The Denver Post

Twenty years later, Dale Earnhardt’s death at the Daytona 500 has a lasting legacy.

I analyzed all of former President Trump’s tweets to find out what he was really saying

- By Jenna Fryer, Dan Gelston and Mark Long

DAY TONA BE AC H, FL A .» Ryan Newman was lying in bed one morning, his two daughters still tucked in down the hall, when a YouTube video of his death-defying crash popped up as a recommende­d watch.

He hit play, absorbing every angle of the terrifying wreck that nearly killed him on the final lap of last year’s Daytona 500, and started to cry.

His emotional response had little to do with his wreck, which ended with his car flipping and skidding to a halt on its roof in a harrowing show of sparks and flames.

“Those are tears of respect and appreciati­on, not tears of sadness, because I was here and I was able to watch it and know that just down the hallway my kids were going to wake up,” Newman said.

Everyone watching feared the worst for Newman, but the 2008 Daytona 500 winner walked out of the hospital 48 hours later with his girls. He will drive the No. 6 Ford in “The Great American Race” on Sunday.

Newman now serves as a symbol of how far the sport has come since NASCAR’s darkest day 20 years ago, when seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt was killed in the final turn of the 500.

Earnhardt was the fourth national series driver killed in nine months. NASCAR never stopped after the deaths of Adam Petty, Kenny Irwin Jr. and Tony Roper, but losing Earnhardt forced the racing series to confront safety issues it had been slow to acknowledg­e.

The dramatic upgrades since have saved multiple lives and are the hallmark of Earnhardt’s legacy.

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Talks of modernizin­g the car had been tiptoed around, and many drivers frowned on the confining head-and-neck restraints. Earnhardt’s death changed everything. Notable advancemen­ts since: • SAFER Barriers was designed to absorb and reduce kinetic ener

gy during high-speed crashes. “Soft walls” have been gradually added to nearly every NASCAR track.

• HANS device: NASCAR mandated the use of head-and-neck restraints in late 2001. Drivers had resisted using the U-shaped neck restraint because they found it cumbersome and restrictiv­e.

• NASCAR has developed three new cars since 2001, each one adapting to the latest technology.

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Earnhardt Jr. was still wearing his fire suit when he sprinted into the hospital searching for his father that fateful afternoon on Feb. 18, 2001. A shy, third-generation driver trying to hold his own against his father, Earnhardt Jr. was in just his second season driving for Dale Earnhardt Inc.

At 26, he inherited his father’s

rabid fanbase and expectatio­ns to be as good as the old man.

He drove six more seasons for DEI and won the first of his two Daytona 500s. But Earnhardt Jr. feuded with his father’s widow and moved to Hendrick Motorsport­s in 2008. DEI eventually folded.

Junior never equaled his father’s on-track success but blossomed into a NASCAR leader before concussion­s forced him to retire in 2017. He’s currently an NBC Sports analyst and made peace with his father’s death long ago.

“I didn’t want to feel any negative feelings when I came here because I love Daytona, love this track and I love the history,” he said in 2018. “I want to be rooted in this sport and that means I want to be at Daytona when they race here. That was the choice I made a long time ago and feel very comfortabl­e here.”

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Even though the 49-year-old Earnhardt had given no indication of slowing down, Harvick’s success in NASCAR’s second-tier series had team owner Richard Childress planning to promote him to Cup the following year.

Childress pushed Harvick into Earnhardt’s seat early, rebranding the No. 3 to the No. 29 to give Harvick his own identity. Yet Harvick struggled to escape Earnhardt’s shadow in the formative years of his Cup career.

“Everything that you did was always compared to everything that Dale did,” Harvick said.

Harvick eventually found his own path. He won the 2007 Daytona 500 driving for Richard Childress Racing and moved to Stewart-Haas Racing before the 2014 season. Harvick was rewarded for the bold jump with his only Cup championsh­ip and has been a perennial contender since.

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Childress, now 75, was far more than Earnhardt’s car owner. They were hunting and fishing buddies, business associates and friends.

“I miss those moments and so many things,” Childress said. “It’s been tough, and not only tough on me and the family, I think on the race fans. I think a lot of them haven’t gotten over it yet.”

