"The Talk About Trump" covers the ways in which boisterous businessman Donald Trump has impacted the presidential race in traditional and social media. Not only has he turned up the volume; he's also managed to change the topic of conversation.
The inaugural PEORIA Project from George Washington University's Graduate School of Political Management, measuring how presidential candidates' messages are resonating and being echoed by the public.
PEORIA Report 3: The GOP Debates Begin, Late Summer 2015GSPMgwu
-WORDS IN EDGEWISE: You can probably guess which candidate dominated the conversation. But you might be surprised at who else has been talked about most.
-BAD, BAD MOOD: We will identify the only candidate for whom mentions with positive sentiments outnumbered those with negative sentiments.
-THE NEW SPIN ROOM: We will display the top three retweets from each party after both debates, and the top retweet from each of the Republican candidates.
-BELTWAY DIFFERENCES: We will distinguish between candidates who got more attention in mainstream than in social media, and vice versa.
-RATINGS: And, as is our custom, we will evaluate how well each candidate’s campaign garnered and leveraged public echoes of what they said during the time period on our scale of 1 to 11.
Closer scrutiny of data from the social network Twitter would have helped to diagnose and predict the rise of the two outsider candidates in the 2016 presidential election, businessman Donald Trump and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, according to a new Public Echoes Of Rhetoric In America (PEORIA) Project report.
The fifth edition of the PEORIA Project, "The Year in Echoes" looks back at the year in political conversations and seeks to find the winners and losers in the battle to get campaign messages heard and echoed by the general public. This report includes all social and mainstream media conversations of the 2016 election from March 15, 2015 to January 17, 2016.
This document analyzes Twitter data from May 4th to July 8th to examine how well Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump consolidated support during the party nomination period. It finds that Trump led Clinton in media coverage and Twitter impressions, but his follower growth slowed to match Clinton's pace. Clinton had the most retweeted tweet criticizing Trump, but Trump's response was also popular. Neither candidate appears to be effectively appealing to supporters of opposing candidates who have dropped out. Hashtags may reflect temporary reactions rather than long-term shifts in support.
Ted Cruz triumphed in TrendPo's #SenateSweeps social media competition by consistently outperforming his opponents across Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube over six weeks. Cruz was an outspoken critic of the government shutdown and used social media to communicate his stance, gaining followers and engagement. He leveraged trending topics and posted sharable, original content like memes and videos. Cruz tweeted frequently, including retweets of colleagues, and saw major gains in followers and retweets. This active social media strategy helped Cruz advance each round to be crowned the champion of #SenateSweeps.
Can Digital Data help predict the results of the US elections? Laurence Borel
The document analyzes digital data and social media metrics to compare support for Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump during the 2016 US presidential election. It finds that while Trump had greater overall online mentions and social media followers, Clinton's campaign website received more traffic and engagement. Sentiment toward Clinton winning the election was slightly positive, while sentiment toward a Trump victory was strongly negative. The document concludes the data suggests Clinton had an edge over Trump in terms of online support and perception during the period analyzed.
"The Talk About Trump" covers the ways in which boisterous businessman Donald Trump has impacted the presidential race in traditional and social media. Not only has he turned up the volume; he's also managed to change the topic of conversation.
The inaugural PEORIA Project from George Washington University's Graduate School of Political Management, measuring how presidential candidates' messages are resonating and being echoed by the public.
PEORIA Report 3: The GOP Debates Begin, Late Summer 2015GSPMgwu
-WORDS IN EDGEWISE: You can probably guess which candidate dominated the conversation. But you might be surprised at who else has been talked about most.
-BAD, BAD MOOD: We will identify the only candidate for whom mentions with positive sentiments outnumbered those with negative sentiments.
-THE NEW SPIN ROOM: We will display the top three retweets from each party after both debates, and the top retweet from each of the Republican candidates.
-BELTWAY DIFFERENCES: We will distinguish between candidates who got more attention in mainstream than in social media, and vice versa.
-RATINGS: And, as is our custom, we will evaluate how well each candidate’s campaign garnered and leveraged public echoes of what they said during the time period on our scale of 1 to 11.
Closer scrutiny of data from the social network Twitter would have helped to diagnose and predict the rise of the two outsider candidates in the 2016 presidential election, businessman Donald Trump and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, according to a new Public Echoes Of Rhetoric In America (PEORIA) Project report.
The fifth edition of the PEORIA Project, "The Year in Echoes" looks back at the year in political conversations and seeks to find the winners and losers in the battle to get campaign messages heard and echoed by the general public. This report includes all social and mainstream media conversations of the 2016 election from March 15, 2015 to January 17, 2016.
This document analyzes Twitter data from May 4th to July 8th to examine how well Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump consolidated support during the party nomination period. It finds that Trump led Clinton in media coverage and Twitter impressions, but his follower growth slowed to match Clinton's pace. Clinton had the most retweeted tweet criticizing Trump, but Trump's response was also popular. Neither candidate appears to be effectively appealing to supporters of opposing candidates who have dropped out. Hashtags may reflect temporary reactions rather than long-term shifts in support.
