Archive: Author: The Management

06/22/2011

This video of President Obama taking a crying baby from First Lady Michele Obama while on a White House rope line, and then demonstrating some kind of presidential/parental magic touch, has earned more than half a million views in five days, no doubt in part due to thousands of upvotes on Reddit.com: By comparison, it's gotten just 17,000 views on the White House's WestWingWeek, where this snippet of footage originated (and is buried at the end of the 5 minute video). Lesson: Politicians, especially Presidents, being human = viral potential. Just ask this fly:...

06/20/2011

The Right knows what it wants, but its base needs to learn how to better use technology. The Left knows how to use tech, but its base needs to figure out what it wants. Both can't help but be reactive to each other. And neither seems to have a fresh vision for America in the 21st century. Those are my conclusions from spending last Thursday thru Saturday in Minneapolis at the Netroots Nation Right Online convention. I mean, the two separate conventions of the online left and the online right, though they were so close to each other (even sharing a headquarters hotel, and sparring across Twitter and occasionally each other's hallways) that at times it did feel like one...

06/16/2011

The scene at a Personal Democracy Forum 2011 cocktail party held in NYU's Kimmel Center. Photo: fabola / Flickr It's difficult to sum up a two-day conference like Personal Democracy Forum in one blog post. We had about one hundred speakers at PdF11 last week, including nearly fifty plenary presentations and more than twenty breakout sessions. And everyone's experience is of course different. We're still sifting all the tweets, blog posts, survey responses, email and word-of-mouth feedback, too. I'm also a little wary of writing a post that says: "These were our best talks--go watch them!" That's a little like telling someone who missed a baseball game that they can catch up on the whole experience by watching the highlight reel...

06/15/2011

Remember when the White House thought the internet was cool, and made sure we all knew that President Obama was pressing government agencies to use the web to be more open, embracing social media (look, he's posted his first Tweet!), and fighting to keep his personal Blackberry from being taken away from him? Well, now they want us to know that he's opposed to "pointless waste and stupid spending that doesn't benefit anybody" and in particular, that he's committed to eliminating duplicate and unnecessary government websites. Indeed, he is promising to shut down half of the estimated 24,000 government sites and subsites, as part of a larger "Campaign to Cut Waste" that was announced on Monday, and he's frozen the...

06/13/2011

James Kotecki, he of the funny-stick-figure-dorm-room-YouTube-interviews of 2008 presidential candidates, has a smart piece up on The New Republic's website parsing the current Republican field of declared presidential wannabes and how they're doing on YouTube. He reports that Tim Pawlenty appears to be doing the best of a relatively desultory bunch, and shrewdly also points to pizzaman Herman Cain's healthy numbers of views. One stat he didn't note, of equal importance to numbers of overall views and average views per video: how many subscribers each campaign has gotten to their channel (these are people who get updated whenever a campaign uploads a video to their channel). The answer for conventional candidates Pawlenty and Mitt Romney is painfully few: just 818...

06/13/2011

Back in April, I remember reading this amazing blog post that was forwarded around on Twitter about how a gay woman in Syria had nearly been arrested in the middle of the night, but somehow her father bravely confronted the secret police thugs who came to their door and convinced them to walk away. "Wow, that's almost too good to be true," I thought to myself, and wondered how it could be possible that "My Father, the hero" hadn't been summarily arrested or executed, given the realities of the Syrian regime. I didn't blog or tweet the story, but plenty of well-meaning people did, sending the blog into orbit and nearly a million page views. Well, as NPR's Andy Carvin...

06/13/2011

Veteran tech journalist Steven Levy has a useful backgrounder up on Wired.com on how Twitter's default settings for following and messaging other users tripped up congressman Anthony Weiner. Levy's key point: requiring you to follow other people--a public act--before you can direct message them privately meant that Weiner's penchant for flirting/sexting with some of his female followers was at least partially public. Weiner, of course, could have made his Twitter account private, but then that would have prevented him from converting his public fame into private games. One assumes that opposition researchers across the political spectrum have taken note, and will be zealously tracking whom politicians follow....

06/09/2011

For some time now, those of us who work in networked politics have been arguing that it was time for the relationship between government officials and the public to change. The internet's economics of abundance--of time, information and connectivity--can enable a transformation from top-down communication and talking in sound-bites to something richer, more participatory, interactive and fundamentally more democratic. Politicians, we argued, had to give up some control over their "message," but in turn could forge more authentic connections with their publics. Of course, we didn't think that some of them were more interested in forging a more authentic connection with their pubic selves, but the Anthony Weiner mess offers this additional lesson about our hypernetworked times: the authentic truth that...

06/07/2011

We're redesigning our website and launching a new subscription service for online politics and government professionals at all levels. What should we include? We'd love to hear your feedback. The world of technology and politics is changing every day -- and you don't have to wait till next June to stay on top of the game. In 2009, we launched the PdF Network to give tech-savvy (or tech-curious) campaigners, political and not, from all over the world a place to sharpen their skills and learn from the experts. Now in 2011, we're relaunching the network as Personal Democracy Plus, a subscription service designed as the source for timely expert premium content designed to help busy professionals sort out the signal...