Let The $4 Billion Rumpus Begin! (Boston SEIU-Turn Edition)

All politics is local? Sorry, Tip – nowadays all politics is vocal.

Case in point: the Boston chapter of the Service Employees International Union, which has recently jumped into the 2012 campaign adstravaganza. From Thursday’s Boston Globe:

Union dives into political spending

SEIU had fought corporate outlays on ads

The Service Employees International Union, the politically active labor group whose members include health care workers and janitors, has fought against corporations spending unlimited cash on candidates, warning it would “distort and ultimately delegitimize the electoral process.’’

But the union has now organized its own group that can spend limitless amounts of money to influence elections, and that group is running an ad criticizing Senator Scott Brown.

Said ad, from MassUniting:

 

The Globe piece points out that “[t]he nonpartisan group factcheck.org said several of the ad’s charges are inaccurate and called it ‘a misleading liberal ad.'”

Right. So what else is new?

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Jason Gay’s Take-Your-Father-To-Work Day

Wall Street Journal sports columnist Jason Gay had a sweet piece Thursday about taking his Dad, “a high school tennis coach in Cambridge, Mass., the city he grew up in, for 38 seasons,” to the U.S. Open.

He has coached players who arrived at their first practice with dazzling spin serves, great players who started with no skills at all, homegrown kids and kids whose families escaped faraway countries in crisis. My dad once tried to talk a towering, teenaged basketball star at his high school to try out for his tennis team. He was convinced the student would make a phenomenal doubles player. Patrick Ewing said no.

But Jason’s Dad had never been to a tennis Grand Slam.

He has now.

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In Dutch With Immigration Officials? Try This Game Show

From PRI’s The World:

Rejected Asylum Seekers Compete on Dutch Game Show

A Dutch TV game show is giving rejected asylum seekers the chance to win nearly $6,000 to start a new life … after they are deported.

Promo (brush up on your Dutch):

Take that, Confessions: Animal Hoarding.

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Let The $4 Billion Rumpus Begin! (Bachmann Drive-By Edition)

Presidential hopeful Michele Bachmann (R-God Is My Umbrella) has launched what New Hampshire Journal is calling “the first negative ad of the 2012 cycle” (which, not to sound negative, makes you wonder where New Hampshire Journal’s been lately).

Anyway, here it is:

 

The spot goes after Bachmann’s fellow Tea Partier Rick Perry (R-Secede or Lead) as a big spender, and concludes “There is an honest conservative – and she’s not Rick Perry.” An outfit called Keep Conservatives United produced the ad and claims it’s running in South Carolina, although Politico says “It’s unclear if it’s a real buy, or a push for free media.”

Either way, the gloves are off. We’ll soon know whether Perry is all hat and no catcall.

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Kia’s Soul Hamsters Are Back!

This one’s for the Missus:

 

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Does Annie Leibovitz Really Need Money This Badly? (Kardashian Kids Edition)

It’s no secret that celebtographer Annie Leibovitz has financial troubles, but as leading indicators go, this is a doozie (from New York’s The Cut via the Missus):

Annie Leibovitz Is Hosting a Party for the Kardashians and Their Sears Line

On Sunday morning, as at least one guy was kayaking through the streets of Soho and the ominous winds of Irene made their way to New England, an e-mail completely oblivious to all of it — perhaps since its origin was L.A. — coursed through the in-boxes of fashion bloggers and editors around the city. It read:

Kourtney, Kim and Khloe personally invite you to join them in celebrating the launch of the Kardashian Kollection. Join the stylish Kardashian klan on September 6th at the private studio of the legendary photographer Annie Leibovitz for an exclusive preview of their fabulous new fashion Kollection for Sears.

Kool!

 

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This Is What’s Wrong With The News Media’s Political Coverage

From Wednesday’s Boston Globe big wet kiss to only-Doug-Rubin-knows-for-sure U.S. Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren:

In an hourlong interview, she spoke often of the now-familiar story of her humble roots in Oklahoma. Her parents struggled financially, almost losing their home after her father had a heart attack. But it was also a time, she said, when the government made it possible for a woman who married at 19 and dropped out of college to get an education that led her to the Harvard Law School faculty in 1992.

The now-familiar story?

