Obama Rewind

Last week, I linked to a piece that rather succinctly explained why I don't do more than skim the candidate blogs anymore - they are typically nothing more than generic boosterism of the candidate's latest activity or press releases for upcoming events.

There is an exception to that, however. I actually read the Students for Barack Obama blog every day. To be sure, there is a fair amount of boosterism on the SFBO blog too, but there are occasionally some decent historical and think pieces, and SFBO Rewind, a regular feature which reviews the recent events and achievements of students for Barack chapters across the country is genuinely useful. It helps build the sense that SFBO chapters and blog readers are part of a larger, national movement, and is a decent vehicle for disseminating some best practices and conveys to SFBO members ideas as to what it is possible to accomplish with their own chapters.

As I was reading the blog today, I also noticed a feature that had previously escaped my attention. Atop each blog is a link notifying the reader as to how many groups within the MyBarackObama social network are talking about that particular post, and linking the reader to those groups. There's been some criticism (and I myself have complained) that the Obama campaign's grassroots were not as transparent as the Dean grassroots. Little things like this make it more transparent. That's not to say that there aren't differences between Dean and Obama's online operations and indeed the structure of their whole campaign, but these little touches are helping me see something more coherent and national and less siloed that my previous impressions.

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SFBO

I also really like the SFBO blog. They do great work. Sigh, though I think the neat feature you're mentioning is actually something more mundane. When you post a diary on my.barackobama.com, you can select which groups (of which you are a member) to post it to. The "Also listed in" feature at the top of each blog post just lists the groups to which the author posted the diary.

There are a lot of ways they could spruce up the site and make it far more transparent. I was just reading that there are 14,000 blogs on my.barackobama.com (as of the end of June I think) --- of course only a fraction of those are probably active blogs, but it does show that people took the first step of creating a blog there. There is so much energy there and interest in writing and sharing experiences. The lack of transparency and visibility is really preventing an online community from forming.

By the way, did you see that Election Geek had posted a follow-up post about candidate blogs?

Right

You're right, that isn't quite as cool as I had thought (guess I should have tried posting a blog . . . ). It would be way cooler if the site tracked internal cross linking automatically. Drawing those connections to multiple conversations would be a very cool feature.

I will check out the follow-up post. I hadn't seen it.

Thanks!

New video highlighting the potential of young people

Have you seen this yet, Mike? It's a ten-minute video highlighting a group of SFBO students setting up a rally at the University of Iowa. Lots of interviews from young people describing how Obama is speaking to their generation.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6K_ntZEPlHI
Snazzy music, interviews with young people not (as Adam Conner put it at YearlyKos) trying to speak as adults and to adults --- but with young people speaking to each other, on their own terms, about their own potential to transform America.

Checking it out

Thanks, Psericks. The campaign sent me a copy but I've been tied up with my dayjob. I will check it out later today.