Published August 01, 2008 12:00 am - Senate nominee Al Franken makes a stop on Bethany Lutheran College's 'Between the Lines,' a political talk show.
Franken makes appearance on college talk show
Senate nominee puts himself 'Between the Lines'
By Mark Fischenich
Free Press Staff Writer
MANKATO
—
It was a situation a political candidate like Al Franken typically would try to avoid — surrounded by a group of people who’d never heard of him and definitely would not be providing any votes on Nov. 4.
But Franken, the Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate seat held by Sen. Norm Coleman, agreed to the stop at Bethany Lutheran College during a three-hour campaign visit to Mankato Thursday.
Take Hugo Wen, one of the production crew in the Bethany Lutheran College television studio, when he was asked his impression of Franken.
“I’m sorry, I don’t know him,” Wen said.
The story was the same for most of the crew for “Between The Lines,” a political interview show that Franken agreed to appear on. The show, which appears more than 40 times a year on Charter Cable and several other cable systems around Minnesota, is typically staffed by Bethany students.
Those students are on summer break. So when the Franken campaign agreed last week to do the show on Thursday, Wen and a couple of dozen other Chinese students were asked to volunteer to as camera operators, sound mixers, technical directors and lighting specialists.
After a month-long visit from their university near Hong Kong, the students felt ready to give it a try.
“I want to pick up the opportunity,” Wen said. “... It’s exciting.”
While the crew was clueless about the unusual past of this particular American politician, “Between the Lines” host Al Travis wasn’t.
“Live from Mankato, it’s Saturday niiiiiiiight!” Travis shouted to open the show.
Travis a Blue Earth resident who started “Between the Lines” about 9 years ago, back when it was on only the Fairmont cable access channel, back when the hot political topic was the Fairmont City Council’s new leash law for cats.
Coming back from a break, Travis had Franken — a former Saturday Night Live writer, political author and radio host — pretend to be finishing a long list of autographs for the host.
“OK, for Chuck, my golf buddy,” Travis said, acting like he didn’t know they were back on the air.
Next came the rapid-fire-questions segment (Franken’s favorite movie is Dr. Strangelove, his first car was an 11-year-old Buick LeSabre).
Then came the political part, which lasted most of the show and which was why Franken was on hand. Despite its humble beginnings, Travis’ show now reaches a million homes around the state.