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Taking It to the People
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
The End of American Capitalism? 5 Short Takes on Where the Financial Crisis Might Be Headed
Democracy and Elections:
Democratic Election Protection Strategy's Missing Link: Electronic Vote Counts
Steven Rosenfeld
DrugReporter:
Marijuana Is Real Medicine
Paul Krassner
Election 2008:
What I Learned at the Sarah Palin Rally Before They Threw Me out
Linda Milazzo
Environment:
How Local Governments Are Standing in the Way of Clean Energy
Kyle Rabin
ForeignPolicy:
Chomsky: "If the U.S. Carries Out Terrorism, It Did Not Happen"
Subrata Ghoshroy
Health and Wellness:
Will the Economic Meltdown Undermine Interest in Health Care Reform?
Niko Karvounis
Hurricane Katrina:
From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished
Amy Goodman
Immigration:
Tuition Becomes Battleground in Immigration Fight
Annette Fuentes
Media and Technology:
The Growth of Talking Points Memo: A Case Study in Independent Media
Joshua Micah Marshall
Movie Mix:
The "Battle in Seattle" and Beyond
Stuart Townsend
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Our Next President Will Transform the Supreme Court
Ellen Goodman
Rights and Liberties:
Months After Boumediene, Justice Delayed Is Justice Denied
Aziz Huq
Sex and Relationships:
New Poll: Parents Overwhelmingly Support Age-Appropriate Sex Ed
Scott Swenson
War on Iraq:
The End of Iraq's "Awakening"?
Robert Dreyfuss
Water:
New Information Shows How Climate Change Will Affect Water
How do you sell out the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City on a chilly Monday night in January with a political fundraiser?
Easy. Tell the people you want some anti-Bush television ads, put some of the entertainment world's best progressive minds on the stage, and send the invite out to a million people.
MoveOn.org's "Bush In 30 Seconds" contest, in which members were asked to submit 30-second television ads demonstrating any failure of the Bush administration, culminated Monday night in a celebrity-lined awards ceremony in which the winners in each category -- Best Overall, People's Choice, Funniest, and Best Youth Ad -- were announced.
Over 1,500 entries were submitted (500 were cut for legal and decency issues); 110,000 people visited the website to vote. 15 finalists rose to the top, and a panel of judges -- Janeane Garofalo, Russell Simmons, Moby, Margaret Cho, Al Franken, Michael Moore, all in attendance at the event -- voted on the Best Overall Ad, while winners in each of the sub-categories were chosen by run-off voting online.
Getting the message of the winning ads out is the next step. Where conservatives have larger pools of money to spend on advertising campaigns, as well as better connections to the moguls of corporate media, MoveOn is relying on its membership to fund the placement in upcoming weeks.
In addition to the $7.5 million raised so far to be spent on running the ad on CNN during the President's State of the Union Address, MoveOn Campaigns Director Eli Pariser announced at the event that they were launching a campaign for an additional media placement: during this year's Super Bowl. Seeking out the $1.6 million in funding such a placement would require, MoveOn asked its members for their continued support. If approved by CBS, "Child's Pay" would be the first political ad to run nationally during the Super Bowl.
Filmmaker Michael Moore supports the move to wider national audience. "For years, progressives have been standing there with their arms folded over their chests, saying, 'Mainstream media is bad. We don't like it,'" he said. "They've just been refusing to play the game. Well, it's time to play the game. This is where people get their information." A tripled-pronged strategy -- using donations for mainstream media placements, traditional grassroots organizing (such as Clergy Leadership Network organizing progressive church leaders and their congregations), and harnessing the power of the Internet as MoveOn and Howard Dean have -- must be employed under one progressive umbrella.
MoveOn's success thus far has come largely from not only building an Internet constituency, but their ability to focus their membership immediately on a single issue at hand and direct them on how to take action. Previously disparate groups of progressives are brought together quickly and effectively through these email calls-to-action, and the "Bush In 30 Seconds" contest was no different.
Two of the ads, however, slipped through their screening process and have been the target of a Republican smear campaign against them. The two ads in question both compared Bush's policies and tactics to those of Adolf Hitler, and the Republican National Committee was quick to denounce MoveOn as a perpetrator of "the worst and most vile form of political hate speech." MoveOn responded immediately, pulling the ads from their website, apologizing for having let them slip through the screening process.
The energy of the event was high and the ads got as much applause as the entertainers who took to the stage. Pariser commented after the event, "As much as everyone appreciated the celebrities, the ads were just loved. We're lucky to have gotten such great creative [talent] in the process."
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| More News and Analysis: | ||
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Months After Boumediene, Justice Delayed Is Justice Denied Rights and Liberties: Months after it granted habeas rights to Gitmo prisoners, the Supreme Court's decision has yet to translate into concrete results. By Aziz Huq, The Nation. October 7, 2008. |
How Local Governments Are Standing in the Way of Clean Energy Environment: Too often people who want to install clean, efficient solar and wind systems can find themselves drowning in a sea of red tape. By Kyle Rabin, AlterNet. October 7, 2008. |
What I Learned at the Sarah Palin Rally Before They Threw Me out Election 2008: 20,000 Christian zealots, anti-abortion fanatics, and mostly white suburbanites reconnected with their high school past at the Palin rally. By Linda Milazzo, AlterNet. October 7, 2008. |