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Chavez Talkathon To Last 4 Days

CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER   05/28/09 11:07 PM ET   AP

Brazil Venezuela

CARACAS, Venezuela — There's nothing Hugo Chavez relishes more than addressing the nation for hours on end, and on Thursday the loquacious Venezuelan leader seized the airwaves like never before.

Chavez began what he said will be a four-day "Hello President" radio and television show celebrating the 10th anniversary of the program that has been widely emulated by other Latin American leaders.

"There's no program like this one," Chavez boasted as he launched the live program while standing outdoors at an electrical plant in western Venezuela. Chavez said the show would run through Sunday, with some breaks of unspecified duration.

"We're starting in the sunshine. We'll probably have a program in the rain," Chavez said. "We might have an episode at midnight, in the early morning. Keep an eye out."

The marathon could threaten what Chavez says is his own personal record of talking for more than eight hours straight one Sunday in 2007.

"Hello President" was first broadcast on the radio on May 23, 1999, a month after Chavez took office. State television began airing the show the following year, and it has become a pillar of efforts to counter what the president calls one-sided reporting by private news media.

Other Latin American leaders _ from former Mexican President Vicente Fox to current Ecuadorean leader Rafael Correa _ subsequently launched their own weekly broadcasts, but none has managed to duplicate the unpredictable Chavez's ability to pull an audience.

Chavez has often burst into song, hugged visiting Hollywood celebrities and scolded careless camera operators while preaching his own brand of socialism.

Watchers are likely to see Chavez chat by phone with Fidel Castro, invent colorful epithets for former U.S. President George W. Bush and unexpectedly announce the seizure of major industries before veering off into a lengthy ramble about steel output. He spoke for about 30 minutes on Thursday about the production of sardines in eastern Venezuela. Shows typically last four to six hours each Sunday.

One show opened onboard a military helicopter in flight, recalled Andres Izarra, a former information minister who ran the program for two years.

"Every 'Hello President' is an adventure," Izarra said.

After kicking off Thursday's show, Chavez said the program "always attempts to be like a school _ a school in which we all learn" and joined a chorus of children to sing a ballad celebrating the country's varied geography and culture.

"The world is full of beauty but it's also full of danger," Chavez said later, telling the kids to resist pressure to try alcohol, illegal drugs and adolescent sex. "Everything at its moment," he added in a fatherly tone.

Chavez chuckled as he remembered the first time he was to appear on a television talk show, and how he initially resisted when studio assistants told him they needed to put makeup on him. "'What would my people think?' I thought. Makeup?" he said.

Chavez's close friend and mentor Fidel Castro _ himself a master of marathon speechmaking _ congratulated the Venezuelan president Thursday: "Never has a revolutionary idea made use of a medium of communication with such efficiency," the 82-year-old Cuban leader wrote in his country's official newspapers.

Chavez grasped the power of the media as the leader of a failed coup attempt in 1992, when he surrendered in exchange for TV time to address the country.

The rebellious army lieutenant colonel famously told viewers the uprising was over "for now," and instantly became a hero to Venezuelans who felt abandoned by entrenched political parties that had traded power for decades.

"Chavez is a pioneer in the way he uses the media to advance his agenda," said Andres Canizalez, a communications professor at Andres Bello Catholic University.

Chavez has gradually expanded state media _ especially television, where five state-run channels now broadcast on the airwaves, compared with just one when he took office.

Two of Venezuela's four most-viewed television networks, meanwhile, have curbed criticism of the government since Chavez accused them of supporting a 2002 coup that briefly ousted him. A third moved to cable in 2007 after the president refused to renew its broadcast license.

Critics complain Chavez seems omnipresent on the airwaves, but his allies defend the president's media savvy.

"Defeating the media circus and disinformation are permanent tasks," said Izarra, now president of Telesur, a Caracas-based regional news channel mostly financed by Venezuela that was launched as a Latin American alternative to private media outlets such as CNN.

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CARACAS, Venezuela — There's nothing Hugo Chavez relishes more than addressing the nation for hours on end, and on Thursday the loquacious Venezuelan leader seized the airwaves like never before...
CARACAS, Venezuela — There's nothing Hugo Chavez relishes more than addressing the nation for hours on end, and on Thursday the loquacious Venezuelan leader seized the airwaves like never before...
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
01:46 AM on 05/29/2009
I'd like to hear him rattle off movie quotes.
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sassafra
I yam what I yam and tha's all what I yam
09:37 PM on 05/28/2009
this isn't a hugo chavez speech...it's a jerry lewis telethon!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZenCrusader
trying to be more zen in a zany world.
07:59 PM on 05/28/2009
In all the endless talk from Chavez there is never any talk of why Venezuela needed 100,000 Kalashnikov rifles from Moscow. Not even any mention of the Kalashnkov rifle factory that Moscow has agreed to build in Venezuela. No talk of why Venezuela would need the 29 TOR-MI missile systems already delivered from Moscow - and 24 Sukhoi MK2 fighter jets & 53 advanced military helicopters will be arriving soon from Moscow.
Chavez is arming himself with weapons that have previously not existed in the region. He is under no threat from his peaceful neighbors. WHY is he doing this ?
08:17 PM on 05/28/2009
ZenCrusader -

There's speculation that Columbia is to be our Israel of Latin America. Chavez has to be concerned about that.

The US is not a peaceful nation, and may want to be a neighbor.

You,re right about fighter jets and helicopters. We could easily dispose of them.
11:22 PM on 05/28/2009
There is no country in South America called "Columbia", it's Colombia. Sorry but that's a pet peeve of mine.

As for Venezuela arming up, it's a complete waste of money for a very unlikely scenario. It's like us arming up because we're worried about an invasion from Mexico or Canada. Even if Colombia was interested in actually invading Venezuela, the Venezuelan army would not be able to put up a fight. Plus, Chavez has achieved a total polarization of the country, with a very likely almost half of the population that might actually root for a defeat of their own country.

The problem with Chavez in this regard is that he needs to stop treating Venezuela like a military barrack. It is just not acceptable for a president of a country on live TV to order up tanks to the border with Colombia to provoke another nation, nor escalate conflicts in the region (see the Colombia vs Ecuador incident wrt the FARC).

As for this 4 day Alo presidente, it's plain abuse. If you don't have cable, you're stuck with this loud mouth talking, reading poems, singing with his horrible voice, and castigating his staff and his opposition in a vulgar manner. If there ever was a form of torture for the masses, Hugo Chavez has just discovered it in his latest narcissistic stunt.
06:58 PM on 05/28/2009
The audience will need a break at some point, of course. (Fireside chats, these ain't.) Hugo Chavez reminds me of guys like Nero, who probably sang better. The Romans were on top of the world with lunatics ruling over them for a time - and we all know how that ended up.
05:31 PM on 05/28/2009
what do you people mean by "his own brand of socialism" for g osh sake s. How many brands are there? Are the available at my local market?
05:29 PM on 05/28/2009
Obama has already announced he's gonna do a six day. He wants to break Bushe's 5 dayer.

Can you imagine Bush winging it for 15 minutes without saying something incredibly stupid.