Something tells me he isn't gone for good. His campaign site still links to the defunct profile, and he's fully embraced a bunch of other services... I think he'll be back on Facebook.
By Joshua Levy, 03/12/2007 - 10:27am
The Web on the Candidates
- As reported by James Kotecki, Wesley Clark has started to produce videos for his website, stopIranWar.com. While Kotecki is upset that Clark isn't
mentioning Kotecki's nameresponding directly to voters, it's an encouraging step and a sign that Clark may be getting closer to announcing his candidacy. - Giuliani's video closet: PrezVid's Peter Hauck has some advice for Rudy: "Buckle Up, It's Gonna Be a Bumpy Ride." After listing the many of Rudy's less-than-conservative merits, Hauck posts two videos -- one a mayoral campaign video from 1989 showing a very family-friendly Rudy, the other a "Welcome to CPAC" video showcasing Rudy's liberal positions on social issues -- that should provide fodder for his conservative critics in weeks and months to come.
- Matthew Mosk of the Washington Post writes about the growing phenomenon of small, bundled online campaign contributions. Many candidates' sites give individuals the tools to fundraise among their peers and to contribute more to the campaign than they ever could as individuals, and usingActBlue John Edwards has raised over $1 million and Bill Richardson over $300,000 in small donations. Becky Donatelli considers this "the online version of neighborhood fundraising," and ActBlue's Ben Rahn sees a symbiosis between online fundraising and the blogosphere. According to the article, "Rahn called bloggers 'one of our most important marketing arms.' He credits the 'organic process' of blogs sending visitors to ActBlue for producing about $2.3 million in donations last year -- a healthy slice of the $19 million raised for Democratic candidates since the site's creation three years ago."
The Candidates on the Web
- Hillary Clinton has a new Hillcast up, discussing the Walter Reade scandal and better care for American troops. Is it me, or does this video seem uninspired and by-the-numbers? Maybe a little interaction with a supporter or a response to some real questions -- something suggesting a conversation -- might spice things up?
- The headline on Dennis Kucinch's site promises "Video and Photos of Dennis at Progressive Alliance Conference of Texas, March 10, 2007" but all I could find were two photos of Kucinich at a house party in San Antonio. No videos, and no particularly revealing photos. Huh?
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Will the Campaigns Become More Transparent During Sunshine Week?
During Sunshine Week, starting Sunday, even reporters who hue to the tightest vision of objectivity get political. Government should be more open, they cry, and with editorials and stories they actively push for improved FOIA, expansion of FOIA to Congress, and improved transparency in all parts of Government.
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I wonder where he went...
Just to Clarify
People seem to have this idea that I only want candidates to respond directly to me. Of course it would be cool if they did that, but I'm really interested in seeing them respond
through video to somebody (anybody!) who sends them a video message.
It doesn't have to be me - in this case, Clark did post a video response to me (which you can see under my video 'Wesley Clark on YouTube.. My contention is that if he wanted to make a video response to me, he should mention my name, just like almost all legitimate video responses on YouTube mention the name of the person they're responding to. That's one big way of telling if the person is really responding or if they just want attention for their video.
I'd be very happy to see candidates address their responses by to whomever they wanted to respond to. This is the same advice that Sam Roake, the manager for David Cameron's web campaign, gave to candidates as quoted on the most recent PrezVid post:
"Don't make the videos scripted and spun. Involve the voters: respond to them and address them by name."
-James Kotecki
James, Do you really expect
James,
Do you really expect that a candidate will be able to personally respond to every query they receive? It doesn't make sense that a candidate would cherry pick to speak directly with one person, while ignoring others...that alienates those he doesn't address. They are much better off putting together videos that have wide spread appeal. Why should a candidate shun the opportunity to speak to as many people as possible and instead waste a vblog on one person?
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Recent comments
- He may not win the nomination
4 hours 23 min ago - great example of web politics in action
17 hours 14 min ago - David Mamet-like subtitles.
20 hours 26 min ago - Email issue
20 hours 40 min ago - Email came from Barr campaign's service
21 hours 19 min ago - The Ron Paul e-mail
22 hours 34 min ago - Godwin's Law
1 day 3 hours ago - Mother May I?
1 day 16 hours ago - interesting points
2 days 17 hours ago - MyBO from back in the day
3 days 17 hours ago

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John Edwards dies on Facebook
Edwards has died an enigmatic death on Facebook. He seems to have left the the virtual land of procrastinating college students for greener pastures. So long good buddy... The only question now is, will anyone notice he's gone?