Earnhardt was the lynchpin of RCR, the team he joined in 1984 and where he won six of his recordtyin­g seven Cup titles. After his death, RCR began to fade. Recent success has been limited to Childress’ grandson, Austin Dillion, who has three one-win seasons in four years.

The tally was in, it was clear Donald Trump had lost — and he tweeted: “either a new election should take place or … results nullified.” It sounds familiar, but it wasn’t November 2020. It was February 2016.

Trump was just months into his presidenti­al campaign, and was already telling a story he would tell countless times over the following five years, hinting to the world at the character of the man the U.S. Senate is now evaluating in the impeachmen­t trial.

Back then, Trump was seeking to nullify Ted Cruz’s victory. And he was accusing Iowa of bungling the primary vote counting.

“The State of Iowa should disqualify Ted Cruz from the most recent election on the basis that he cheated — a total fraud!” Trump tweeted.

The Donald Trump Americans think of now was the same Donald Trump who entered the election in 2015 and the White House in 2016. Some of his power to rally a loyal base was based on his repetitive rhetorical style, but on Twitter he was especially potent as narrator-inchief of his own political life.

In 2017, I began to collect all of his tweets, going back to June 16, 2015, the day he announced his candidacy. I kept at it until Jan. 8, 2021, the day Twitter permanentl­y suspended his account. I wanted to learn more about how he used language. But in

those 20,301 tweets I learned something more fundamenta­l about how the 45th president of the United States used Twitter to tell his own story.

A storytelle­r president

Trump was more effusively positive and more bitingly negative than the politician­s, journalist­s, news organizati­ons and activists I compared him to — including Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton, Katy Tur of NBC, pro-Trump activist Linda Suhler and Black Lives Matter activist DeRay Mckesson.

However, the main distinctio­n I found was that Trump was among the most frequent users of storytelli­ng methods. Since I am a digital narrative researcher, that intrigued me.

Storytelli­ng in general is common among effective politician­s, but Trump’s effort appears to have built a high level of loyalty, diverted attention away from negative topics and generally set the agenda for what the American public was discussing.

Others have looked at this aspect of Trump’s appeal, examining specific stories throughout his presidency, his style of storytelli­ng and even the rhetorical components of his populist narrative.

But I discovered a particular story structure that he used the whole time.

Consistenc­y amid change

There were five main themes, which appeared regularly — often all in one

day:

1. The true version of the United States is beset with invaders;

2. Real Americans can see this;

3. I (Trump) am uniquely qualified to stop this invasion;

4. The establishm­ent and its agents are hindering me;

5. The U.S. is in mortal danger because of this.

Taken together over time, this formed an overall story structure that I summarize this way: “The establishm­ent is stopping me from protecting you against invaders.”

The elements were flexible. “The establishm­ent” could be anyone — Democrats, the NFL, a media outlet, a corporatio­n and even Vice President Mike Pence. “The invaders” were China, the coronaviru­s that first emerged there, people crossing the U.S.-Mexico border or Black Lives Matter protesters.

But the structure never changed: There was a danger to the nation, Trump was uniquely able to protect America and he was righteousl­y supported by “real” Americans.

That is what he said; how it worked was equally important.

Telling a different story

In terms storytelli­ng scholars use, Trump “rescripted” the world to fit his themes. He took elements of news articles, viral videos, other tweets and whatever else he needed to build his messages. He took storylines that were already in the public sphere and placed new meaning on them to fit his own tale.

During the 2015 lead-up to the Republican primary, for example, the conservati­ve Club for Growth spent $1 million running negative ads against Trump. But Trump, tweeting, rescripted the story: “The phony Club For Growth, which asked me in writing for $1,000,000 (I said no), is now wanting to do negative ads on me. Total hypocrites!” The Club for Growth was a groveling and fraudulent establishm­ent; he was effective and powerful.

Trump would also rescript characters into multiple, sometimes contradict­ory, messages, depending on the day’s news. Consider his tweeting about China, which was first a partner, then a trade adversary and finally an invader:

• 2017: “The failing @nytimes hates the fact that I have developed a great relationsh­ip with World leaders like Xi Jinping, President of China…..”

