Ads

McCain: "Don't Know Much About" the Economy

by: tremayne

Mon Aug 25, 2008 at 12:35

Via user conspiracy in the Quick Hits here is the latest ad from the Obama campaign:

It strikes me that this is not the same cookie-cutter type ad that Matt and others here have complained about. Or maybe we've set the bar so low that anything remotely creative seems genius. Anyway, what is your take on this ad?

Discuss :: (40 Comments)

Even Newer Obama Ad: Better?

by: tremayne

Thu Aug 21, 2008 at 11:45

Below we have a lively discussion on two new Obama ads. The consensus of that discussion is: neither ad is that great but a strong majority prefer the first because the second may be too "inside baseball." Now we have an even newer ad. Question: Is this one better than the other two or about the same? Vote below and give your reasoning in the comments.

Discuss :: (70 Comments)

Two New Obama Ads: Which is Better?

by: tremayne

Wed Aug 20, 2008 at 23:03

Let's do some message testing. Watch these two ads and tell us which is better. You can vote in the poll and give your reasoning in the comments.

Try to evaluate the ads from the point of view of a lower information voter rather than the high-information voter you probably are.

Discuss :: (110 Comments)

A Different Take on Obama, Britney, Celebrity, and the last couple weeks

by: mtayl

Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 14:36

There's been a lot of hand-wringing--here on OpenLeft and elsewhere, including the MSM--over McCain's celebrity ads, his new caricature of Obama, and whether his more aggressive, attention-grabbing message (over the last 10 days or so) has been hurting Obama by feeding into voter concerns with him.

People, including myself, have been reminded of August 2004.

I think there are a couple of substantive differences, though, and I think the Obama camp is aware of them:

First, the celebrity ads (and the immaturity that underlies them) are McCain ads, not third party ones. Bush had just enough distance in Aug. 2004 that he could plausibly deny affiliation with the SBVT. McCain, of course, cannot. Perhaps more important, unlike Bush, McCain's brand is about rejecting politics as usual and partisan bickering and a lot of the crap we see on CNN everyday. How do these ads do anything but fall into that gutter and hurt his brand? I think--MAYBE--Obama's people deliberately let McCain go negative and nasty first, because they think it is much more a double-edged sword for him than it is for them.

That's not to say the tightening of some state polls and the national polls (sort-of) isn't concerning. The Obama camp seems to have decided the June-August time was a period of occasional, concise, targeted moments of positive media coverage--the trip, the VP choice, the convention--rather than an aggressive, multi-faceted onslaught. A lot of people are upset--and worried--about their (at least until the last couple of days) lack of aggression, their inability to control the narrative.

I dunno. I feel like we're still missing something. It's as if they're lying in wait, guns primed, just biding their time. Maybe I'm wrong and they're just incompetent or weak(in reality, it's probably somewhere in between). But I find it hard to believe they aren't aware of all the concern popping up over the last couple weeks and the narrative McCain has produced. Despite Obama's response ads (and a couple of decent, if less-than-perfect, counter punches), I still feel like they're WAITING. Mike Lux calls it Beltway caution, and maybe it is. But what else could it be?

A grand strategy? I have no clue. I wish I knew, but we won't until after labor day. Until then, while we can raise red flags and warn them to get more aggressive, to control the message, we can't get Axelrod and Gibbs' attention any more than that letter in The Nation can get Obama's.

It's frustrating, ain't it?

Discuss :: (2 Comments)

McCain and the RNC Want it Both Ways

by: Josh Nelson

Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:35

They better not get away with this.  
The Republican National Committee demanded Monday that television networks stop running a television ad by the Democratic Party that falsely suggests John McCain wants a 100-year war in Iraq.

In a blinding fit of mock outrage, they immediately fired off angry letters to NBC, CNN and MSNBC insisting that they stop airing the commercial.

Here is the ad in question.

The ad, wisely, uses John McCain's own words.

The ad says President Bush has talked about staying in Iraq for 50 years, then plays a clip of McCain saying, "Maybe 100. That'd be fine with me."

The announcer then says: "If all he offers is more of the same, is John McCain the right choice for America's future?"

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 239 words in story)

Obama's Innovative Online Ads

by: worldtrippers

Thu Jan 31, 2008 at 12:21

I was browsing the blogs this morning, specifically, TalkingPointsMemo, when I noticed this awesome ad from the Obama campaign on TPM's front page.



Wow! An interactive map targeted to where I live! You can move the Obama "O" to your location, and it then asks you to put in your address and voila! Caucus Location! I was impressed, and began to wonder, are they doing this for every state? And is Hillary doing anything similar? In true blogger spirit, I set out to find out.
There's More... :: (4 Comments, 456 words in story)
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