Ted Cruz triumphed in TrendPo's #SenateSweeps social media competition by consistently outperforming his opponents across Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube over six weeks. Cruz was an outspoken critic of the government shutdown and used social media to communicate his stance, gaining followers and engagement. He leveraged trending topics and posted sharable, original content like memes and videos. Cruz tweeted frequently, including retweets of colleagues, and saw major gains in followers and retweets. This active social media strategy helped Cruz advance each round to be crowned the champion of #SenateSweeps.
Can Digital Data help predict the results of the US elections? Laurence Borel
The document analyzes digital data and social media metrics to compare support for Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump during the 2016 US presidential election. It finds that while Trump had greater overall online mentions and social media followers, Clinton's campaign website received more traffic and engagement. Sentiment toward Clinton winning the election was slightly positive, while sentiment toward a Trump victory was strongly negative. The document concludes the data suggests Clinton had an edge over Trump in terms of online support and perception during the period analyzed.
We've seen the polls on the Republican candidate standing in the 2016 US Presidential race. However, who's leading in social media and major news sources? Also, who is most engaged with the public in their race to the presidency?
This presentation is a consolidated view of three published reports to answer questions about party mentions, candidate mentions, and candidate engagement on social media.
What are the opinions of public about trump?OlegGarah
The quantity of Americans who say they hold positive perspectives of President Donald Trump has dropped to its most minimal point since his initiation, as indicated by opinion news. https://eatprayvote.org/
Donald Trump won the 2016 US presidential election by narrow margins in key battleground states like Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. His digital director, Brad Parscale, correctly predicted this result based on analytics of early and absentee voting data that showed Trump support in these states. Parscale targeted Facebook ads and "dark posts" toward specific voter demographics, like African American men and Bernie Sanders supporters, with messages aimed at depressing turnout for Hillary Clinton. While Clinton had a large advantage in overall social media followers, Trump's campaign used digital expertise and analytics to more effectively engage and influence key voter groups through targeted messaging, helping him win the election.
Republican Candidate Scorecard: Mike HuckabeeTonya Green
The 2016 US presidential race is on. Frequently we hear the results of political polls, ranking the popularity of candidates. However, both social media and traditional news are useful sources to learn about the candidates, the issues to be addressed, the candidates most discussed, and sentiment around discussions of the candidates. This report includes the results of the analysis of candidate mentions in social media and major news sources over one month. The ranking of candidates by mentions overall and by media source are provided on the Republican Candidate Scorecard. This report also includes a detailed analysis of the mentions of Mike Huckabee in social media and major new sources. It answers many questions, including:
- How many mentions of Huckabee were observed and how does he rank among the Republican candidates?
- What is the trend of discussions and when do mentions peak? What topic is discussed at the peak of discussions?
- What other key terms are also mentioned with Huckabee?
- Where do mentions of Huckabee most occur?
- Who are the influencers of discussions of Huckabee, in blogs, traditional news sources and Twitter?
- How engaged is Huckabee on Twitter? How many times did Huckabee tweet and how many tweets were directed to Huckabee?
The Public Opinion Landscape: Election 2016 – Super TuesdayGloverParkGroup
This document provides an overview and analysis of the 2016 US presidential election as of March 1, 2016. It summarizes the state of the Republican and Democratic nomination races following the early voting states. On the Republican side, Trump has won most states so far but needs over 50% of delegates to avoid a contested convention. Super Tuesday will be an important test, with 653 delegates at stake across 12 states. For Democrats, Clinton has a significant lead in delegates and polls, but Sanders hopes to close the gap on Super Tuesday with 865 delegates up for grabs across 11 states.
Jacksonville, Florida Sports Talk Radio Station PopularityTaylor Kennedy
This presentation provides the reader with an understanding of the Jacksonville, Florida Sports Radio Landscape in 2019. This presentation shows the reader the top radio stations by survey and Twitter popularity. The presentation also shows you graphics of which radio personalities are most popular between 1010XL / 92.5 FM and ESPN 690.
Donald Trump has maintained his lead in Republican primary polls since announcing his candidacy in June 2015. There are three theories for his success: 1) He has tapped into widespread populism, nativism, and anti-elite sentiment among Republican voters. 2) His controversial statements have driven massive media coverage, correlating his polling numbers to his outsized media presence. 3) The lack of a consensus alternative among Republican elites has created a power vacuum that Trump has filled. Trump's rise is likely due to an overlap of all three factors.
This Unclassified Slide Deck provides an overview of the concept of Reflexive Control Doctrine as it is used as a national strategy by the Russian Federation. It describes exactly how and what was done to "influence" the election differentiating the from the notion of actual "collusion." Disinformation, misinformation, fake news as a campaign strategy is vastly different from actually affecting an outcome by active measures such as bribery, blackmail or hacking.
Certus Insights Special Report: Overview of Polling and Media Coverage on Imp...Natalie Copeland
An in-depth report that reviews the major trends on public attitudes toward the impeachment inquiry, including the latest polling numbers, trends in attitudes since the inquiry announcement, an overview of partisan attitudes, and the impact of impeachment on the President’s approval ratings. The report also details media coverage of the impeachment, examining the amount of coverage, comparisons of the coverage to the Mueller investigation, most shared publications, and most shared news articles.
