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Clinton’s Convention Is Made for TV. Trump’s Was Made for Twitter. | Clinton’s Convention Is Made for TV. Trump’s Was Made for Twitter. |
(about 3 hours later) | |
PHILADELPHIA — Hillary Clinton has so far been putting on a better television show in Philadelphia than Donald J. Trump did in Cleveland. | PHILADELPHIA — Hillary Clinton has so far been putting on a better television show in Philadelphia than Donald J. Trump did in Cleveland. |
Expectations had it the other way around. Mr. Trump is the bona fide television sensation, a former maestro of a hit reality series, and he had promised to bring some “showbiz” to the proceedings. Yet it’s Mrs. Clinton who has had the celebrities and musical acts that “Tonight Show” bookers’ dreams are made of — Alicia Keys, Meryl Streep, Paul Simon, Elizabeth Banks, Lenny Kravitz and Lena Dunham. It’s Mrs. Clinton who has had the more professionally produced show. And at least for the first two nights, it’s Mrs. Clinton who has had the bigger ratings, by several million people. | Expectations had it the other way around. Mr. Trump is the bona fide television sensation, a former maestro of a hit reality series, and he had promised to bring some “showbiz” to the proceedings. Yet it’s Mrs. Clinton who has had the celebrities and musical acts that “Tonight Show” bookers’ dreams are made of — Alicia Keys, Meryl Streep, Paul Simon, Elizabeth Banks, Lenny Kravitz and Lena Dunham. It’s Mrs. Clinton who has had the more professionally produced show. And at least for the first two nights, it’s Mrs. Clinton who has had the bigger ratings, by several million people. |
Her team planned its schedule to take maximum advantage of a major-party nominee’s great media prize: nearly total control of four nights of prime-time television on cable news, and at least 10 to 11 p.m. on the broadcast networks. | Her team planned its schedule to take maximum advantage of a major-party nominee’s great media prize: nearly total control of four nights of prime-time television on cable news, and at least 10 to 11 p.m. on the broadcast networks. |
Even Mr. Trump gave the Democratic convention credit when he called Wednesday night to discuss the differences between the two conventions. “I’ve liked both shows,” Mr. Trump said, though, he said, no true judgment can be made until after the last night, when the two candidates’ speeches — and ratings — can be compared. | Even Mr. Trump gave the Democratic convention credit when he called Wednesday night to discuss the differences between the two conventions. “I’ve liked both shows,” Mr. Trump said, though, he said, no true judgment can be made until after the last night, when the two candidates’ speeches — and ratings — can be compared. |
Here in Philadelphia, each of the Democratic speeches has had its own distinct aim: Fire up the base (Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey and the mothers whose unarmed sons were slain by police), attack Mr. Trump (Senator Elizabeth Warren and the actresses Lena Dunham and America Ferrera), unify the party (Bernie Sanders and Bernie Sanders), fill out the nominee’s biography (Bill Clinton), draw in independents (Michael R. Bloomberg). The acts and speeches were choreographed down to the minute so that not a precious second of prime time would go to waste. | Here in Philadelphia, each of the Democratic speeches has had its own distinct aim: Fire up the base (Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey and the mothers whose unarmed sons were slain by police), attack Mr. Trump (Senator Elizabeth Warren and the actresses Lena Dunham and America Ferrera), unify the party (Bernie Sanders and Bernie Sanders), fill out the nominee’s biography (Bill Clinton), draw in independents (Michael R. Bloomberg). The acts and speeches were choreographed down to the minute so that not a precious second of prime time would go to waste. |
It might have been a less notable contrast if Mr. Trump’s show had not been such a break from the tightly scripted performance that has come to typify these conventions. In Cleveland, an important endorser, Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa, started speaking after the broadcast networks had already moved on to local news; Mr. Trump called in to “The O’Reilly Factor” while Patricia Smith was speaking emotionally onstage about her son’s death in the Benghazi attack; and one night’s program ended prematurely, leaving precious prime-time minutes unused. | |
Asked about the differences between the two productions, Mr. Trump said he could not speak to them with much specificity, because, he said, “I didn’t produce our show — I just showed up for the final speech on Thursday.” (He acknowledged that he made other appearances while the convention was going on, including on O’Reilly, but said they weren’t a distraction from the convention because they were unannounced and “nobody even knew” he would be appearing.) | Asked about the differences between the two productions, Mr. Trump said he could not speak to them with much specificity, because, he said, “I didn’t produce our show — I just showed up for the final speech on Thursday.” (He acknowledged that he made other appearances while the convention was going on, including on O’Reilly, but said they weren’t a distraction from the convention because they were unannounced and “nobody even knew” he would be appearing.) |
