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Obama Campaign: New Documentary Breaks Traffic Record

The Obama campaign's new documentary is a hit online.

Ari Melber

March 16, 2012

Rahm Emanual did not look happy. “The financial sector—the heart that pumps blood into the economy—was frozen up in cardiac arrest!” Recalling his tenure as President Obama’s first chief of staff, Emanual paints a grim picture. “The auto industry was literally days from collapse,” he intones. Yes, you may have already lived through the 2008 financial crisis, but President Obama’s advisers think that economic amnesia is hurting their case with voters. That is the premise of the sharp, dark film that Obama’s re-election campaign released on Thursday night, a seventeen-minute exploration of the mess that greeted the new president when he came into office. People are tuning in: the video’s debut on Thursday drew more visitors to Obama’s campaign website than any time this year, which Obama officials confirmed to The Nation on Friday.

While the campaign churns out hundreds of political videos, “The Road We’ve Traveled” was designed to be special. The campaign tapped Oscar-winner Davis Guggenheim to direct. Tom Hanks narrates. Bill Clinton and Elizabeth Warren make full-throated cameos. And Obama’s campaign staff aggressively promoted the video’s message to the press and its argument to the base. Around the country, in fact, campaign workers organized hundreds of events to screen the video and conduct trainings. And officials stress that getting people to watch the video—the goal of most viral marketers on YouTube—is not enough.

“We produce these amazing videos, but ultimately we want them to drive some kind of action,” says Teddy Goff, the campaign’s digital director. “So we’re putting a huge amount of energy into using video to advance the business goals of campaign,” he told The Nation in an interview after the video was released.

Still, Obama’s campaign is quite adept at getting people to watch their videos. While Newt Gingrich leads Obama’s potential rivals on YouTube, with about 10 million views total, Obama has racked up 174 million views. They range from the short and goofy—a clip of Obama dancing on Ellen has over 10 million views—to long and serious, like the famous campaign speech on race, which drew about 7 million (and millions more from uploads by others). The new documentary is signficant because, unlike those examples, it proposes a storyline that is not otherwise prevalent in the news or public conversations. Watching the film’s opening tour of the economic crisis is not just a bummer—which is unusual for incumbent politicking — it’s actually scary. At an emotional level, the campaign wants to reset the baseline for the president’s tenure. As Goff explains it, many voters just don’t have complete information on “how bad the economic crisis was” when Obama entered office, or “how much we’ve progressed since then.”

The campaign’s actionable goal is not simply to get supporters to “press send” and share the video itself, but to internalize the message and ultimately do their own sharing, in their own words, of the president’s message. Obama may have more Facebook friends than any other politician (25 million and growing), but his team is betting that the most effective marketing is still mouth to mouth.

Ari MelberTwitterAri Melber is The Nation's Net movement correspondent, covering politics, law, public policy and new media, and a regular contributor to the magazine's blog. He received a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and a J.D. from Cornell Law School, where he was an editor of the Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy. Contact Ari: on Facebook, on Twitter, and at amelber@hotmail.com. Melber is also an attorney, a columnist for Politico and a contributing editor at techPresident, a nonpartisan website covering technology’s impact on democracy. During the 2008 general election, he traveled with the Obama Campaign on special assignment for The Washington Independent. He previously served as a Legislative Aide in the US Senate and as a national staff member of the 2004 John Kerry Presidential Campaign. As a commentator on public affairs, Melber frequently speaks on national television and radio, including including appearances on NBC, CNBC, CNN, CNN Headline News, C-SPAN, MSNBC, Bloomberg News, FOX News, and NPR, on programs such as “The Today Show,” “American Morning,” “Washington Journal,” “Power Lunch,” "The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell," "The Joy Behar Show," “The Dylan Ratigan Show,” and “The Daily Rundown,” among others. Melber has also been a featured speaker at Harvard, Oxford, Yale, Columbia, NYU, The Center for American Progress and many other institutions. He has contributed chapters or essays to the books “America Now,” (St. Martins, 2009), “At Issue: Affirmative Action,” (Cengage, 2009), and “MoveOn’s 50 Ways to Love Your Country,” (Inner Ocean Publishing, 2004).  His reporting  has been cited by a wide range of news organizations, academic journals and nonfiction books, including the The Washington Post, The New York Times, ABC News, NBC News, CNN, FOX News, National Review Online, The New England Journal of Medicine and Boston University Law Review.  He is a member of the American Constitution Society, he serves on the advisory board of the Roosevelt Institute and lives in Manhattan.  


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