If you agree with him then you probably think he's saying what everyone is thinking, and if you disagree with him then you probably think he's ranting and raving like a madman about baseless conspiracy theories.
But boring? The only way to find it boring is if you're deliberately shutting out everything because you're worried there might be some truth to it.
I'd be hard pressed to call a 1.5 hour press conference 'concise', but I strongly disagree with you about it not being engaging. I find him a pretty engaging speaker at the worst of times (I mean he is both a lawyer and the former mayor of NYC) and when he gets sarcastic or heated it's very entertaining.
As for the "lines running on his face", the most I noticed was him dabbing away some sweat a couple of times.
Calling it boring is the biggest giveaway.
If you agree with him then you probably think he's saying what everyone is thinking, and if you disagree with him then you probably think he's ranting and raving like a madman about baseless conspiracy theories.
But boring? The only way to find it boring is if you're deliberately shutting out everything because you're worried there might be some truth to it.
The way he presented it wasn't engaging or concise. He made it easy for people to tune out while laughing at the lines running on his face.
I'd be hard pressed to call a 1.5 hour press conference 'concise', but I strongly disagree with you about it not being engaging. I find him a pretty engaging speaker at the worst of times (I mean he is both a lawyer and the former mayor of NYC) and when he gets sarcastic or heated it's very entertaining.
As for the "lines running on his face", the most I noticed was him dabbing away some sweat a couple of times.