Yet even as it became clear that Mrs. Clinton’s convention planners were doing a far better job of making use of the television time, the question that has hung over the campaign all year remained: Does it matter? | Yet even as it became clear that Mrs. Clinton’s convention planners were doing a far better job of making use of the television time, the question that has hung over the campaign all year remained: Does it matter? |
Mr. Trump has gotten where he is through asymmetrical media warfare. He’s forgone traditional campaign tactics like heavy television advertising and the sophisticated data targeting that President Obama perfected over his two campaigns. Instead, he’s filled television and Twitter with a running, multiplot reality show that when working to maximum effect starves his opponents of media oxygen. | Mr. Trump has gotten where he is through asymmetrical media warfare. He’s forgone traditional campaign tactics like heavy television advertising and the sophisticated data targeting that President Obama perfected over his two campaigns. Instead, he’s filled television and Twitter with a running, multiplot reality show that when working to maximum effect starves his opponents of media oxygen. |
Mrs. Clinton has followed the old media playbook by which presidential elections have always been won in the modern era: message discipline, if to a fault (given her severe allergy to news briefings); heavy television advertising; and classic door-to-door get-out-the-vote legwork. | Mrs. Clinton has followed the old media playbook by which presidential elections have always been won in the modern era: message discipline, if to a fault (given her severe allergy to news briefings); heavy television advertising; and classic door-to-door get-out-the-vote legwork. |
The back-to-back conventions are a great test case of which approach will work better, and we won’t know for some time. So far, Mr. Trump has defied all the traditional rules of political media. If his approach to the conventions proves to be the more effective one, then he will have certainly rewritten them. | The back-to-back conventions are a great test case of which approach will work better, and we won’t know for some time. So far, Mr. Trump has defied all the traditional rules of political media. If his approach to the conventions proves to be the more effective one, then he will have certainly rewritten them. |
Mr. Trump said he would ultimately win because “we have a much better message, and we have a better messenger.” | Mr. Trump said he would ultimately win because “we have a much better message, and we have a better messenger.” |
Reporters leaving Cleveland quickly formed a consensus that the Trump convention had been a “hot mess,” as some of them wrote. Mr. Trump wrote Tuesday night on Twitter that his convention was “far more interesting.” More like fascinating, in a highway-rubbernecking way. | Reporters leaving Cleveland quickly formed a consensus that the Trump convention had been a “hot mess,” as some of them wrote. Mr. Trump wrote Tuesday night on Twitter that his convention was “far more interesting.” More like fascinating, in a highway-rubbernecking way. |
In a sense, it was the show Mr. Trump had promised — even if it was at times more like “The Apprentice” than a national political convention. | In a sense, it was the show Mr. Trump had promised — even if it was at times more like “The Apprentice” than a national political convention. |
It had twisty-turny plotlines (how did lines from Michelle Obama’s 2008 convention speech wind up in Melania Trump’s 2016 speech?), intrigue (did Team Trump know Ted Cruz was going to use a prime-time speaking slot to deny Mr. Trump an endorsement), and villainy (should Hillary Clinton be locked up, and is she inspired by Lucifer?). | It had twisty-turny plotlines (how did lines from Michelle Obama’s 2008 convention speech wind up in Melania Trump’s 2016 speech?), intrigue (did Team Trump know Ted Cruz was going to use a prime-time speaking slot to deny Mr. Trump an endorsement), and villainy (should Hillary Clinton be locked up, and is she inspired by Lucifer?). |
What the news media saw as a hot mess, Mr. Trump’s supporters saw as refreshing, telling-it-like-it-is change. And at least two respected polls, CNN/ORC and the U.S.C. Dornsife/Los Angeles Times, showed a bounce for Mr. Trump. | What the news media saw as a hot mess, Mr. Trump’s supporters saw as refreshing, telling-it-like-it-is change. And at least two respected polls, CNN/ORC and the U.S.C. Dornsife/Los Angeles Times, showed a bounce for Mr. Trump. |
Mr. Trump said that proved that he got “the intended result” out of his convention. “I got the biggest bump,” he said. | Mr. Trump said that proved that he got “the intended result” out of his convention. “I got the biggest bump,” he said. |
The polling is still more remarkable when you consider the following: Mrs. Clinton and the super PACs supporting her have spent $68 million on television advertisements, compared with less than $6 million by Mr. Trump and his supporting groups, according to the ad tracking firm Kantar Media. | The polling is still more remarkable when you consider the following: Mrs. Clinton and the super PACs supporting her have spent $68 million on television advertisements, compared with less than $6 million by Mr. Trump and his supporting groups, according to the ad tracking firm Kantar Media. |
