He nailed nothing. He mostly put me to sleep.
Say what you want about Sen. Clinton, she's had 20+ years of working the ropes and public speaking, often under great duress. By comparison, Sen. Obama is used to people deferring to his vision, passion, and narrative, and letting these things count for content and the ability to articulate an idea to voters.
I am NOT saying Sen. Obama is not articulate. He can be. But he needs to learn to run for office, and not hold forth like a high school student. This means knowing the answer to a question before it's asked. This means having full command of the details and histories of legislation and issues.
Sen. Clinton can do this while fending off attacks and, for all I know, filing her nails, reading a magazine, and talking on the phone to Chelsea. She's an awesome campaigner and performer.
Last night, Sen. Obama reminded me of no one so much as George W. Bush. The deer in the headlights look. The rambling, stumbling answers. The retreat to feeling and talk about change whenever he didn't know what else to say. The dependence on others, e.g., John Edwards, to do his work for him.
Indeed, the more I think about it, the more like George W. Bush Sen. Obama is: the sense of entitlement. The sense of self-righteousness. The incredulity that he may have to work for something, get his hands dirty, prove to us he's worth the job.
If I were an Obama supporter, I'd be very depressed right now. We know what Sen. Clinton's problems are. They're old news, and they're not going to stop her now. Sen. Obama was merely pointing out the obvious last night. But every time he appears on a stage with her, he looks teeny by comparison.
(And what's with his scary hands? Can't he afford a jacket whose sleeves go past his wrists? Every time he moves his arms, he looks like Frankenstein.)