Yeah, hopefully when the novelty of the YouTubed gaffe wears off, we'll all start to learn to appreciate the inherent humanity of the people we elect to lead us and chill out about the occasional blunder. I'm sure that hope goes double for those of us who got into blogging long before we thought about getting into politics, lest we suffer the same fate as Pandagon & Shakespeare's Sister.
By Colin Delany, 06/14/2007 - 12:50pm
Cross-posted on e.politics
As Joe Trippi has been making the rounds lately, one thing he's been talking about is the rise of a culture of authenticity in politics as we move from a broadcast television era to an Internet-dominated era. I heard him make the point at last week's Connecting with Young Voters event (ably summarized by Kate Phillips in The Caucus), and he said something similar this week to The Guardian (thanks, Josh).
"Before TV, what mattered was how your voice sounded. Then with TV it matters what your candidate looks like ... Anybody can fake it on TV: all the Joe Trippis and Alastair Campbells get really good at making sure our guy looks great for the eight seconds that are actually going on the news.
"We are now moving to a medium where authenticity is king, from what things look like to what's real ... You have to be 'on' 24 hours a day, seven days a week."
He went into some detail about what a culture of authenticity means for campaigns the proliferation of "behind-the-scenes" campaign videos is one example, as is the recent trend of having campaigns interact with supporters via video "conversation" (more like a conversation via radio with someone on Pluto, though, with question and answer separated by hours or days).
The part of his discussion that really jumped out at me was his mention of the danger for campaigns of the transition period from an era of "gotcha" culture to one of authenticity. He pointed to the video of Conrad Burns falling asleep in a Senate hearing as an example let's face it, we've ALL started to fall asleep in a meeting before, and it's not really an indicator of how on-the-ball Burns was as a legislator. Eventually, Trippi believes that we'll laugh off minor gaffes like this, but at the moment, the Internet is encouraging a culture of authenticity at the same time that rival campaigns, the media, blogs, etc., will gang-tackle a candidate (or celebrity) for the slightest public or private mistake.
MoveOn's Eli Pariser made a related point at the Personal Democracy Forum conference last month when talking about social media: he argued that they won't reach their full potential until we can move past the "gotcha" mentality. He has reason to know, since MoveOn was burned in 2004 by the legendary "Hitler ad" it'll be hard for campaigns to take risks with citizen-generated content if they're afraid of being held responsible for something created by a a supporter with bad taste. Another example: think of all the times that the most extreme position taken by a random commentor on a lefty blog is held out by some TV blathering head or talk radio host as somehow being representative of ALL liberal thought.
How can campaigns handle this problem? First of all, by having a sense of humor. Your candidate makes an honest mistake, or a supporter does something that looks bad? Act like it's no big deal and apologize if necessary. Then, move on. Take a lesson from the Bush campaign for Texas Governor in 1994 he accidentally shot a protected bird, and I can remember how much the Ann Richards campaign tried to jump all over him about it. But, he paid his fine and laughed it off as a simple stupid mistake. Good damage control, and it worked.
The public will ultimately be able to tell the difference between something minor and a true Macaca moment they'll be able to spot the unguarded moment that really DOES tell you something significant about a public figure. The worst thing a campaign can do is get defensive or evasive nothing fires the press and the bloggers up like a candidate who seems to be hiding something.
– cpd
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Communication is different than authenticity
As I so often do, I disagree with Joe Trippi.
I think the Internet presents possibilities for communication with candidates that we have not had before. Along with Al Gore, I hope that trend will continue and offer even more ways to get direct feedback than we're already seeing. As the Dean campaign proved, it is also a great way to organize supporters. I am still in touch with people I "met" online through that campaign, and we have not stopped working to take our country back. We're using the connections we made and the network we built to do that.
The Internet also offers a venue for more points of view with a low cost of entry so that a variety of voices can be heard. But, as Micah Sifry pointed out yesterday, many of the popular political videos are professionally done--possibly as self-promotion for the makers. They do not necessarily represent candidates. Nor do the voter-generated pieces. As the Dean campaign was careful to impress on grassroots supporters, we spoke for ourselves--not the campaign or candidate.
As for the online pieces by the campaigns, they're no doubt as carefully scripted as any other campaign communications. There is, of course, always the chance to catch McCain doing a musical performance. And those off-script moments are probably more authentic than the norm. But they're few and far between, which is why they garner so much attention.
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Well said.
Dead on, and I think relates to what I tried to say over here.
It pains me to say this but GWB's career makes a strong argument in favor of this analysis. His neologisms and vapid statements may actually have helped him -- nobody could think he was scripted in his gaffes, and if the authentic person revealed in such moments was a doofus fratboy, you knew at least that you were looking at the real thing.
Gore, on the other hand -- I met the guy briefly a couple years back; he was low-key, wryly funny, and sometimes self-deprecating. Where was that man back in 2000?
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Ian Wilker
roots.lab - helping nonprofits leverage the social web.