Some people consider 2008 Democratic Presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama to be the most “wired” candidate in either major political party. That is, he has utilized online social networks and even streaming video channels to his advantage – showing that he’s hip and understands a younger generation. He even has a MySpace page profile that had 160,000 “friends”. An Obama supporter has been running it for nearly three years, with the blessing of the Senator’s campaign team. They suddenly decided, though, that they were uncomfortable with an “outsider” running the page, which of course represents Obama’s viewpoints, etc.
The campaign team wanted control of the profile page, and the supporter, Joe Anthony, a paralegal, was fine with that, though he wanted nearly $50K in total fees to do so, which the Senator’s team said no to. Big mistake. At $50,000 of effort put in by Anthony to build 160,000 friends, each “friend”, and no doubt supporter of Obama, cost only about thirty cents. The stink that ensued caused Myspace to step in and decide that the Senator’s team could have control and Joe Anthony could take the contact info. All 160,000 friends. So what if it was supposed to be volunteer work?
Does this translate into 160,000 lost future votes? Maybe. Maybe less, maybe more. Who can know? The fact is, there are now only just over 21K friends. Obviously, it was a monstrously stupid move for the campaign team of a seemingly well-loved, charismatic candidate who has been a historic figure and may continue to be. Someone on the campaign team should be fired. It’s not like the campaign money isn’t there. But even more to the point, Anthony obviously was a good buffer and did a tremendous job building goodwill for the Senator.
Will the MySpace page be the same with the official campaign team running it? I doubt it. However, the Senator phoned Anthony to offer his apologies and try to win back his vote. Had the campaign team invited Anthony to be part of their team, everyone would be way ahead.
Originally posted on May 3, 2007 @ 2:29 pm
Alex Hammer says
Update 1: “Obama MySpace Discrepancy – Joe Rospars and TechPresident” http://hammer2006.blogspot.com/2007/05/obama-myspace-discrepancy-joe-rospars.html
Update 2: “TechPresident: How to Value a MySpace Mega-Group” http://hammer2006.blogspot.com/2007/05/techpresident-how-to-value-myspace-mega.html
Update 3: “Joe Anthony on his current MySpace page: “Perhaps it should just be deleted.”” http://hammer2006.blogspot.com/2007/05/joe-anthony-on-his-current-myspace-page.html
Original: Obama, MySpace, Joe Anthony, Day 2 – Latest Coverage By Leading Media (New York Times, TechPresident, Washington Post, Huffington Post)
http://hammer2006.blogspot.com/2007/05/obama-myspace-joe-anthony-day-2-latest.html
Neil McIntyre says
Forget MySpace, every politician has one now. What impressed me is Barack is on Twitter, and seems to update semi-frequently.
Raj Dash says
@Neil: Really? That’s what I dislike about Twitter: the inability to find someone. I know Senator Edwards is on, but I didn’t know Senator Obama was. That’d be interesting – a Presidential candidate’s Twitter “channel”
Neil McIntyre says
Yeah, http://twitter.com/BarackObama … Unless that’s just someone pretending to be him, which I guess is possible.
Raj Dash says
Yeah, how do you stop that on Twitter? Or any social site, really. Still, it should be interesting to follow. If not, I’ll unsubscribe. Though I’d really like to see what Rudy Guiliani and Hilary Clinton have to tweet, not to mention Al Gore, who I’m 200% certain will be running.