MySpace and YouTube Vie for a Spot in the Political Machine
Los Angeles Times reporter Scott Martelle reports in the Sunday edition that both Internet sites have announced campaigns which will include webcasts of town hall meetings and candidate debates. Both are looking to draw voters into the political process. "Both MySpace and YouTube would like to establish themselves as serious political sites," according to Josh Bernoff, a social-computing analyst at Forrester Research. "They want to be broader, more multidimensional." He adds that credibility is at stake for both sites as they try to establish themselves "as more than one-trick ponies where users share passions for rock bands or post funny videos."
According to the LA Times article, at stake are 21 million potential viewers who have viewed political videos since February, according to Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project. He also says that 24 million people have participated in online lobbying campaigns. Though those numbers are extremely large, they don't represent the largest percentage of voters considering that 122 million people voted in the last Presidential election.
MySpace announced a campaign which will include a series of webcast town hall meetings with both Democratic and Republican presidential candidates and a virtual primary planned to take place in January. In addition, some of the candidates including Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain have created MySpace profiles.
YouTube will cosponsor with CNN a Democratic debate in July and is currently in talks to cosponsor Republican debates.
Facebook.com is also trying to get in on the action by establishing profile pages for each candidate. Facebook users can become a supporter for the candidate of their choice.
MySpace and YouTube Vie for a Spot in the Political Machine
You may also like...
- What Happened After the 2000 Presidential Election
- Hispanic Population Could Play Large Role in 2008 Presidential Election
- The Victoria Woodhull/Frederick Douglass Ticket in the 1872 U.S. Presidential Election (and Comparin...
- George Allen's Potential Candidacy for the 2008 Presidential Election
- 2008 Presidential Hopefuls: Senator Sam Brownback's Potential Candidacy for the 2008 Presidential El...
- The Effects of Advertising on Young Voters in the 2004 Presidential Election
- George Pataki and Rudy Giuliani's Potential Candidacy for the 2008 Presidential Election
- Media Framing of War in the 2004 Presidential Election
- The 2008 Presidential Election: An Overview of Potential Nominees
- Election Polls Review: Why the Democratic Nominee Will Win the Presidential Election
Takeaways
- MySpace and YouTube square off to secure a place in the polictical process
- 21 million webcast viewers are at stake
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Most Commented On


