Let The $4 Billion . . . Or $6 Billion . . . Or $9.8 Billion Rumpus Begin! (Romney MA Jobs Edition)

The Obama campaign continues its sandblasting of Mitt Romney’s jobs record as Massachusetts governor, running this ad in CO, FL, IA, NC, NH, NH, NV, OH, PA, and VA (via MSNBC’s First Read).

 

First Read notes that Romney has taken a new approach to defending its record: sort of ignoring it.

The Romney camp responds with this statement: “Having abandoned ‘Hope and Change,’ the Obama campaign only ‘Hopes To Change The Subject’ from an abysmal jobs report. We’re happy to compare the 4.7 percent unemployment rate Mitt Romney achieved in Massachusetts to President Obama’s weak record any day.” By the way, it was interesting to see Team Romney unveil a new way to slice up the jobs data for Romney’s tenure in Massachusetts. Our question: Why did you wait until now? The 47th in job creation was a staple for the entire primary campaign and yet, no pushback like we saw this weekend. As the Boston Globe writes, the Romney camp has never disputed the accuracy of the 47th charge.

Feel free to read the Globe story, but be advised: It will make your head hurt.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

$ex and the City: Sarah Jessica Parker Puts Out For Obama

The 2012 presidential campaign is all about My Dinner with Celebrity Whoever.

Start with Barack Obama’s George Clooney dinnerfest last month (via the LA Times’s Food blog):

DINNER AT CLOONEY’S

One hundred and fifty wealthy Democrats joined President Obama for dinner at George Clooney’s Studio City house, including Robert Downey Jr., Tobey Maguire, Barbra Streisand and Jeffrey Katzenberg, reports The Times. Wolfgang Puck catered the dinner, which was expected to raise $15 million.

Next came Mitt Romney’s dinner with Donald Trump (via the Washington Times):

 How hungry are you? Could you stomach a meal with Donald Trump? Would having Mitt Romney there make it more edible?

That’s the question supporters of Mitt Romney have to ask themselves before plunking down $3 to buy a chance to have dinner with Mitt and The Donald.

It is all part of a mega fundraiser to rival President Obama’s bash at George Clooney’s California home on May 10 when a couple who had bought a winning $3 raffle were flown to join the dinner party that raised $15 million dollars for the President’s campaign. Of course, the other diners had to pony up $40,000-a-head for their dinners.

Now comes Sarah Jessica Parker’s pitch for yet another Obama repast (via BuzzFeed):

Transcript:

“Ok, the guy who ended the war in Iraq, the guy who says you should be able to marry anyone you want, and the guy who created 4 million new jobs, that guy: President Obama and Michelle are coming to my house for dinner on June 14, and I want you to be there too.”

How much does the hardworking staff want to be there?

Not $40,000 worth, that’s for sure.

UPDATE: The SJP ad ran on MTV Sunday night, according to ABC News.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Headscratcher o’ the Day (NYT/Elizabeth Warren Edition)

From Sunday’s New York Times piece about Landslide Lizzy Warren’s sweeping of (and sweeping Marisa DeFranco aside of) the Massachusetts Democratic Party convention on Saturday:

In recent days, Ms. Warren has taken more aggressive steps to try to counteract the fallout from the [Native American] ancestry issue and criticism of her campaign for failing to respond to the controversy more quickly and fully. Governor Patrick, one of the state’s most popular politicians, broke his pledge to stay neutral in the Democratic contest and endorsed her a few days ago.

She also began reaching out to individual reporters.

But not, apparently, to the Times reporter, Katharine Q. Seelye, who quoted only Warren’s speech to the convention and comments to “reporters.”

So why bring it up and not elaborate?

Your guess (as good as the hardworking staff’s) goes here.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Dr. Evil Targets Mike Bloomberg

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s proposed crackdown on big sugary drinks is going over like the metric system.

Exhibit A:

This full-page New York Times the American Beverage Association ran on Friday.

Exhibit B:

This full-page ad the Center for Consumer Freedom ran on Saturday.

The Center for Consumer Freedom, as the hardworking staff has previously noted, is a front group for the restaurant, fast-food, and soft-drink industries orchestrated by superflack Rick Berman, who was profiled by 60 Minutes as Dr. Evil and who runs at least 23 other front groups.

Then again, a Friday Times piece included this quote for the ages:

Another diner, Monica Dauphine, 44, who was sharing a 32-ounce Sprite, gave the mayor credit for his good intentions, but said: “You can’t force it. It’s like dictatorship. I’m sorry, but if you want to be obese, you want to be obese.”

Reality check: Saturday’s Wall Street Journal included this Sentiment Tracker about the Bloomberg ban:

Rick Berman, eat your (low-calorie) heart out.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Mitt Romney Is Tough. No, Wait – He’s Wimpy.

From our New York Times Corp. Kissin’ Cousins desk:

The Boston Globe and its kissin’ cousin the New York Times have very different takes on how presumptive presidential nominee Mitt Romney (R-How You Like Me Now?) is viewed by the GOP’s conservative base.

