Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Bomb Garden

Luke Baumgarten
by Luke Baumgarten & r & & r & Selling the Drama


Two weeks ago I awoke to an e-mail from Sen. Hillary Clinton. Early in the campaign, trying to ascertain all the totally hip social networking elements the various candidates had built in, I created an account with almost all of their official Websites.





Stupidly. I've been getting a torrent of e-mails ever since.





This particular wake-up e-mail, though, was intriguing. Sen. Clinton had completed that completely superfluous campaign act: She'd picked a theme song. I was excited at first, then just confused as hell. The theme song for Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign -- among the most culturally important candidates of my lifetime -- turned out to be Celine Dion's "You and I." It's such a clich & eacute;d choice that even my criticizing it feels clich & eacute;.





Once again, everyone's saying the black community is going to be an essential election year get. This cycle too, Latinos are being courted heavily. Celine Dion speaks to no one but Francophone Canadians -- not exactly America's largest demographic. After five years in Vegas, can we even call her a diva?





The real problem isn't Celine per se, it's that she's the only choice. Since 2004, marketers have taught us that massive blanket ad campaigns don't work. Markets are fragmented and require highly tailored advertising to reach increasingly small blocks of people. Theme songs are like impressionistic ads. Thus, Hillary and the others shouldn't have a single theme song so much as a song to reach each little, tiny demographic. Diddy for African-Americans. Woodie Guthrie for teamsters. The Gypsy Kings for, well, gypsies. Tom Waits for sailors and alcoholics. Limp Bizkit for Riverside High School's class of '99. That kind of thing.

Also in Opinion

Sound Advice

Inlander Staff |
Monday, November 17,2008

Core Work

ISAMU JORDAN |
Monday, November 17,2008

Bomb Garden

n/a |
Monday, November 17,2008

Glittering Flecks

Michael Bowen |
Monday, November 17,2008

Choking the Spaceman

n/a |
Wednesday, November 5,2008

Also By Luke Baumgarten

Fresh & Tasty

A New Cocktail Culture

Bon Bon brings fancy drinks to Garland, at long last. Plus, Indian food returns to downtown.

Luke Baumgarten, Kirsten Harrington |
Wednesday, August 11,2010

Remote Possibilites

Luke Baumgarten |
Wednesday, June 6,2007

Bomb Garden

Luke Baumgarten |
Wednesday, August 22,2007

On Repeat

Luke Baumgarten |
Wednesday, October 15,2008

For Your Consideration

A TV show that makes drinking easy. Plus, Europe's most popular online music service comes to the U.S.

Luke Baumgarten |
Wednesday, August 24,2011


 
 
Close
Close
Close