The Great Revolt audiobook analyzes Donald Trump's election and whether it represented a fundamental shift in the electorate. Authors Salena Zito and Brad Todd traveled over 27,000 miles interviewing more than 300 Trump voters across 10 swing counties. They found that Trump's supporters were diverse but united in wanting a movement that prioritizes pragmatism over ideology and demands respect from Washington. Zito and Todd argue that Trump's victory was not a fluke but rather signaled tectonic changes in political parties and media that were ignored prior to the 2016 election.
The 2016 US presidential race is on. Frequently we hear the results of political polls, ranking the popularity of candidates. However, both social media and traditional news are useful sources to learn about the candidates, the issues to be addressed, the candidates most discussed, and sentiment around discussions of the candidates. This is a brief report of the results of the analysis of candidate mentions in social media and major news sources over one month. In this Republican Candidate Scorecard, you'll learn:
- What is the ranking of candidates by mentions overall and by media source?
- When did mentions of each candidate peak during the month?
- What is the sentiment around mentions of each candidate?
This document summarizes the results of a nationwide survey of 829 likely Republican primary voters conducted from September 29 to October 1, 2015. Key findings include:
- Donald Trump and Ben Carson are leading the field in name recognition and consideration, followed by Marco Rubio, Carly Fiorina, and others.
- No candidate has a majority support yet and voters are still considering an average of 6 candidates.
- Trump saw the largest increase in support over prior months, followed by gains for Carson, Fiorina, and Rubio.
- A majority of voters want a nominee who will reach out to compromise, though views on the preferred type of candidate are mixed.
The document provides an overview and analysis of the 2016 US presidential election as of October 2015. It summarizes several national polls showing that most Americans feel the country is headed in the wrong direction and are split on whether they prefer a candidate with political experience or an outsider. The polls also show Donald Trump leading the Republican primary field but Ben Carson gaining momentum, while Hillary Clinton maintains a lead over Bernie Sanders in Democratic polls. The document analyzes fundraising and other election metrics through October 2015.
This study analyzed the tone of Fox Business Network's coverage of presidential candidates Donald Trump and John Kasich during the 2016 primaries. It found that Trump received more negative coverage (67%) than Kasich (52%), supporting the hypothesis that the media has a pro-establishment bias. The coverage focused most on candidates' character and horserace performance. Trump was depicted negatively as unpolished and offensive, while Kasich was seen as too passive. Reporters often expressed opinions on which candidate would win primaries based on campaign strategies. Kasich received more positive coverage of his policies due to his experience in government budgets. The study found evidence that the media frames candidates in ways that shape public perceptions.
A Tale of Two Kyles: How Ad Data Exposed My ID TheftKyle J. Britt
In 2010 my identity was stolen. I first realized it thanks to a targeted ad. But ever since then, my identity is tangled up with another real Kyle Britt. You wouldn’t believe how hard that is to fix.
When using multiple property files that define the same properties, the values in the property file listed last will override those listed earlier. This is because properties are read from the last listed file first and this overrides any same-named properties from earlier files. The document demonstrates configuring Mule to read properties from two files, and shows that reversing the file order changes which property values are used.
María Teresa Ciro Ochoa se presenta como ingeniera de sistemas con 13 años de experiencia docente y laboral en áreas administrativas y de sistemas. Describe la gastronomía típica de Barranquilla, incluyendo platos como el arroz de lisa y el sancocho de guandú, así como bebidas como el raspao y el agua de panela. Resalta la cultura de Barranquilla, especialmente su carnaval declarado Patrimonio Cultural de la Nación, y otros eventos culturales como Barranquijazz. Inclu
We've seen the polls on the Republican candidate standing in the 2016 US Presidential race. However, who's leading in social media and major news sources? Also, who is most engaged with the public in their race to the presidency?
This presentation is a consolidated view of three published reports to answer questions about party mentions, candidate mentions, and candidate engagement on social media.
What are the opinions of public about trump?OlegGarah
The quantity of Americans who say they hold positive perspectives of President Donald Trump has dropped to its most minimal point since his initiation, as indicated by opinion news. https://eatprayvote.org/
Donald Trump won the 2016 US presidential election by narrow margins in key battleground states like Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. His digital director, Brad Parscale, correctly predicted this result based on analytics of early and absentee voting data that showed Trump support in these states. Parscale targeted Facebook ads and "dark posts" toward specific voter demographics, like African American men and Bernie Sanders supporters, with messages aimed at depressing turnout for Hillary Clinton. While Clinton had a large advantage in overall social media followers, Trump's campaign used digital expertise and analytics to more effectively engage and influence key voter groups through targeted messaging, helping him win the election.
Republican Candidate Scorecard: Mike HuckabeeTonya Green
The 2016 US presidential race is on. Frequently we hear the results of political polls, ranking the popularity of candidates. However, both social media and traditional news are useful sources to learn about the candidates, the issues to be addressed, the candidates most discussed, and sentiment around discussions of the candidates. This report includes the results of the analysis of candidate mentions in social media and major news sources over one month. The ranking of candidates by mentions overall and by media source are provided on the Republican Candidate Scorecard. This report also includes a detailed analysis of the mentions of Mike Huckabee in social media and major new sources. It answers many questions, including:
- How many mentions of Huckabee were observed and how does he rank among the Republican candidates?
