Check out the whole list here.
But I find these interesting:


Did this interviewer not want a chair? Is she more comfortable squatting on the rain soaked roadside?
Was she even offered a seat?
Or is it that Cindy Sheehan is the only one who sits when she holds court? Was the interviewer told that to get the interview she had to sit at Sheehan's feet to gaze up at her?
I'm probably taking a cheap shot here. Or maybe this is a window into how things are run in Camp Casey.
I'd like to know from any journalist if this is normal operating procedure (perhaps a pro like Michelle Malkin, who has been in plenty of interviews, can let us know if this is the way interviews work).
Update: I knew I had seen this before. Now I remember. National security advisor Stephen Hadley and deputy chief of staff Joseph Hagin met with Cindy Sheehan on Saturday when she first arrived in Crawford, and spent 45 minutes with her:

Stephen Haldley is on the ground and Joseph Hagin is in the chair. So she's used to receiving people sitting on the floor. And apparently they have more than one chair at Camp Casey.