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Edited on Tue Jan-20-04 09:52 AM by ludwigb
The winner is the candidate who, by critical consensus, had the best television ads. The runner-up owes his even more incredible rise to being widely recognized as "nice" and "optimistic". He's an articulate, bright and caring person. How do people know this? Because the statewide ads tell them so, and the face of John Edwards meets their unconscious longings. Meanwhile, tall and deep-voiced John Kerry taps into a longing for a calm, powerful, commanding presence.
The fact of the matter is that all of Dean's money isn't going to make him a telegenic personality. At lunch today I briefly discussed the election with one of my roommates--she was vaguely familiar with Dean.
"Isn't he the one with the awful red face that goes around shouting 'You have the power! You have the power!," she asked. "Yes, where did you see him?" "Oh, on the news a few days ago."
That says it all.
It is sometimes difficult for us Net junkies, who watch little or no TV, to realize that the wide world around us remains firmly committed to the original fix. Many on the Net attribute Dean's defeat to the overwhelming power of the corporate media. They are only right insofar as it is the nature of the dominant medium of television that defeated them, rather than some corporate conspiracy. Gephardt's traditional labor volunteer campaign failed just as spectacularly as Dean's innovative Internet volunteer campaign.
The entire Internet punditry class, as a red-faced Andrew Sullivan points out, has demonstrably overestimated the power of new media. We have been caught up in a circular, blogular CW and have lost touch with the medium that brought Clinton and Bush to power.
I'm going to return to my original instinct, before I went to Dean meet-ups and got idealistic about the democratic power of new media. The Democratic candidate must be someone who can defeat Bush on the television screen. He must win over people whose only knowledge of politics are sound bytes and headlines through the sheer force of his personality. Simply put, the Democrats need to nominate someone we could imagine our parents and grandparents voting for, even if they knew next to nothing about his ideas.
I say we should give each one of the candidates an honest 2nd look. How effective are they at convincing normal (that is, unpolitical) people?
We have to win in 2004. Let us learn what we can from these early primaries and act accordingly!
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