From Saturday’s Globe:

Romney fires up conservatives with jabs at Obama

Mitt Romney, who battled to win the votes of skeptical conservatives during his primary campaign, is reaping praise from some prior critics for his pluck and creativity in taking the fight to President Obama now that he is the Republican presidential nominee.

“I’m telling you, this is not the McCain campaign,’’ radio host Rush Limbaugh told his listeners Thursday.

He spoke just after energetic Romney workers stymied an Obama rally in Boston, and Romney himself made a surprise visit to Solyndra, the California solar panel manufacturer that went bankrupt despite a $535 million loan guarantee from the administration.

Limbaugh also lauded the former Massachusetts governor for not distancing himself from Donald Trump earlier in the week, after the boisterous real estate magnate and television host – while gearing up to host a fund-raiser for Romney – reiterated his belief that Obama is not a US citizen.

From Saturday’s Times:

Critics From Base See Romney Pulling Punches on ‘Nice Guy’ Obama

To hear Mitt Romney tell it, President Obama has slowed the economic recovery, apologized for America abroad, taken his cues from the social democrats of Europe and wasted hundreds of millions in stimulus dollars on companies like Solyndra.

But there is one more thing Mr. Romney regularly reminds voters about the president: “He’s a nice guy.” Those were Mr. Romney’s words last month at a campaign stop in Fort Lupton, Colo., where he added, for good measure, “I don’t have a problem with the man personally.”

That followed Mr. Romney’s portrayal of Mr. Obama in April as “a nice guy” who “spent too much time at Harvard,” and his description of the president in October as “well meaning, but just over his head when it comes to the economy.”

Even as Mr. Romney steps up his attacks on the Obama administration, his measured portrayal of the president himself — his He’s-a-Nice-Guy-But approach — has stirred some concerns among fellow Republicans who are eager, after nearly four years of an Obama administration, to see the president demonized.

So, to review: The Globe says conservatives think Romney is bashing Obama. The Times says conservatives think Romney is babying Obama.

What say you, splendid readers?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

Elizabeth Warren Goes Off The Reservation

The hardworking staff opened the old mailbag today and a letter from none other than Elizabeth Warren (D-Indian Giver) poured out.

Dear Friend,

I came out of a hardworking [!] middle class family at a time when America was creating opportinities for kids like me.

My dad sold carpet for a living, and after he had a heart attack, my mother had to go to work to keep a roof over our family’s head. I got married at 19, had two kids, and worked my way through college. I taught elementary school and eventually went to law school.

I made it . . . but it wasn’t always easy.

Especially now.

But Warren doesn’t mention her current Cherokee Notions in the fundraising letter, just her battle against “the big banks and Wall Street.”

Somehow, that just doesn’t add up.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 12 Comments

Doc Emrick: The Musical

One of the great joys of the Stanley Cup playoffs has been Mike Emrick’s call of them (especially Bruins-Capitals and Rangers-Devils).

From the Boston Globe’s Bob Ryan:

There are many great sports announcers in our midst. But the one whose amazing ability to synthesize the action with graceful use of the mother tongue while providing insight and the requisite amount of emotion in a volatile sport, and who thus stands a bit above the pack, is the irreplaceable Doc Emrick. Hockey is lucky to have him. Truth be told, we all are.

(For dissenting voices, see here.)

Regardless, now come the Finals with Doc in fine fettle, as this New York Times piece (literally) notes:

Hockey’s Highs and Lows From a Maestro of the Mic

They are verbal sprints. Or marathons. Or marathon sprints.

Whatever one calls them, Mike Emrick’s precise, exhilarating, loud and exhausting play-by-play hockey calls are memorable for their accuracy, inventiveness, honest emotion, fluidity and speed.

He has done a few thousand games, starting with the minor league Port Huron Flags in Michigan in the 1970s. If he fears anything, it is the damage a cold can do to his voice, not the effects of frantic action. And he can deliver minutes of unbroken narrative, his tenor rising steeply at the hint of a goal.

They are Emrick’s arias: dramatic tales of passes, shots, checks, crashes into boards, saves, interceptions, goals and line changes accentuated by the sound — “OhhhhHHHHHHH!” — of his internal thermostat rapidly heating up, as if close to exploding. He hits his highest note with variations on a single word: “SCORES!”

And the Times has transcribed one of Emrick’s calls into a musical score:

 

All that aside, Emrick just loves the game.

You can hear it in every word.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

The Factory Is Facebook. The Product Being Manufactured Is You.

(With apologies to Adbusters)

Dispatches from the Facebook/Marketing/Privacy vortex.

From MediaPost:

Facebook Rolls Out Promoted Posts, New Page Tools

Facebook is taking steps to boost ad spending directly through brand pages, while also giving marketers new tools for managing their presence on the social network. The social network has rolled out promoted posts to extend the reach of page content, as well as providing companies with different access levels to their Facebook pages internally.