- What is the trend of discussions and when do mentions peak? What topic is discussed at the peak of discussions?
- What other key terms are also mentioned with Huckabee?
- Where do mentions of Huckabee most occur?
- Who are the influencers of discussions of Huckabee, in blogs, traditional news sources and Twitter?
- How engaged is Huckabee on Twitter? How many times did Huckabee tweet and how many tweets were directed to Huckabee?
The Public Opinion Landscape: Election 2016 – Super TuesdayGloverParkGroup
This document provides an overview and analysis of the 2016 US presidential election as of March 1, 2016. It summarizes the state of the Republican and Democratic nomination races following the early voting states. On the Republican side, Trump has won most states so far but needs over 50% of delegates to avoid a contested convention. Super Tuesday will be an important test, with 653 delegates at stake across 12 states. For Democrats, Clinton has a significant lead in delegates and polls, but Sanders hopes to close the gap on Super Tuesday with 865 delegates up for grabs across 11 states.
Jacksonville, Florida Sports Talk Radio Station PopularityTaylor Kennedy
This presentation provides the reader with an understanding of the Jacksonville, Florida Sports Radio Landscape in 2019. This presentation shows the reader the top radio stations by survey and Twitter popularity. The presentation also shows you graphics of which radio personalities are most popular between 1010XL / 92.5 FM and ESPN 690.
Donald Trump has maintained his lead in Republican primary polls since announcing his candidacy in June 2015. There are three theories for his success: 1) He has tapped into widespread populism, nativism, and anti-elite sentiment among Republican voters. 2) His controversial statements have driven massive media coverage, correlating his polling numbers to his outsized media presence. 3) The lack of a consensus alternative among Republican elites has created a power vacuum that Trump has filled. Trump's rise is likely due to an overlap of all three factors.
This Unclassified Slide Deck provides an overview of the concept of Reflexive Control Doctrine as it is used as a national strategy by the Russian Federation. It describes exactly how and what was done to "influence" the election differentiating the from the notion of actual "collusion." Disinformation, misinformation, fake news as a campaign strategy is vastly different from actually affecting an outcome by active measures such as bribery, blackmail or hacking.
Certus Insights Special Report: Overview of Polling and Media Coverage on Imp...Natalie Copeland
An in-depth report that reviews the major trends on public attitudes toward the impeachment inquiry, including the latest polling numbers, trends in attitudes since the inquiry announcement, an overview of partisan attitudes, and the impact of impeachment on the President’s approval ratings. The report also details media coverage of the impeachment, examining the amount of coverage, comparisons of the coverage to the Mueller investigation, most shared publications, and most shared news articles.
The Great Revolt audiobook analyzes Donald Trump's election and whether it represented a fundamental shift in the electorate. Authors Salena Zito and Brad Todd traveled over 27,000 miles interviewing more than 300 Trump voters across 10 swing counties. They found that Trump's supporters were diverse but united in wanting a movement that prioritizes pragmatism over ideology and demands respect from Washington. Zito and Todd argue that Trump's victory was not a fluke but rather signaled tectonic changes in political parties and media that were ignored prior to the 2016 election.
The 2016 US presidential race is on. Frequently we hear the results of political polls, ranking the popularity of candidates. However, both social media and traditional news are useful sources to learn about the candidates, the issues to be addressed, the candidates most discussed, and sentiment around discussions of the candidates. This is a brief report of the results of the analysis of candidate mentions in social media and major news sources over one month. In this Republican Candidate Scorecard, you'll learn:
- What is the ranking of candidates by mentions overall and by media source?
- When did mentions of each candidate peak during the month?
- What is the sentiment around mentions of each candidate?
This document summarizes the results of a nationwide survey of 829 likely Republican primary voters conducted from September 29 to October 1, 2015. Key findings include:
- Donald Trump and Ben Carson are leading the field in name recognition and consideration, followed by Marco Rubio, Carly Fiorina, and others.
- No candidate has a majority support yet and voters are still considering an average of 6 candidates.
- Trump saw the largest increase in support over prior months, followed by gains for Carson, Fiorina, and Rubio.
- A majority of voters want a nominee who will reach out to compromise, though views on the preferred type of candidate are mixed.
The document provides an overview and analysis of the 2016 US presidential election as of October 2015. It summarizes several national polls showing that most Americans feel the country is headed in the wrong direction and are split on whether they prefer a candidate with political experience or an outsider. The polls also show Donald Trump leading the Republican primary field but Ben Carson gaining momentum, while Hillary Clinton maintains a lead over Bernie Sanders in Democratic polls. The document analyzes fundraising and other election metrics through October 2015.
This study analyzed the tone of Fox Business Network's coverage of presidential candidates Donald Trump and John Kasich during the 2016 primaries. It found that Trump received more negative coverage (67%) than Kasich (52%), supporting the hypothesis that the media has a pro-establishment bias. The coverage focused most on candidates' character and horserace performance. Trump was depicted negatively as unpolished and offensive, while Kasich was seen as too passive. Reporters often expressed opinions on which candidate would win primaries based on campaign strategies. Kasich received more positive coverage of his policies due to his experience in government budgets. The study found evidence that the media frames candidates in ways that shape public perceptions.