• 2018: “We are not in a trade war with China, that war was lost many years ago by the foolish, or incompeten­t, people who represente­d the U.S. Now we have a Trade Deficit of $500 Billion a year, with Intellectu­al Property Theft of another $300 Billion. We cannot let this continue!”

• 2020: “New China Virus Cases up (because of massive testing), deaths are down, ‘low and steady’. The Fake News Media should report this and also, that new job numbers are setting records!”

Sticking to the script

Trump most commonly tweeted about the government, media and corporate institutio­ns, which often became fodder for news coverage. The media often framed the tweets as attacks and “counter-punching.” But in a closer read, they were not merely responses to criticism or bad news. They regularly described something, the way a narrator would.

But his recasting of reality through his own lens may have also played a role in Trump’s downfall. All the attacks, all the twisting of informatio­n, all the fear, may have worn out just enough people in key states to ensure his defeat.

When that defeat struck, Trump’s storytelli­ng framework did not change: It escalated and multiplied, consuming everything and everyone who did not blatantly support what many have called the Big Lie — that the election was rigged against him:

• Jan. 3, 2021: “I spoke to Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger yesterday about Fulton County and voter fraud in Georgia. He was unwilling, or unable, to answer questions such as the ‘ballots under table’ scam, ballot destructio­n, out of state ‘voters’, dead voters, and more. He has no clue!”

• Jan. 6, 2021: “Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constituti­on, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth!”

A path to the end

There is no one single line from a Trump speech or tweet that is going to be the smoking gun urging his followers to violence.

But he did help set the scene for the Capitol raid. The most famous was on Dec. 19, 2020: “Peter Navarro releases 36-page report alleging election fraud ‘more than sufficient’ to swing victory to Trump … A great report by Peter. Statistica­lly impossible to have lost the 2020 Election. Big protest in D.C. on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!”

The way Trump crafted this tweet is representa­tive of how he rescripted things to tell his own story. He took something already in the discussion, Navarro’s report, and used it in a way that shaped the logic for the “stop the steal” campaign.

Trump didn’t have to invent #StopTheSte­al — just include it in his existing narrative structure. Other politician­s, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, have adopted Trump’s general structure for their own tweets.

However, the final tweet from his account before it was closed does not really fit any of his common themes. It is also one of the few times it seems like the tweet is telling a more traditiona­l story. “To all of those who have asked, I will not be going to the Inaugurati­on on January 20th” is a pretty understate­d ending to an epic tale.

 ?? Greg Suvino, The Associated Press ?? Dale Earnhardt was killed in a crash on the last turn of the last lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. The 49-year-old driver had to be cut from his battered car and was taken to Halifax Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead of head injuries.
Greg Suvino, The Associated Press Dale Earnhardt was killed in a crash on the last turn of the last lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. The 49-year-old driver had to be cut from his battered car and was taken to Halifax Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead of head injuries.
 ?? Senate Television via The Associated Press ?? In this image from video, a tweet is displayed for senators as House impeachmen­t manager Rep. Joaquin Castro, DTexas, speaks during the second impeachmen­t trial of former President Donald Trump in the Senate at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
Senate Television via The Associated Press In this image from video, a tweet is displayed for senators as House impeachmen­t manager Rep. Joaquin Castro, DTexas, speaks during the second impeachmen­t trial of former President Donald Trump in the Senate at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Michael Humphrey is assistant professor in the Journalism and Media Communicat­ion department in the College of Liberal Arts, Colorado State University.
Michael Humphrey is assistant professor in the Journalism and Media Communicat­ion department in the College of Liberal Arts, Colorado State University.
 ?? Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images file photo ?? In this June file photo, then-President Donald Trump uses his cellphone during a meeting in the State Dining Room of the White House.
Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images file photo In this June file photo, then-President Donald Trump uses his cellphone during a meeting in the State Dining Room of the White House.
 ?? Erin Schaff, © The New York Times Co. ?? A screen shows a tweet sent by Donald Trump days before the storming of the Capitol, during the former president's second impeachmen­t trial at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
Erin Schaff, © The New York Times Co. A screen shows a tweet sent by Donald Trump days before the storming of the Capitol, during the former president's second impeachmen­t trial at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.

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