Promoted posts allow Facebook page administrators to boost exposure for their posts beyond the normal reach they get in fans’ news feeds — and without having to go through a separate ad dashboard. Facebook, however, doesn’t specify how much larger a percentage of a brand’s fans will see a post that’s promoted.

From the New York Times:

On Facebook, ‘Likes’ Become Ads

SAN FRANCISCO — On Valentine’s Day, Nick Bergus came across a link to an odd product on Amazon.com: a 55-gallon barrel of … personal lubricant.

He found it irresistibly funny and, as one does in this age of instant sharing, he posted the link on Facebook, adding a comment: “For Valentine’s Day. And every day. For the rest of your life.”

Within days, friends of Mr. Bergus started seeing his post among the ads on Facebook pages, with his name and smiling mug shot. Facebook — or rather, one of its algorithms — had seen his post as an endorsement and transformed it into an advertisement, paid for by Amazon.

In Facebook parlance, it was a sponsored story, a potentially lucrative tool that turns a Facebook user’s affinity for something into an ad delivered to his friends.

From techPresident:

In Facebook Nation, Privacy Activists Trigger a Vote On Policy

[A] group of users led by Austrian Facebook birddogger Max Schrems [has] accrued nearly 48,000 comments on proposed changes to the social network’s data use policy. As a result, the policy is up for a vote by all Facebook users, presenting a rare test of the social network’s ability to balance its status as a publicly traded company with its unique place in the digital public square.

If 30 percent of users join in the governance vote — which is an up-or-down vote on Facebook’s proposed slate of changes and comes after the public comment period on the policy — the results will be binding, Facebook says. Otherwise, they will be advisory.

Schrems and company are advocating that the social network take a far more user-centric approach to data management, one that requires users to give their specific permission for Facebook to apply data-gathering features to their accounts and to have greater access to the information the company is collecting about them. For instance, Schrems’ group Europe v Facebook is calling on Facebook to implement an “opt-in” system as opposed to an “opt-out” one for all data use and all features, such as face recognition; to publish a list of all data categories stored about a user, instead of naming examples; and to give users full access to personal data “in a raw format within 40 days upon request.”

So, to review:

Facebook is trying to become more advertiser-friendly. In the process, it is using your Facebook activity as marketing fodder. In response, privacy activists want you to stop it.

Is that clear enough?

 

Originally posted on the Newer! Improveder! Sneak ADtack!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

It’s Good To Live In A Two-Daily Town (Gov. Patrick Strong-Arm Edition)

From our When Deval Picked Lizzy desk:

Thursday’s local dailies had very different takes on Gov. Deval Patrick’s decision to endorse Elizabeth Warren (D-CherOKee) in the Massachusetts Democratic primary for U.S. Senate.

Boston Globe page B1:

Governor Patrick endorses Elizabeth Warren

SOMERVILLE — Governor Deval Patrick, who had said he would not endorse in the Democratic Senate primary, threw his support behind Elizabeth Warren on Wednesday, seeking to boost her campaign as she faces continued questioning over her assertions of Native American heritage.

Patrick’s endorsement comes just three days before the Democratic convention in Springfield, where some Democrats are hoping to elbow aside Marisa DeFranco, a potential challenger to Warren, by ensuring she does not receive the 15 percent of delegates needed to earn a spot on the September primary ballot.

Massachusetts Republicans pointed out Patrick’s history of insisting he would not endorse in the midst of a contested primary and called his decision to do so now “a sign of deep panic and desperation in the Warren campaign.”

The Boston Herald’s front page called it something entirely different (via The Newseum’s Today’s Front Pages):

Nice contrast, yeah?

Campaign Outsider Three-Daily Town Bonus®

From Thursday’s New York Times:

Governor Throws Weight Behind Senate Candidate

SOMERVILLE, Mass. — In a last-minute change of heart, Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, who said last year that he would stay neutral in the race against Senator Scott P. Brown until Democrats had settled on a candidate, endorsed the embattled Elizabeth Warrenon Wednesday.

The unexpected move, announced at a contentious news conference at Warren headquarters here, came just days before the state Democratic Partyis to hold its convention. Delegates are expected to back Ms. Warren, but they may also give enough support to another candidate, Marisa DeFranco, to allow her a spot on the September primary ballot to challenge Ms. Warren.

Deliciously even-handed, don’t you think?

Too bad Massachusetts politics aren’t the same.

P.S. Don’t you love how Patrick and Warren lean exactly the same degree to the left in the photo?

Snap.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

David Axelrod Is Full Of It

House of Obama consigliere David Axelrod tweeted this yesterday:

This, as it happens, is a piece in Politico:

GOP groups plan record $1 billion blitz

Republican super PACs and other outside groups shaped by a loose network of prominent conservatives – including Karl Rove, the Koch brothers and Tom Donohue of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce – plan to spend roughly $1 billion on November’s elections for the White House and control of Congress, according to officials familiar with the groups’ internal operations.

Anyone who cares about our democracy should be appalled by this? That’s rich coming from a guy who helped spend $750 million on one campaign in 2008.

C’mon, Axelrod. Rejoin the real world.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments