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Matthew C. Nisbet, Ph.D, is a professor in the School of Communication at American University where his research focuses on the intersections between science, media, and politics. E-MAIL: nisbetmc@gmail.com

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« Things Get Worse for Those "Greedy" Academic Publishers | Main | PBS Test Pilots Wired Magazine Program Along With Two Other New Science Shows »

Let the Conversation Begin? The You-Tube Election

Category: Blogging/New MediaFRAME: Strategy/Conflict
Posted on: January 28, 2007 2:04 PM, by Matthew C. Nisbet

Brace yourself for the 2008 You-Tube election. When it comes to presidential campaigns, many Americans make up their minds about candidates not based on the issues, but rather based on "low information" signals about the candidate's personal narrative and character. For example, in 2004, the Bush campaign stuck to a very successful internal theme in plotting external message strategy: Who would you rather have a beer with, Bush or Kerry?

Not only is the candidate's perceived likeability important, so is their appearance of competence in handling the many dynamics and unexpected turns of the campaign trail. With the growth in popularity of You-Tube, much like George Allen's now infamous Macaca moment, any campaign gaffe captured on video will be archived and linked to gleefully by thousands of bloggers. Word-of-mouth buzz will direct large audiences to YouTube where they will be able to catch the gaffe that they might have missed live on TV.

Consider the clip above. At a "Let the Conversation Begin" campaign rally in Iowa, Hillary Clinton was captured on MSNBC singing rather awkwardly the national anthem. In a NYTimes article by Patrick Healy reporting on the campaign stop, the MSNBC moment and its immediate appearance on YouTube is mentioned. The clip is also linked to by the immensely popular Drudge Report. The mainstream print exposure in the Sunday Times and the Drudge attention has guided swarms of viewers to the archived segment. As of 2pm EST, the clip stands as the most popular video of the day on You-Tube and has been watched by roughly 300,000 Web surfers.

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Comments

1

You may be interested in about the first Hillary ads.

Posted by: coturnix | January 28, 2007 3:47 PM

2

Citizen journalism has incredible potential to do many good things for democracy (fact-check politicians as they speak; analyze news content; mobilize citizenry)... but these sorts of expose' makes me really sad about where the blogosphere and other interactive media are taking us in terms of democratic process and transformation of journalism... Who give a sh** about how well Hillary can sing?! Why is this news?!

After seeing how popular these sorts of "news" are, how can we expect politicians to be less strategic and more up-front? Also, how can we blame news media for being so horse-race-oriented? Sad, very sad... :(

Posted by: ivan dylko | January 29, 2007 9:58 AM

3

So now what we need is to combine YouTube with a focus on the issues...

http://www.ExpertVoter.org

Thoughts?

gary

Posted by: gary | March 5, 2007 6:13 PM

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