Media power in the campaign

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MEDIA POWER IN THE CAMPAIGN
[SOURCE: The Christian Science Monitor, AUTHOR: Dante Chinni]
[Commentary] Who needs the old media anymore? Candidates can talk directly to voters and mobilize supporters. Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton even announced their candidacies with online videos. Has the old-time media monopoly on the year leading into the campaign been broken? Not completely. Weighing against the old media's power is an open field with a few presumed front-runners but no dominant candidate. The news media are trying to find one. When all is said and done, however, we may go into 2008 with baskets full of stories that have done little to winnow the field but left voters fatigued before a single vote is cast. At the same time, another factor is in play that may have actually increased the press's power for 2008: an extremely compressed primary schedule. Some states, tired of seeing the power that Iowa and New Hampshire wield each presidential season, have moved up the dates of their votes. Because of those changes, and others proposed, by March 4, 2008, 40 states will have held their primaries ­ including the 10 most populous. What would that mean? The long-shot candidates would be in a very difficult situation. That compact schedule would rob them of the two things they need: the time to catch fire with voters and the money that comes with a sudden rise in public consciousness.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0508/p09s02-codc.html

* Netroots on shaky ground
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-oe-goldberg8may08,1...
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Media power in the campaign