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Barack ObamaFraming and defamingSubmitted by timturner on Wed, 2008-04-23 18:48.Barack Obama | Humor | politics
Last night while watching Barack Obama give his speech after the Pennsylvania primary, I got all excited about posting something on viz. for general amusement. But then when I read some other blogs, I realized I was not the only person to see what I saw. I forgot that in this Golden Age of the Internets, Original Ideas do not stay that way for long. But behold, anyway: Visual dismissal?Submitted by erinhurt on Thu, 2008-03-27 17:12.Barack Obama | Lens culture | photography | Visual Rhetoric
I ran across an interesting blog on Lens Culture that argues that a recent French magazine cover (posted below) equates Obama to a young, inexperienced boy.
Rock the VoteSubmitted by Jillian Sayre on Sat, 2008-03-01 13:02.Barack Obama | Political Propaganda | political rhetoric | viral videos | youtube
Obama supporters have been called fanatical and naive but something that we've also noticed is that they are also rather musical. MK noted the Will.I.Am video and McCain parody here and Tim posted the somewhat...let's say cheesy...response from Clinton supporters here. Starting with the "Obama girl"'s song (who, it turned out later, didn't vote), and helped along by the accessibility of web publishing, Obama's participatory rhetoric seems to elicit a creative response that belies an identification (perhaps over-identification) with the candidate. Here in Texas we've got two new videos hitting the tubes. The first attempt to argue against the widely held conception that Clinton is the candidate for Latino (and in this case Mexican American) voters: Visual rhetoric on the campaign trailSubmitted by John Jones on Wed, 2008-02-27 12:24.Barack Obama | Hillary Clinton | politics | visual analysis | Visual Rhetoric
As the Democratic primaries have continued on throughout the winter, columnists and pundits have been reaching out to find ever more ways of distinguishing between Obama and Clinton. Salon has posted an article analyzing the design of the candidate’s logos, while Clay Spinuzzi has blogged on the contrasting designs of Obama and Clinton campaign flyers being distributed in Texas (without any images, unfortunately). Michelle Obama’s haloSubmitted by John Jones on Wed, 2008-02-13 20:30.Barack Obama | Photography | politics | visual analysis
Timothy Noah at Slate has been keeping an eye out for evidence that Barack Obama is, in fact, the Son of God. In his latest post, he linked to this picture of Michelle Obama from Reuters:
According to Noah, the framing and Obama’s posture suggest a passing resemblance to this woman:
Sheep’s clothingSubmitted by John Jones on Tue, 2007-03-20 12:12.Barack Obama | big brother | Hillary Clinton | politics | youtube
Barack Obama has taken some heat for remarks made to a New York Post reporter attacking Al Sharpton (who’s had a lot to deal with lately, thank you very much) which pundits are arguing were made by an Obama operative. Now there’s this: |
Notice the three dudes in Abercrombie and Fitch t-shirts right behind the Senator. Supposedly the campaigns choose the people in those seats pretty carefully; one has to wonder, if in fact that's true, what was going through the head of the person who made this decision. Not that there's anything wrong with Abercrombie (well, Jezebel says it's "the epitome of everything about the America that is not 'ready' for" a President Obama), but still, it seems like a weird choice, no?



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