Ran across this interesting Washington Post article outlining which candidate's appeal to which marketing segments. Here's the analysis of by a demographics research firm:
How Donations Depict Donors
They are young. They propel urban gentrification. They shop at Banana Republic, read Vanity Fair, like Audi A4s and watch reruns of "Friends." The $54,117 median family income of these well-educated, Internet-savvy professionals is relatively low in part because so many are single and live alone. The people who meet these criteria tend to live in Zip codes that Claritas Inc., the demographics research firm, has classified as the nation's "Bohemian Mix.
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Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) has, in turn, successfully mined two other similar constituencies: what Claritas has called "Young Digerati" -- listen to National Public Radio, drive Saabs, live in condos on the edge of cities -- and "Money and Brains" -- support arts charities, shop at Nordstrom, married with few if any children, many with postgraduate degrees.
For Democratic candidates and the Democratic Party, these donors have become increasingly important, as business groups have shifted toward the GOP and the parties are now prohibited from collecting large contributions of unregulated "soft money."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A23634-2004Jan16?language=printerI'm curious as to whether DUers think these descriptions are accurate. So, what I'm asking is that you read the article, find the candidate you support or are leaning toward and let me know if you fit the profile. Do you know other supporters of a particular candidate? Do they fit the profile?
I'm sorry to say that they did not include all of the candidates. I would have been interested in their market demographics as well.