There has been a lot of debate in recent years over whether 30-second commercials work in politics the way they once did. But there was always one circumstance in which there was not much doubt that they were effective — those rare occasions when one side could run commercials unopposed, or nearly unopposed. | There has been a lot of debate in recent years over whether 30-second commercials work in politics the way they once did. But there was always one circumstance in which there was not much doubt that they were effective — those rare occasions when one side could run commercials unopposed, or nearly unopposed. |
“Historically, lopsidedness in paid media has worked for whoever’s been able to spend more or spend more effectively,” said Elizabeth Wilner, who monitors political advertising for Kantar Media. Now, she said, “the disparity is astonishing.” | “Historically, lopsidedness in paid media has worked for whoever’s been able to spend more or spend more effectively,” said Elizabeth Wilner, who monitors political advertising for Kantar Media. Now, she said, “the disparity is astonishing.” |
That Mr. Trump is in such a competitive race with Mrs. Clinton despite the disparity in advertising is proof that “free media trumps paid media any day in presidential politics,” a maxim shared with me by Mark McKinnon, the former chief media strategist for George W. Bush. And, Mr. McKinnon added, “Trump has figured out how to turn the volume up to 11.” (Or maybe up to 100, with his call on Wednesday for Russia to hack into the computer system of his rival for the presidency of the United States, prompting some to accuse him of treason.) | That Mr. Trump is in such a competitive race with Mrs. Clinton despite the disparity in advertising is proof that “free media trumps paid media any day in presidential politics,” a maxim shared with me by Mark McKinnon, the former chief media strategist for George W. Bush. And, Mr. McKinnon added, “Trump has figured out how to turn the volume up to 11.” (Or maybe up to 100, with his call on Wednesday for Russia to hack into the computer system of his rival for the presidency of the United States, prompting some to accuse him of treason.) |
Mr. McKinnon’s 2004 campaign team won an early advantage for Mr. Bush by attacking Senator John Kerry with a blitz of advertising before Mr. Kerry had much money to defend himself. And, Mr. McKinnon told me on Wednesday, despite Mr. Trump’s success without advertising, “I would rather be the campaign spending $100 million on advertising than the campaign spending nothing.” | Mr. McKinnon’s 2004 campaign team won an early advantage for Mr. Bush by attacking Senator John Kerry with a blitz of advertising before Mr. Kerry had much money to defend himself. And, Mr. McKinnon told me on Wednesday, despite Mr. Trump’s success without advertising, “I would rather be the campaign spending $100 million on advertising than the campaign spending nothing.” |
If this advertising disparity continues and Mrs. Clinton still loses, there would be reverberations beyond national politics; Madison Avenue and its clients would have to further assess the effectiveness of what has been considered the most important marketing tool in media history for the better part of the last four decades. | If this advertising disparity continues and Mrs. Clinton still loses, there would be reverberations beyond national politics; Madison Avenue and its clients would have to further assess the effectiveness of what has been considered the most important marketing tool in media history for the better part of the last four decades. |
David Plouffe, who helped spearhead Mr. Obama’s 2008 effort, said presidential media was a long game, and its efficacy could truly be judged only in November. It’s all working toward motivating the winning combination of voters to get to the polls in the states that matter in the Electoral College. “This is not a one-act play,” he said, “and I think the cumulative effect of smart targeting and smart spending still matters.” | David Plouffe, who helped spearhead Mr. Obama’s 2008 effort, said presidential media was a long game, and its efficacy could truly be judged only in November. It’s all working toward motivating the winning combination of voters to get to the polls in the states that matter in the Electoral College. “This is not a one-act play,” he said, “and I think the cumulative effect of smart targeting and smart spending still matters.” |
A convention has the potential to be the ultimate advertisement, a four-night infomercial in prime time that can “move the needle further and faster than advertising does,” as Kevin Sheekey, a longtime adviser to Mr. Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York, told me. | A convention has the potential to be the ultimate advertisement, a four-night infomercial in prime time that can “move the needle further and faster than advertising does,” as Kevin Sheekey, a longtime adviser to Mr. Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York, told me. |
The true effect of the two conventions won’t be known for a while, and it will set the dynamic until the next big presidential mini-series: the debates. | The true effect of the two conventions won’t be known for a while, and it will set the dynamic until the next big presidential mini-series: the debates. |
Pop your popcorn. | Pop your popcorn. |