzie’s masterpiece Crystal Downs truly deserves its ranking as the one of the top ten courses in the... Full Story

Off Course

  • Elizabeth's Chophouse -- Haute Cuisine in Michigan's U.P. 2/6/2012

    First of all, who wouldn’t like a restaurant that introduces itself like this? ‘Since I was 5 years old, I’ve been in a restaurant kitchen. It is my life. Cooking is my passion. My love is my wife, Elizabeth. Her passion is service.’ That’s how Tom Wahlstrom introduces the online world to his wonderful restaurant, Elizabeth’s Chophouse, in Marquette Michigan.  On its website, he and his wife, Elizabeth, go on to say, ‘This restaurant is a culmination of our passions, devotions and love. We hope you will enjoy our efforts to bring you that same passion in the finest quality food and the areas ...

  • Island Resort and Casino -- An 'Island' of Gaming Amid Michigan Wilderness 2/6/2012

    Once upon a time people in and around Harris, Michigan, would get into their cars and drive to Harris to play bingo…in their cars…without leaving their cars. It may sound like a ‘Yooper’ fairy tale, but drive-in bingo was the genesis of what is today Island Resort and Casino in Harris, Michigan, 13 miles west of Escanaba in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Island Resort and Casino is just what its name implies, an island of big city gaming, entertainment and fun, surrounded by Michigan’s U.P. wilderness.     Think mid-winter and not inches, but feet, of snow in this northern climate, and the casino’s palm ...

  • The Grand Canyon: ‘Bucket List’ item checked off 2/6/2012

    When most people think of Las Vegas fabulous casinos, Lady Luck, and unforgettable evening shows immediately pop into their heads. And if you’re a golfer, well, images of ‘big game hunting’ courses also crowd the mind. On several occasions I’ve visited Las Vegas and played my share of its many fine courses. In fact, it’s now part of our family’s lore, a la the Chevy Chase vacation movies, when my wife Deb and I played a course and she proudly shot the day’s temperature, 108. (For 18, smart-aleck.) Yes, we love Las Vegas golf especially coming out of the Michigan ...

Read more in the Off Course Archive