A Tale of Two Kyles: How Ad Data Exposed My ID TheftKyle J. Britt
In 2010 my identity was stolen. I first realized it thanks to a targeted ad. But ever since then, my identity is tangled up with another real Kyle Britt. You wouldn’t believe how hard that is to fix.
When using multiple property files that define the same properties, the values in the property file listed last will override those listed earlier. This is because properties are read from the last listed file first and this overrides any same-named properties from earlier files. The document demonstrates configuring Mule to read properties from two files, and shows that reversing the file order changes which property values are used.
María Teresa Ciro Ochoa se presenta como ingeniera de sistemas con 13 años de experiencia docente y laboral en áreas administrativas y de sistemas. Describe la gastronomía típica de Barranquilla, incluyendo platos como el arroz de lisa y el sancocho de guandú, así como bebidas como el raspao y el agua de panela. Resalta la cultura de Barranquilla, especialmente su carnaval declarado Patrimonio Cultural de la Nación, y otros eventos culturales como Barranquijazz. Inclu
Si pensamos en un árbol que represente a la ciudad de Madrid, este es sin duda alguna el madroño, ya que forma parte de uno de los símbolos más emblemáticos de la ciudad, ubicado en la Puerta del Sol.
DJ Femme Fatale launched her career on London pirate radio stations and was later offered a residency at Ministry of Sound club, where her high-energy sets developed a loyal following. She was the first DJ signed to BBC 1Xtra and had a prime time Saturday night show. She has enjoyed success touring with Ministry of Sound and hosting a weekly show on their TV channel. She has won several awards including 'Best Female DJ' and has been nominated and featured positively in major music and lifestyle publications. With her passion and style inspiring new fans globally, DJ Femme Fatale has established herself as one of today's leading DJs.
A youth worker in Craigieburn, Australia has created a program called the White Owl Ambassadors Program to help empower young people and reduce the stigma around mental illness. The program aims to improve youth leadership skills and teach them how to raise awareness of mental health issues through workshops on topics like social media, public speaking, and opening dialogue about mental health. The youth worker developed the program based on his own experiences dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety after coming out as gay. He is now seeking funding through two organizations to further develop and expand the program.
This data sheet provides specifications for a flush-mounted metal box for installing a 7-inch 7STELLE monitor, including a height of 126mm, width of 196mm, and depth of 16mm. The box is designed for flush mounting and includes accessories for installation in plasterboard walls. It comes in single packaging that is 20mm high, 215mm wide, 132mm deep, weighs 0.345kg, and has a volume of 0.568dm3.
This document discusses integrating information and communication technology (ICT) like smart boards, computers, and apps into visual art classrooms. It recommends that teachers first familiarize themselves with the technologies they plan to use and allow guided student practice. Teachers should create virtual museums and galleries for art exposure and teach programs like Paint and Photoshop. Keeping records of student work allows for later compilation and critique. Having an ICT plan can enhance teaching by accommodating different learners and providing access to information, while also risking overdependence on technology and distraction from the real lesson.
La CLEA es una organización sin fines de lucro integrada por estudiantes de arquitectura de 14 países latinoamericanos. Funciona a través de los CLEAS, que representan a cada país y se reúnen dos veces al año en las Reuniones Consultivas para planificar eventos como el Encuentro Latinoamericano de Estudiantes de Arquitectura y el Taller Social Latinoamericano, que promueven la cooperación, el intercambio de ideas y el desarrollo de proyectos de arquitectura con un enfoque social.
The Castor Project was a natural gas storage facility in Spain that reused an old oil field off the coasts of Tarragona and Castellón. It involved injecting and compressing gas underground which displaced water and was stored in rock cavities. However, the project caused hundreds of minor earthquakes in the region from 2012-2013, up to a magnitude 4.1 quake. This led to widespread criticism from local residents and environmental groups. The project was ultimately shut down in 2014 and the company was fined over 1.3 billion euros due to the seismic activity caused by the gas injection operations.
«Вы когда-нибудь задумывались о том, почему некоторые люди, выросшие, казалось бы, в идеальных для жизни условиях, у чудесных, заботливых родителей, не в состоянии справиться с простейшими жизненными проблемами?
Или о том, почему вроде бы очень умные люди всю жизнь наступают на одни и те же грабли?
Есть прирожденные «везунчики». И есть «неудачники», которые, как бы ни старались, ничего не могут поделать со своей «несчастливой звездой». Почему так получается? В чем причина?»
El documento discute el papel de las redes de comunicación en los movimientos sociales y el espacio público. Menciona que las redes son clave para convocar e informar sobre revueltas, aunque el desarrollo de las movilizaciones ocurre en el espacio público. También describe el movimiento estudiantil mexicano "Yo Soy 132" que busca lograr un México más libre y democrático a través del empoderamiento ciudadano y el acceso a información plural e imparcial.
Big data—that ever-expanding universe of digital influencers and exploding number of social media conversations—can be a big brand-building opportunity for PR professionals, but only if you have the know-how and technology to use it to your advantage.
