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Daily Digest: Telenovelas Get the Vote Out

BY Joshua Levy | Monday, January 28 2008

The Web on the Candidates

  • Have you been waiting impatiently for someone to combine the telenovela with a voter registration drive? Wait no longer, Voto Latino is here. The site uses a pleasing array of Web 2.0 goodness (MySpace and Faceook widgets, Yahoo! maps, YouTube) to encourage Latinos to register to vote. At its center is a hilarious sendup of telenovelas starring Rosario Dawson and Wilmer Valderrama that brings melodrama, humor, and passion to its message: register to vote! It’s a sterling example of how to combine the web and traditional PR to create a funny and important public service message.

  • techPresident’s Micah Sifry has a good piece in this week’s the Nation about the (brief) rise and fall of Unity 08, the wannabe third party seeking to use the web to nominate a unity ticket in 2008. But with a “narrow and artificial base of aging political consultants and college kids,” the group couldn’t raise enough money to keep going, so now they’re pushing for a Bloomberg candidacy. Micah thinks that might not be such a good idea. “The current presidential field is a lot tougher than the candidates Bloomberg has faced in New York,” he writes. “And other than a few consultants and earnest college students, no one seems to be clamoring for an iconoclastic billionaire to get into the race.”

  • Also in the Nation, OpenLeft’s Matt Stoller looks at why Democratic turnout in the primaries and caucuses has exploded this year. Stoller mostly argues that it’s “because of a mixture of improved technology, better organizers and more investment in voter contact, Democratic campaigns have simply gotten better at talking to more people.” While he gets pretty inside-baseball about how field operations are working, the fact is that, thanks to new technologies and renewed voter interest, Democrats are now much better at that crucial step of getting supporters to actually talk to each other.

  • In a twist on the traditional Howard Dean bat-style fundraising graphic, the RNC has created the Clinton Spendometer, a widget-ized thermometer that tracks Hillary CLinton's “reckless spending proposals.” It’s at $888.6 and counting — almost a trillion dollars? Methinks the RNC is playing loose with the numbers.

The Candidates on the Web

  • Bigger than Iowa and New Hampshire: the Washington Post’s Matthew Mosk and Jose Antonio Vargas report that immediately after Barack Obama’s victory in South Carolina Saturday, the Obama website saw the “highest peak” in donations and traffic of the entire campaign. According to a campaign source, money was coming in online at a rate of $500,000 per hour. Any way you slice it, that’s a phenomenal number, and it’s more evidence that Obama has become the true online fundraising juggernaut of the cycle.

  • The Politico's Ben Smith and Carrie Budoff Brown investigate Obama's coordinated response to the continuing email campaign trying to spread "the myth that Obama is a crypto-Muslim Manchurian candidate." The campaign has been fighting the messages since it launched a year ago, and the campaign says it doesn't suspect Hillary Clinton or any other candidate is behind it. Rather, as Smith and Budoff Brown write, the emails are "a largely organic expression of a dark place in the American consciousness." A dark place indeed.

  • Hillary Clinton is continuing her post-Iowa pledge to connect to young voters, posting her second video of answers to supporters’ questions. As in her first video, Hillary responds to questions submitted, in top-down Hillary style, through a form on her site. There’s a good range in there, from how to make college affordable to hiring more teachers. Completing the outreach effort, the answers are intercut with clips of young voters praising Hillary. It’s definitely a good move for her; for better or worse, she’s often at her best when going through policy proposals with a staffer.

In Case You Missed It…

Micah Sifry notices that professional and amateur videographers online are starting to zero in on Hillary Clinton in a way that could subtly hurt her image. Will her campaign respond?

Political campaigns typically use search advertising primarily for long-term list-building, but with a big chunk of February 5th voters apparently still undecided, Colin Delany wonders if targeted search ads should be an effective way to reach people who are still making up their minds?

Hearty congratulations are in order for Julie Barko Germany, who has just been officially named the new director of the Institute for Politics, Democracy & the Internet (IPDI) at George Washington University.

A new website called Politweets gleans the “tweets” which mention political candidates’ names and then displays them on its site in real time, writes Kristin Gorski It’s become a news outlet, where private citizens, traditional media, and even the candidates’ themselves tweet about facts, opinion and web links to anyone who reads.

News Briefs

RSS Feed friday >

Google to Charlie Rangel: You Are Dead to Me.

Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) might be facing particularly challenging reelection odds this year, at least acording to Google: based on its new Knowledge Graph interface, the search engine says that the very-much-alive Congressman died on November 20, 2004, as Colin Campbell first reported for Politicker via Azi Paybarah and Anthony Adragna. GO

friday >

Roemer to Americans Elect: Thanks Anyway

Americans Elect announced recently that it would suspend its online candidate selection process, leaving organizations in several states with an open slot on the ballot. Naturally, potential candidate Buddy Roemer is not enthused. "I am taking the next few days to review with supporters how best to proceed from here," he says. GO

Chris Anderson Says That Nixed TED Talk Was Rated "Mediocre," Links To It Anyway

TED's Chris Anderson responds to criticism of how his idea-spreading operation handled a talk about inequality — and posts video of the talk online. GO

Was the "Ricketts"/Fred Davis Obama-Wright Ad Pitch a Good Deal?

As if the content of the now-discarded plan for a new Super PAC-funded attack campaign against President Barack Obama wasn't controversial enough to grab attention — it would revive attempts to link President Obama to the controversial Rev. Jeremiah Wright just before the beginning of the Democratic National Convention this summer — the now-discarded plan featured a two-page pitch for a pricey social media component meant to boost its exposure. GO

Facebook's Growing Political Importance, Visualized

To commemorate Facebook's impending IPO, the Sunlight Foundation's* reporting group has a new story chronicling Facebook's increasing political spending. Accompanying the story, though, is an instance of their Capitol Words tool that shows Facebook's increasing relevance in Congress as well. GO

TED: Some Seattle Billionaires Have 'Ideas Worth Spreading'; Some Don't

A year ago, Microsoft mega-billionaire Bill Gates gave a talk at TED about state budgets and education funding, entitled "How state budgets are breaking US schools." It was an attack on state budgeting practices. All but one of the fifty states are supposed to balance their budget, but Gates argued that most states used gimmicks "that ... GO

Summer Olympics to Stream Live From the UK — For Some

The BBC announced its plans yesterday to broadcast its live Olympics coverage of London's Summer games to PCs, mobile-devices and Internet-connected televisions, Reuters reported.

With a free Olympics application for Apple and Android phones, the BBC says it will be offering up to 24 live streams and video highlights clips, and plans for over 2,500 hours of live programming ... that is only available to viewers in the UK. NBC also plans to stream online, but the majority of free viewing of the Olympics will only be available to existing cable TV subscribers.

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CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront" Will Have Some Tech-Politics Commentators

This should be interesting: CNN nightly news program Erin Burnett OutFront is out with its list of political commentators for the general election. Some of the names are familiar in Internet-politics-land. The gang includes Upworthy's Maegan Carberry, who was previously director of communications at Rock The Vote; Sasha Issenberg, who ventures into our corner of the political world frequently while documenting the new science of political campaigns for Slate; and Ben Smith, veteran political blogger turned BuzzFeed's top politics editor.

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