Ask ten people in the 351 cities and towns of Massachusetts about Elizabeth Warren and 1) 98% won’t know who she is; 2) 99.99% won’t know the first thing about her.

That’s how familiar Warren’s story is. To all appearances, this is news coverage by the chin-strokerati for the politerati. Which, to all appearances, is all too prevalent.

Then again . . .

Campaign Outsider Certified Footnotes®:

1) Elsewhere in Wednesday’s Globe – Special Elizabeth Warren Edition! – Metro columnist Brian McGrory calls Warren “the most talked-about Democrat nobody really knows”

2) It’s possible that by “now-familiar story” the Globe’s big wet kiss meant “archetypal tale.”  In that case, the hardworking staff invokes the Emily Litella Exception.

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Accent On Product Placement

The two major Spanish-language television networks are introducing telenovel-ads, product placement inside their extremely popular bodice-rippers like Telemundo’s “Mi Corazón Insiste.”

But the marketing comes with a twist, the New York Times reports:

While the idea of product placement, or as marketers prefer to call it, branded entertainment, is far from new, the campaigns are becoming increasingly sophisticated with elements that take the products from the telenovela to the Web and mobile devices.

In the Corazón campaign, viewers can watch what the network is calling “webvelas” featuring parallel story lines of original content starring Carlos Ferro, playing Camilo Andrade, and Cynthia Olavarría, playing Sofia Palacios. The mini-Web series, which will be called “Y Vuelvo a Ti,” features the characters doing things like paying for a meal using a Chase debit card or using a Chase ATM.

Now that’s entertainment!

[Point of clarification: Some would say – and by some we mean the hardworking staff  – that this doesn’t qualify as branded entertainment. Branded entertainment is when the marketer actually produces the content; product integration is when you work the product into the storyline; product placement is when it’s just there. This Chase tie-in feels like product integration.]

Whatever you call them, these product tie-ins are becoming more elaborate and increasingly multimedia. According to the Times piece, “[v]iewers can visit a Chase microsite for the show, follow the series on Facebook, watch it on their mobile phones and get text messages prompting them to tune in to the show or to go online.”

There are also music downloads, contests for behind-the-scenes tours, and etc. A Telemundo exec calls the strategy “organic, but pervasive.”

Translation: It used to be that programming was a vehicle for ads. Now it’s  the other way around.

Originally posted on Sneak Adtack

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Why Mitt Romney’s ‘Clarifications’ Never Help

Short answer: Because he’s clueless.

Exhibit Umpteen, via Tuesday’s Boston Globe:

Romney says Calif. home is doubling, not quadrupling

Mitt Romney has a clarification for those tweaking him for planning to quadruple the size of his oceanfront home in California. It’s only doubling in size if you count normal living space.

Oh, yes – normal living space. The hardworking staff forgot about that part.

“It’s not accurate, Romney said, simply,’’ according to [Manchester Union Leader publisher Joe] McQuaid. “The application he made, two years ago, was to double the living space by turning one story into two. The ‘quadrupling’ was a measurement of added nonliving space, including a basement and garage.’’

The San Diego Union-Tribune reported Aug. 20 that Romney planned to bulldoze his 3,009-square-foot, single-story home in coastal La Jolla and replace it with a two-story, 11,062-square-foot structure.

In that story, a Romney aide declined to comment. Later, as the former Massachusetts governor began to face criticism over the project, Romney aides clarified that the project would not begin until after the 2012 election.

Oh, yes – after the 2012 election. The hardworking staff forgot about that part.

Then again, maybe Romney’s staff should be working harder to avoid stuff like this.

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WSJ Drops News Corp. Disclosure

At least for this Tuesday report:

News Corp. Loses Contract

New York Changes Mind on Education-Tracking Tool, Citing Hacking Scandal

New York State’s comptroller rejected a $27 million contract between the New York State Education Department and News Corp.‘s education subsidiary, Wireless Generation, citing concerns about the phone-hacking scandal at the media conglomerate’s U.K. newspaper unit.

In a letter dated Aug. 25, the office of state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli informed the education department that “in light of the significant ongoing investigations and continuing revelations with respect to News Corporation, we are returning the contract with Wireless Generation unapproved.”

Despite its standard practice, the Journal failed to disclose in the piece that it’s owned by News Corp.

Start of a trend? Anomaly?

Time will tell, as the hurricane watchers say.

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