Join Cision’s Heidi Sullivan and Dave Lundstrom for a complimentary webinar that explores the basics of big data and how to leverage it to positively impact your brand.
With the Nevada caucus approaching, learn how Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Senator Bernie Sanders stack up nationally and in the Silver State. Find out which topics each candidate leads on and learn more about their policies on issues like the economy, immigration and healthcare.
Five Social Media Trends We Spotted in the MidtermsCision
The 2010 midterm elections weren’t just fought across TV and radio – they were fought across social media networks too. For three weeks, Vocus monitored key races in Massachusetts, Kentucky
and Nevada to spot emerging trends – here’s what we found…
Candidate Buzz: Republican Candidate Scorecard and Candidate ProfilesTonya Green
An analysis of candidate mentions in social media and major news sources
- How the candidates rank based on the "buzz" they generate
- A snapshot of the "buzz" generated by each Republican candidate, including the number of mentions, mentions by source, trend, top keywords, top hashtags, and sentiment
The document analyzes Twitter data from various US presidential candidates from July to October 2015. It finds that Bernie Sanders had the most conversational style and engaged the most with topics discussed by the US population like taxes, immigration, and the economy. Hillary Clinton touched on all major topics, including same-sex marriage, the economy, and immigration, often mixing English and Spanish in her posts. Rand Paul focused most of his messaging on taxes and the economy, with some comments on immigration.
Jason Cohen - Presidential Debates Report - Political CommunicationJason A. Cohen
The documentary "Debating Our Destiny" examines the importance of presidential debates since 1960. It interviews candidates about their debate experiences and strategies. Key themes emerged. Debates are mentally grueling as candidates must rebut their opponent and think on their feet. Candidates learned to avoid controversial statements that could hurt them. Additionally, it's important to know the key issues and have an experienced running mate. Saturday Night Live parody sketches often highlighted candidates' mannerisms and how they came across, which could impact voter perception. The documentary and sketches demonstrate debates' ongoing significance in connecting candidates with voters and influencing election outcomes.
The document discusses trends in traditional news coverage of elections and how different actors, including the media, voters, and candidates, influence that coverage. It notes that while politicians often blame negative media coverage solely on the media, John Zaller provided alternative explanations by analyzing how the goals of all three groups impact coverage. For example, candidates' increased control over messaging has led to more press-initiated negativity as the media pushes back on restricted access. The document also examines how trivial and negative coverage has consequences for how the public views politics.
The 2016 US presidential race is on. Social media and news are dominated by the political candidates and issues to be addressed by both Republicans and Democrats. Which political party is leading the race in the media? This brief report is an analysis of mentions of the Republican party and the Democratic party in social media and major news sources. It's likely no surprise, which party is most mentioned over a one-month period and who is trumping the mentions. This report includes an analysis of the number of mentions, by media source, the trends, the top keywords, the top hashtags on Twitter, and top re-tweets,
The document summarizes a book written by David Plouffe, campaign manager for Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign. It describes how Plouffe details Obama's unlikely victory as an underdog candidate through unconventional campaign tactics like focusing on grassroots support and delegates over popular vote. The summary highlights how Plouffe analyzes specific campaign strategies and admits mistakes, providing valuable insight for political junkies. However, it notes the book provides little insight into Obama himself as a person.
The document discusses political bias and lack of objectivism in media coverage of elections. It argues that many major news outlets violate principles of objective journalism and the SPJ Code of Ethics by endorsing candidates and providing disproportionate, biased coverage. This is seen through examples like The New York Times' endorsement of Hillary Clinton and subsequent glowing coverage of her campaign over Bernie Sanders. The document concludes that media endorsements undermine independence and mislead readers by presenting opinion as fact, and that outlets should provide factual information to allow readers to form their own opinions.
073116-CHARLES KOCH SILENT ON WHITE HOUSE RACEVogelDenise
17 USC § 107 (LIMITATIONS On EXCLUSIVE Rights - FAIR USE)
Many did not see the COLLAPSE of the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime and/or the KOCH’s CRUMBLING Empire because they were TOO BUSY entertaining the DISTRACTIONS and LISTENING to the LYING LIPS of the White Supremacist/ZIONIST-Controlled Media that SOUGHT to keep the TRUTH HIDDEN from those who WANTED to be IGNORANT!
LESSON LEARNED: The Jews/Zionist came after the WRONG AFRICAN-American (Vogel Denise Newsome) who is NOT afraid of them. Newsome is NOT a POLITICIAN! Newsome is NOT afraid to go AGAINST the United States’ DESPOTISM Government Regime! GOD is more POWERFUL!
Australian Political Parties and social media: uses and attitudesStephen Dann
Australian Political Parties and social media talks about how the Twitter accounts of political candidates from the W.A. senate re-election fared under analysis from the Twitter Content Classification framework (Plus a brief overview of Day 1 of the #cmpm2014 conference)
This document appears to be a report analyzing Twitter data related to various political hashtags from August 26th to September 1st, 2014. It provides statistics on the number of tweets found for each hashtag, the most frequent words in tweets, and performs sentiment analysis to classify tweets as positive, negative or neutral. It also identifies the top users tweeting about specific hashtags and gives examples of recent tweets.
