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Pop Culture: Core Consumer Values As Core Political Values

by: The Angelic One

Tue Feb 19, 2013 at 11:20:28 AM EST


Emily Zanotta has an insightful post wherein she praises the "marketing genius" of US Senator Marco Rubio:

He may have been trying to parlay his turn at giving the State Of The Union response into the start of a presidential campaign, but Marco Rubio chalked up an accomplishment last Tuesday night that few Republican politicians - or activists, for that matter - can lay claim to: creating, and embracing, a moment in culture.

After he took that dastardly, ostensibly "career-killing" sip of water on air, you could almost smell the avalanche of media coverage as it slowly wound its way across the landscape. They were honing in on a public foible like Kardashians to a camera. But instead of crying foul and whining to a friendly outlet about the persistent victimization of conservatives, Rubio and his staff saw an opportunity to inject themselves seamlessly into the cultural conversation. Within hours, they had responded with creative tweets, morning talk show appearances and a branded water bottle campaign that netted $100,000 for his super PAC.

And despite the 200 separate thirst-for-power puns churned out by MSNBC, Rubio's chances at stardom were not lost. In fact, if anything, his sense of humor came across as a deliberate attempt at humanization, and a step in the right direction.

Rubio's people, if not Rubio himself, understand the importance of the pop cultural "coolness" factor for his public persona. I agree with Zanotta that the collective GOP (nationally & locally) still "don't get it" with regards to the importance of influencing pop culture in order to directly & indirectly influence politics:

The key, instead, seems to be following Marco Rubio's lead, and in the footsteps of the most successful "liberal" cultural endeavors: injecting humor, self-parody and subtle themes into material that is genuinely entertaining, permeating the collective consciousness by embracing trends, using them and taking to heart that entertainment is now a core consumer value. Cultural consumers and "low-information voters," as they've come to be known, now see political elections the same way they see any contest played out on reality television - as something to be viewed, enjoyed and participated in on their own terms - where personal brands and relationships matter.

Right now, the face of the GOP is less "Beautiful Creatures" and more "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" sans the dead household pets: a wrinkled visage in denial about the passage of time, trying to relive the glory days of the 1980s and '90s by smearing itself in lipstick and think tank white papers. The need for cultural connectivity is ignored by the GOP, as easily as its cultural commentary is farmed out to 60-year-old white men writing essays about how Hollywood should get off their lawn, and its artistic spirit to ham-fisted musicians and filmmakers whose products are nothing short of horrendous.

Conservatives and libertarians cannot avoid culture, nor can they afford to pounce on every perceived slight with church lady outrage, the way they did when audiences were limited and voter outreach was an unnecessary expenditure. Conservatives may never be recognized or revered for their efforts, but like Marco Rubio, they will be able to exercise more control over the media cycle and spread their message across demographic boundaries while minimizing the effects of the left's well-honed demonization efforts.

Amen to that sentiment.

The Angelic One :: Pop Culture: Core Consumer Values As Core Political Values
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Pop culture is filth! (0.00 / 0)
http://www.nationalreview.com/...

Pop culture is filth. It is now completely degenerate. Why do you never hear anyone humming a current pop song any more? Because none of them is hummable, or even worth bothering to remember. What is the main topic on TV sitcoms and "dramedies"? You know what. Why do you stand in the aisle in Blockbuster muttering to yourself: "There isn't a single damn movie in here I want to watch"? Because Hollywood produces nothing but crap, crap, crap.


---
"That it ceased to exist, I'll grant you, but whether or not it failed cannot be definitively said." - Metropolitan (1990)


So What Do You Propose To Do? (0.00 / 0)
So What do you propose to do, Patrick? Give up? Adjure civil society, crawl into a cave, & live out the rest of your days as a hermit? Carrying a sign or standing on a soapbox as you rail to nobody in particular that the end is near? The conservative withdrawal & self-segregation from pop culture has contributed to pop culture's debasement. In fact, you can even blame market conservatives for contributing to pop culture's debasement since some of them have no problem pandering to the lowest common denominator. It's ironic that you cite NRO's Derbyshire since his form of classic pessimism enables - if not ensures - the perpetuation of the cultural "filth" he rails against.

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