My Digital Notebook

online journalism, search, and digital media
Posts Tagged ‘election 2010’

On why Gordon Brown calling Gillian Duffy ‘a bigot’ sparked a perfect social media story

Gordon Brown at G8

The perils of going out for a loaf of bread in Rochdale

Yesterday was an unusual day and one that Gordon Brown will never forget. Personally, I feel quite sorry for him. You can accuse him of being short-tempered, autocratic and blinkered if you will, but one thing that I don’t think Gordon Brown is, is disingenuous. Today that’s exactly how it looks and I hope it doesn’t become the slip that characterises the end of his career. That would be unfair.

As some people have already pointed out, Brown was dreadfully unlucky yesterday. The audio fell straight into the Rupert Murdoch’s hands rather than anyone else’s; the sound was sweet and crisp and Gillian Duffy turned out to be a respectable lady with the perfect background for the Tory press to exploit.

But there was also some other factors that combined to make the incident into a perfect social media story. Here they are:

 

1. Time

Brown closed his car door a little after midday and Andrew Sparrow reported that ‘Gordon Brown has been caught on a microphone…’ at 12.18pm.

Britons were sat before their computers with their lunch hours approaching – time to discuss, blog, tweet or whatever.  For Gordon Brown there was another seven hours of campaigning to go before the evening, and the story had the whole day to play out.

2. Quality content

Shortly after Sky News producer Tami Hoffman had noticed, analysed then broadcast the audio it was being uploaded to streaming sites across the Internet. What’s more, it was high quality.

Within half an hour the video was featured on Brightcove and shortly after that it was uploaded to Audioboo and any newspaper or blogger could feature. With content to link to, people linked – circulating the story far quicker that the television could do alone.

3. Exposure

Social media excels when exposing perceived wrongs. Look at the Trafigura case last September or Jan Moir’s article about Stephen Gately’s death. Now here was the Prime Minister using scandalous language to describe a potential voter.

Just the type of thing to tweet about.

4. Narrative

The story lingered. First Gordon Brown was in Jeremy Vine’s radio studio, then he was back on his way to Rochdale, then he was in Gillian Duffy’s house and then he was on her doorstep, smiling like a Cheshire cat. Many newspapers live-blogged the whole thing and evening into the evening people were still tweeting about whether or not the Sun had paid £50,000 for a story.

It was very much like watching a long episode of Neighbours, albeit with deeper, Scottish accents. At 3.42pm, when Gilliam Duffy’s door swung open, Andrew Sparrow wrote something on the Guardian blog that summed it all up:

“Everyone: the door has opened. This is live blogging at its best. More follows.”

Image credit: Downing Street

Nick Clegg – More popular than John McCain (in America)

John McCain Town Hall Meeting in Fresno

Foreign wars and General Elections

From a young age I was told by my father that foreign wars existed to teach Americans geography. I suppose what he was trying to say is that Americans tend to limit their interest to their own country, unless something is at stake.

It’s clear enough that as the General Election campaign drags on, British politics will stay under the magnifying glass at home. But are people in the US taking as much interest in our TV debates, blogs, partisan newspapers and politicians as we took in Obama’s and his election 18 months ago?

Nick Clegg and John McCain

Here’s a useful graph from Google that suggests that they are. Collecting together data from the past month you can see that the search terms “David Cameron”, “Gordon Brown” and “Nick Clegg” are generating around about the same interest in the US as is “John McCain.”

Click on the image below to enlarge

Nick Clegg on Google Insights

No Cameron, No Brown

In fact, in the days following the first leaders’ debate on 15 April, the first mass-search data for Nick Clegg was recorded and in the days that followed he remained – off and on – more popular than the old republican.

This suggests a couple of things. Firstly that Clegg was relatively unknown across the Atlantic a week ago, and – secondly – that people have been interested enough in him to type his name into Google.

12 days after that first leaders’ debate Nick Clegg is still generating more searches in the US than Gordon Brown or David Cameron, which in itself is a curious fact. In fact, Google searches for Cameron and Brown have tailed off completely – leaving Clegg and McCain up there on their own.

Perhaps we don’t need to have wars to get Americans interested in other countries after all. A General Election might just do.

Image credit: 1Flatworld