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Chuck Brooks Selected as Cybersecurity Marketer of the YearChuck Brooks
Dear Friends & Colleagues, Please see attached. I am excited to announce that I was named the WINNER of "Cybersecurity Marketer of the Year" in the 2016 Cybersecurity Excellence Awards. The Awards are an annual competition that honors individuals and companies that demonstrate excellence, innovation and leadership in information security. Thanks for your kind votes and endorsements !
Best regards, Chuck
@ChuckDBrooks
https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckbrooks
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PEORIA Project Report 4: Kasich Rising
1. KASICH RISING
(AND OTHER HIGHLIGHTS OF THE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE CONVERSATION)
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR MICHAEL CORNFIELD,
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR LARA BROWN, AND DATA SCIENTIST JAMIE CHANDLER
RELEASE DATE: NOVEMBER 9, 2015
2. Using Zignal Labs’ platform, GSPM tracks
the mainstream and social media echoes of
the and
their .
4. Candidates
(Descending order)
Total Mentions
Sept. 21 – Nov. 1
All Current
Candidates
(share of voice, in %)
Republicans Only
(share of voice, in
%)
Donald Trump 9,096,900 35.6 54.0
Hillary Clinton 4,660,264 18.2 --
Bernie Sanders 3,891,131 15.2 --
Ben Carson 1,913,895 7.5 11.4
Ted Cruz 1,555,251 6.1 9.2
Jeb Bush 1,299,325 5.1 7.7
Marco Rubio 917,575 3.6 5.4
John Kasich 409,393 1.6 2.4
Mike Huckabee 332,727 1.3 2.0
Chris Christie 327,396 1.3 1.9
Carly Fiorina 266,054 1.0 1.6
Rand Paul 263,416 1.0 1.6
Martin O’Malley 156,255 0.6 --
Lindsey Graham 142,727 0.6 0.8
Bobby Jindal 137,574 0.5 0.8
Rick Santorum 131,420 0.5 0.8
George Pataki 43,045 0.2 0.3
CONVERSATION LEADERS
Note: Omitted candidates who dropped from the nomination contests (i.e., Perry, Walker, Webb, and Chafee).
6. CLINTON & TRUMP?
54%
11%
9%
8%
5%
2%
2%
2%
2% 2%1%1%1%0%
Share of Republican Voice (%)
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Trump Carson Cruz Bush Rubio Kasich Huckabee
Christie Fiorina Paul Graham Jindal Santorum Pataki
46%
39%
2%
4%
2%
7%
Share of Democratic Voice (%)
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
Note: In this and many of the following analyses, we added Biden into the Democratic
field because his potential candidacy was a much discussed possibility.
7. DEMOCRATIC TIME SERIES
Note: Omitted candidates who dropped from the nomination contests (i.e., Perry, Walker, Webb, and Chafee).
9. DEMOCRATIC NET
SENTIMENT
-75
-50
-25
0
25
50
75
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
Net Sentiment of Democratic Candidates Mentions (%)
Pre-Debate Net Sentiment (9/21-10/12) Post-Debate Net Sentiment (10/13-11/1)
Note: Net sentiment is measured as the percentage of positive mentions minus the percentage of negative
mentions (similar to “net approval” or “net favorability”). Still, NLP does not capture sentiment all that
indiscriminately. As such, sarcasm (“that’s sick”), disappointment (“that sucks”), or even descriptive facts
(“drops out”) may be included in the mentions count. Net sentiment should, therefore, be seen as a directional
and relational indicator rather than an absolute measure.
10. REPUBLICAN TIME SERIES
Note: Omitted candidates who dropped from the nomination contests (i.e., Perry, Walker, Webb, and Chafee).
13. DEMOCRATS: WHO IS
TALKING ABOUT WHOM?
Candidates Mainstream
Media
Sept. 21 –
Nov. 1
Social
Media
Sept. 21
– Nov. 1
Hillary Clinton 511,865 4,148,399
Bernie Sanders 249,741 3,641,490
Martin O’Malley 71,707 84,548
Jim Webb 54,482 365,885
Lincoln Chafee 47,796 183,466
Joe Biden* 212,240 520,748
0
750,000
1,500,000
2,250,000
3,000,000
3,750,000
4,500,000
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
TotalMentions
Total Media Mentions
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Mainstream Media Social Media
14. DEMOCRATS: WHO IS
TALKING ABOUT WHOM?
45%
22%
6%
5%
4%
18%
Mainstream Media SOV (%)
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
46%
41%
1%
4%
2%
6%
Social Media SOV (%)
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
15. DEMOCRATS: WHO IS
TALKING ABOUT WHOM?
0
250,000
500,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,250,000
1,500,000
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
TotalMentions
Media Mentions Before Debate
September 21 - October 12, 2015
Mainstream Media Social Media
0
500,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,000,000
2,500,000
3,000,000
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee Biden*
TotalMentions
Media Mentions During/After Debate
October 13 - November 1, 2015
Mainstream Media Social Media
16. REPUBLICANS: WHO IS
TALKING ABOUT WHOM?
