Story:
WASHINGTON — Get ready for the geek-in-chief.
President-elect Barack Obama used to collect comic books, can’t part with his BlackBerry, and once flashed Leonard (Mr. Spock) Nimoy the Vulcan “Live Long and Prosper” sign.
That and other evidence has convinced some of Obama’s nerdier fans that he’ll be the first American president to show distinct signs of geekiness. And that’s got them as excited as a Tribble around a Klingon.
Obama is good at “repressing his inner geek, but you can tell it’s there,” especially when he goes into nuanced explanations of technical matters, said Benjamin Nugent, author of the book “American Nerd: The Story of My People.”
“One imagines a terrifying rally of ‘Star Trek’ people shouting, ‘One of us!’” Nugent said, in an interview conducted by e-mail, of course.
Others see only some geek qualities, qualifying the president-elect as merely “nerd-adjacent.” After all, he’s an athlete and kind of cool, some experts demur. Still, there’s enough there for geeks to celebrate.
Psychology professor Larry Welkowitz of Keene State College in New Hampshire hopefully speculated that there’s a shift in what’s cool and that “smart can be in. Maybe that started with the computer programmers of the ’90s. The Bill Gateses of the world are OK.”
The Obama transition team would not comment on the president-elect’s geek qualities, even when it was suggested those could be positive. And his old college friends give the geek idea a split vote. While Margot Mifflin, now a journalism professor in New York, said she saw no geeky signs in Obama as a freshman at Occidental College in California, Amiekoleh Kimbrew Usafi recalled it differently, despite the lack of technology back in 1979.
“He’s a geek because he was smart,” Usafi said, noting that Occidental was a geeky school to start with, billing itself as the Yale of the West. “I remember he would be hitting his books. I would see him in the library. … There were a lot of girls that liked him because he was cute, but he kept his head in the direction he was going in. I would see him studying all the time.”
So a quick geek cultural check for Obama:
- Technology. Click that icon. He’s the candidate who tried to announce his vice presidential pick by * * text message* * and embraced Facebook as a campaign tool. He’s seldom seen without a BlackBerry and talks about a chief technology officer for the nation.
- Comic books. As a youngster, Obama collected Spider-Man and Conan the Barbarian comic books.
- In May in Des Moines, Iowa, Newsweek caught Obama teasing wife Michelle about her belt buckle, saying it was studded with Star Trek-powering dilithium crystals and adding, “Beam me up, Scotty!” As he laughed at his own joke, Michelle Obama rolled her eyes, as geek wives often do.
But Dan Sarewitz, a professor of science and society at Arizona State University, said calling Obama a geek is unfair — both to the president-elect and to geeks.
“He’s too cool to be a geek; he’s a decent basketball player; he knows how to dance; he dresses well,” Sarewitz said. “It’s too high a standard for geeks to possibly live up to
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