( True to form,  we would also need an endorsement from George  
Stephanopoulos )
 
 
New Republic
 
Media Maven
The strategic genius of Sarah  Palin.

 


July 13, 2010 



 
Like most great women of mystery, Sarah Palin is at once everywhere and  
nowhere. On any given evening, you might see the former Alaska  
governor-turned-conservative-icon on Fox News, chatting up like-minded 
travelers  about 
the political buzz du jour. 
Her byline pops up now and again in the opinion pages (supporting McCain,  
bashing enviros). She periodically hits the campaign trail with favored  
candidates. She is a prolific and passionate tweeter. Her Facebook page  
overflows with thoughts on global events both past (DDay, Reagan’s Brandenburg  
Gate speech) and present (Israel, border security, the need to drill, baby,  
drill); news of upcoming appearances (a rally at the Lincoln Memorial with 
Glenn  Beck, a possible U.K. jaunt to meet Margaret Thatcher); the latest 
media  atrocities committed against her; and her rolling endorsements of “
commonsense  conservative” candidates who tickle her fancy. And, any day now, 
filming is  scheduled to start on the docu-travelogue series in which Palin 
will 
“bring the  wonder and majesty of Alaska” to TLC viewers. 
In the midst of this aggressive visibility, however, Palin keeps a tight 
grip  on her time in the public eye. She rarely sits down with 
non-conservative  interviewers and eschews mix-’em-up formats pitting her 
viewpoint against 
that  of a more liberal counterpart. More fascinating, she is cautious 
about her  interaction with fellow Republicans. Some of her Facebook 
endorsements this  election cycle have come with telephone outreach to the 
chosen 
candidate or, for  the fortunate few, even joint appearances. Others come 
suddenly, with no direct  communication at all. More than one campaign learned 
of 
Palin’s endorsement only  when some staffer or supporter stumbled across it 
online. There is, for  instance, an entertaining video clip of Iowa 
gubernatorial hopeful Terry  Branstad being handed news of his anointment 
during a 
June 3 campaign event.  Blindsided, Branstad chuckles awkwardly and announces, 
with evident amazement,  “I never expected this! Sarah Palin just endorsed 
us on Facebook.” (It’s hard to  tell from audience members’ explosive 
laughter whether they are more delighted  or appalled for Branstad, a moderate 
Republican whose endorsement by Palin drew  howls of protest from her 
conservative followers.) 
For Republican pols actively angling for Palin’s magic touch, simply  
attracting the attention of Palinland can prove challenging. There have been  
smirking media accounts of various Republican primary combatants scrambling for 
 a Palin endorsement or appearance. Before he became infamous for serially  
exaggerating his résumé Illinois Senate candidate Mark Kirk suffered the  
indignity of having his make-her-love-me-please memo to Palin pal Fred Malek  
leaked to the media. Among Republican strategists, there has arisen 
grumbling  about the difficulties in connecting with her people. “Nobody even 
knows 
how to  get ahold of her. No one knows who to call,” says one. Some 
campaigns grew so  desperate, they took to e-mailing Palin’s Facebook page. 
(Meanwhile, even among  those considered close to Palin, there is some 
confusion as 
to who, besides  Sarah and Todd, are in-the-know, central players in 
Palinland.) Grumps the  strategist, “The entire Palin organization seems to be 
the 
woman, a massive  Facebook page, and a ton of TV cameras.” 
It’s an unconventional media strategy, to be sure, and not without its  
drawbacks— namely, bitter party operatives. (“This means that you can’t plan  
anything!” says the strategist.) Yet it’s hard to deny that Palin’s p.r.  
approach has not only succeeded but succeeded brilliantly. How? The most 
obvious  element at work here is that Palin operates not as a politician but as 
a  celebrity. “Most politicians can’t get on the cover of People,” sighs  
another GOP campaign veteran. “She’s on the cover almost every week.” The 
rules  are different for celebrities: Palin’s megawattage enables her to 
command  attention for every word and gesture, even as she largely stiff-arms 
The 
New  York Times and “Meet the Press.” Similarly, candidates desperate for 
her  endorsement are unlikely to (publicly) whine about whatever attention 
she  dribbles their way, no matter how arbitrary or last-minute. 
Of course, unlike other categories of the rich and famous, political celebs 
 (especially populist firebrands) cannot risk being seen as remote or out 
of  touch. But here’s where Palin’s embrace of new media saves the day. Her 
perky,  quirky tweets and chatty Facebook items make her fans feel as though 
they  have a direct line to her—despite the oft-voiced assumption that 
Palin (like so  many pols) does not write most (if any) of her own Facebook 
posts. Such is the  beauty of social networking: It allows a public figure to 
avoid direct  interaction with the public while promoting the illusion of 
personal connection  and involvement.
 
This model makes perfect sense for Palin if she plans to continue as a 
media  personality. It’s unlikely she’d change her m.o., however, even if she 
decided  to run for office again one day. It suits her core strengths—
passion, pithiness,  and a mind-boggling magnetism—and, let’s face it, it’s so 
much easier than the conventional model. Already, even as Palin eagerly 
collects scalps  in the midterm races (a key step toward running for future 
office), she is  skipping much of the messier, schmoozier work of building 
relationships with  other campaigns (traditionally also a key step), opting 
instead 
to bless many  from the safe, antiseptic distance of Facebook. 
Palin would not be the first celebrity candidate to attempt an 
above-the-fray  strategy. In the hunt for the 2008 GOP presidential nomination, 
ex-senator and  erstwhile actor Fred Thompson briefly entertained dreams of 
running 
a different  kind of campaign, in which his fame and willingness to rely on 
the Web would  spare him from trudging through all those snow banks in Iowa 
and New Hampshire.  A key part of his plan was to speak directly to voters 
via blog posts and other  new-media tools, rather than letting himself be 
filtered by all the usual  gatekeepers. But Thompson, while plenty well-known 
and delightfully avuncular,  lacked the fire in the belly to make it more 
than a couple of feet off the  starting block. 
Palin, by contrast, appears to still harbor plenty of ambition, or at least 
 scores to settle. She also enjoys a media landscape far more “democratized”
 than  what Thompson faced just a few years ago—who knows what Team Fred 
could have  done with the Twitter mania that’s swept politics recently?—not 
to mention a  star quality many Hollywood A-listers would kill for. With her 
new-media savvy  and old-fashioned charisma, Palin has managed to merge 
Norma Desmond (“Mr.  DeMille, I’m ready for my closeup”) with Greta Garbo (“I 
want to be alone”) to  become one of the most irresistible spectacles on the 
public stage. Any  political strategist who orchestrated such brilliant 
success via such  unconventional means would instantly be dubbed the p.r. 
genius of our time. But,  as far as we know, there is no crack communications 
team charting Palin’s  course. At some point, even Palin haters may have to 
face the possibility that  the p.r. genius is Sarah herself. 
Michelle Cottle is a senior editor of The New  Republic.

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