Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

In This U.S. Election, Media Focus Is Nearly All Donald Trump, All The Time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2016 11:34 AM
    WASHINGTON — U.S. news networks devoted a half hour's worth of coverage the other day to an inanimate object: the stage upon which Donald Trump would eventually speak.
     
    They wouldn't allow their empty-stage coverage to be interrupted by the fact that a leading presidential candidate happened to be on another stage speaking at that very moment.
     
    Hillary Clinton was delivering a speech on the middle-class agenda at a union event while networks like MSNBC and Fox had anchors filling airtime with small talk in anticipation of Trump's arrival.
     
    Clinton may be leading most presidential polls. But when it comes to grabbing media attention, it seems, nobody trumps Trump.
     
    Democrats have quickly resigned themselves to the reality of running against a stunt-happy showman who steals the spotlight by any means necessary.
     
    "The reality of Donald Trump is he's going to dominate the news. He's going to dominate the news cycle," Clinton's communications director, Jennifer Palmieri, told two of her former colleagues in the Obama White House this week in their podcast, "Keepin' It 1600."
     
    "(But) there's a difference between dominating the news cycle, and driving the debate."
     
     
    Trump wrote three decades ago in his first book that he does outrageous things to get his name in the news — and he's remained true to his word.
     
    Dominance of the media was a secret of Trump's success in the Republican primaries.
     
    He achieved a multitude more airtime than his Republican rivals, forcing them to exhaust their advertising budgets to get some attention while he got on TV for free.
     
    That doesn't mean he can necessarily ride a wave of PR stunts into the White House.
     
    Trump's advantage in media airtime narrowed later in the primaries. Its value going forward is debatable, according to some political-science research outlined in the book, "The Gamble," which suggests media attention sways voters less in a general election than in a primary.
     
    Does the American public even want all this Trump coverage? Perhaps not, suggests media-analytics site Parse.ly. In a blog item titled, "The Media's Obsession With Trump Isn't Justified By Data," it analyzed more than one billion webpage clicks and more than 100,000 online articles since November.
     
     
    It found Trump has appeared in more than twice as many news stories as Clinton. But online articles about him got slightly fewer clicks, on average, than those about Clinton, Sen. Ted Cruz, or in some months Bernie Sanders.
     
    Palmieri even questions the electoral value of this attention.
     
    "More coverage for him doesn't necessarily mean good coverage for him," said the Clinton aide.
     
    For example, she alluded to his floating murder conspiracy theories about former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia; White House aide Vince Foster; and about the Kennedy assassination.
     
    She also cited his plan to deport millions of undocumented residents, and his willingness to cite the possibility of printing money as a solution to U.S. debt problems.
     
    In the last few days alone he's recycled old rape allegations against Bill Clinton and fomented a drama about whether he'd debate Sanders in a televised charity-benefit event — after the idea had made some news, he announced he wouldn't do it.
     
    A Clinton campaign supporter says she won't be distracted by his daily noise.
     
     
    "He tries to say as much outrageous stuff as he can, with the idea of provoking his opponent," said Gordon Giffin, a former ambassador to Canada who advises and raises funds for the Clinton campaign.
     
    "That strategy won't work with her. I don't think she'll be provoked. I think she'll be steady, straightforward, and run the campaign that she has in mind — unrelated to whatever kind of outrageous comments he makes."
     
    But there's little doubt that the unusual nature of his candidacy means this election has revolved around Trump.
     
    He generates multiple times more Google searches than Clinton — 2 1/2 times this month, according to Google Trends.
     
    Even the Democrats are building fundraising efforts around him.
     
    His name and photo appear prominently in emails requesting donations to the Democratic National Committee for what the party even calls its Stop Trump Fund.
     
    "It's official," said a note from the Democratic party last week, on the day of the empty-stage coverage. Media reports that day estimated Trump had secured the necessary number of delegates to guarantee his nomination.
     
     
    "This guy is the Republican nominee for president."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Two Canadians Dead Among 233 Killed In 7.8-Magnitude Ecuador Quake

    Two Canadians Dead Among 233 Killed In 7.8-Magnitude Ecuador Quake
    OTTAWA — Federal officials say two Canadians are among at least 233 people killed by a devastating earthquake in Ecuador.

    Two Canadians Dead Among 233 Killed In 7.8-Magnitude Ecuador Quake

    Don't Target Hindus, Says Pakistani Daily

    Don't Target Hindus, Says Pakistani Daily
     A Pakistani commentator has hit out at a private TV channel for using "extemely offensive and derogatory remarks" targeting the Hindu minority.

    Don't Target Hindus, Says Pakistani Daily

    Fred Hayman, Stylish Godfather Of Rodeo Drive, Dies At 91

    Fred Hayman, Stylish Godfather Of Rodeo Drive, Dies At 91
    LOS ANGELES — Fred Hayman, the dapper entrepreneur whose vision transformed a nondescript Southern California street called Rodeo Drive into one of the world's pre-eminent fashion districts, has died at age 91.

    Fred Hayman, Stylish Godfather Of Rodeo Drive, Dies At 91

    Woman Fights Russian Law On Organ Removal Without Consent

    Woman Fights Russian Law On Organ Removal Without Consent
    When Elena Sablina's daughter Alina was killed in a car crash in Moscow two years ago, she was devastated.

    Woman Fights Russian Law On Organ Removal Without Consent

    Hillary Clinton, Michelle Obama Have Tense Ties, Says Book

    Hillary Clinton, Michelle Obama Have Tense Ties, Says Book
    US First Lady Michelle Obama continues to "resent" Democrat front-runner Hillary Clinton due to the "bad blood left over from the bruising" 2008 campaign, a new book has alleged.

    Hillary Clinton, Michelle Obama Have Tense Ties, Says Book

    Fox Anchor Megyn Kelly Meets With Donald Trump To 'Clear The Air'

    Fox Anchor Megyn Kelly Meets With Donald Trump To 'Clear The Air'
    Fox News Channel's Megyn Kelly said she met privately with Donald Trump on Wednesday to "clear the air" following the Republican candidate's repeated attacks on social media.

    Fox Anchor Megyn Kelly Meets With Donald Trump To 'Clear The Air'