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Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Jonathan Garthwaite :: Townhall.com Columnist
Will a YouTube Video Decide the Next President?
by Jonathan Garthwaite
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For decades, campaign managers and spin masters have controlled the campaign messages blasting across the airwaves.

They used one focus group after another to determine which words to say and which images to use. Only then would a radio spot or television commercial make it off the drawing board and into the election campaign.

All that may be changing.

On March 5, an anonymous visitor to the popular video-sharing site YouTube uploaded a video attacking Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and promoting the candidacy of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.

It's a very well-made ad. A remake of the 1984 Apple commercial that aired during the Super Bowl that year, the ad replaces the Big Brother image on the large screen with Clinton and turns the hammer-throwing athlete into an Obama T-shirt-wearing revolutionary.

The ad ends with a rainbow-colored O with an apple stem popping out the top and the address of the official Barack Obama Web site.

After bouncing around the Internet for a couple of weeks, it caught steam this weekend and now is the talk of the town — maybe not on Main Street USA, but it sure has the political class buzzing.

It's a creative ad, and from all the talk on television and radio that has developed in the last few days, it has obviously been effective.

But is it changing the political world as we know it? If you listen to the media pundits and the professional campaign operatives, the answer is a resounding yes.

The very fact that a creative and enterprising individual can create a compelling message that draws such a picture of two candidates and their contrasting images is a sign of where political campaigning is heading.

Ads and campaign materials created and distributed by entities not affiliated with the actual campaigns is nothing new — it's been happening since the dawn of politics.

In past years, independent groups have distributed outrageous fliers with devastating half-truths; political advocacy groups have bought up air time to broadcast negative ads for decades.

Not much could be done about the anonymous fliers, but McCain/Feingold and its restrictions on free speech and issue advocacy groups, like the Christian Coalition and the Sierra Club, have tried to stop independent expenditures from having their desired effect too close to the election. Congress in essence tried to create an incumbency-protection law.

That protection is quickly coming to an end. In the past, money was an insurmountable barrier on the average American to having an influence on elections but with the advent of the Internet, YouTube and viral Internet campaigns, any individual with access to a computer, creativity and limited technical skills can create a devastating message. Only the creativity and effectiveness of the message can limit its ability to spread like a wildfire.

The Hillary 1984 ad isn't alone. A quick search of the Internet and YouTube returns dozens of attack ads against nearly all the announced candidates for president. Continued...

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About The Author

Jonathan Garthwaite is the editor-in-chief of Townhall.com.

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What light shines through yonder window?
Back in 2004, I passed along links to the Theresa Hines-Kerry, in-your-face, finger waging, bordering on eye gouging encounter with a local Boston reporter where she uttered the famous “shove it” phrase that was caught on video and posted to the internet shortly thereafter. This was way before You Tube had achieved any kind of notoriety.

You could type “shove it” on any community blackboard a thousand times or conjugate it another thousand and it would never project the kind of vituperative inflection Madam Kerry engendered in one five second dalliance.

A picture may be worth a thousand words. Video is words at 1k, with an exponent of 60 times a second.

Maybe
I can remember the 1985 movie "Back To The Future" where the professor states that he is not surprised that in 1985 one "needs to be an actor to become President".

Natural furthered development.
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