Candidates Mainstream
Media
Sept. 21 –
Nov. 1
Social
Media
Sept. 21 –
Nov. 1
Donald Trump 502,686 8,594,221
Ben Carson 224,731 1,689,170
Jeb Bush 198,198 1,101,138
Marco Rubio 149,926 767,662
Ted Cruz 108,506 1,446,749
Carly Fiorina 90,061 175,993
Chris Christie 78,952 248,453
John Kasich 59,578 349,813
Rand Paul 58,700 204,722
Mike Huckabee 43,637 289,093
Lindsey Graham 38,843 35,511
Bobby Jindal 17,005 33,440
Rick Santorum 31,779 20,689
George Pataki 6,858 13,594
0
250,000
500,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,250,000
1,500,000
1,750,000
TotalMentions
Total Media Mentions
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Mainstream Media Social Media
Trump: Off the chart again .
Undercard
Debaters
17. REPUBLICANS: WHO IS
TALKING ABOUT WHOM?
33%
15%
13%
10%
7%
6%
5%
4%
4% 3%
Mainstream Media SOV (%)
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Trump Carson Bush Rubio Cruz
Fiorina Christie Kasich Paul Huckabee
58%
11%
8%
5%
10%
1%2%2%1%2%
Social Media SOV (%)
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Trump Carson Bush Rubio Cruz
Fiorina Christie Kasich Paul Huckabee
18. REPUBLICANS: WHO IS
TALKING ABOUT WHOM?
0
250,000
500,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,250,000
1,500,000
TotalMentions
Media Mentions Before Debate
September 21 - October 27, 2015
Mainstream Media Social Media
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
TotalMentions
Media Mentions During/After Debate
October 28 - November 1, 2015
Mainstream Media Social Media
Undercard
Debaters
Undercard
Debaters
“Off the
Charts”
Mainstream
Media
Sept. 21 –
Oct. 27
Social
Media
Sept. 21 –
Oct. 27
Mainstrea
m Media
Oct. 28 –
Nov. 1
Social
Media
Oct. 28 –
Nov. 1
Donald Trump 435,134 7,633,758 67,552 960,463
19. THE WEEK THAT WAS FOR
THE DEMOCRATS
52%
28%
14%
1%3% 2%
Democratic Share of Voice (%)
October 19 - 25, 2015
Clinton Sanders Biden O'Malley Webb Chafee
20. THE WEEK THAT WAS FOR
THE DEMOCRATS
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
Website Shares Top Campaign Tweet (RT)
Social Media During the Week
October 19 - October 25, 2015
Clinton Sanders
21. CLINTON’S TOP 3 TWEETS
DURING HEARINGS
1,687 Retweets 659Retweets 445 Retweets
22. TOP GOP RESPONSES TO
BENGHAZI HEARINGS
#1
#3
Jeb Bush
92 Retweets
#1
#1
Donald Trump
1,489 Retweets
#1
#5
Chris Christie
22 Retweets
#1
#2
Mike Huckabee
130 Retweets
#1
#4
Rand Paul
70 Retweets
23. PART TWO
Social media activity by the
candidates and their
campaigns during the
conservational events of the
period.
24. TRUMP ON TOP?
ECHO CONVERSION RATES
Candidates
(in descending order)
Echo Conversion
(total number of
website shares/total
number of social
media mentions,
measured in % for
Sept.21-Nov.1, 2015)
Cruz 13.8
Kasich 8.5
Fiorina 5.3
Clinton 1.6
Paul 1.5
Sanders 1.0
O'Malley 1.0
Huckabee 0.8
Rubio 0.8
Carson 0.6
Bush 0.5
Christie 0.08
Trump 0.05
0
500,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,000,000
2,500,000
3,000,000
3,500,000
4,000,000
4,500,000
Social Media Mentions & Website Shares
September 21 - November 1, 2015
Social Media Mentions Website Shares
Again, Trump is “off the chart.” His social
media mentions were over 8.5M, but his
website shares were 4,517 – he comes in
last on this measure.
25. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES
SOCIAL MEDIA ACTIVITY
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
16,000
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee
Social Media Before Debate
September 21 - October 12, 2015
WebsiteShares TopCampaign Tweet (RTs)
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
Clinton Sanders O'Malley Webb Chafee
Social Media During/Post Debate
October 13 - November 1, 2015
Website Shares Top Campaign Tweet (RTs)
26. CNN DEBATE: DEMOCRATS
TOP RESPONSES (10/13-10/14)
#1
Bernie Sanders
4,570 Retweets
#1
#2
Hillary Clinton
3,109 Retweets
#1
#3
Martin O’Malley
136 Retweets
#4
Jim Webb
69 Retweets
#5
Lincoln Chafee
69 Retweets
28. TOP 3 RETWEETED GOP
RESPONSES (10/13-10/14)
#2
Donald
Trump
5,759
Retweets
#1
Donald
Trump
17,378
Retweets
#3
Donald
Trump
4,699
Retweets
29. REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES
SOCIAL MEDIA ACTIVITY
0
40,000
80,000
120,000
160,000
200,000
Social Media Before Debate
September 21 - October 27, 2015
Website Shares Top Campaign Tweet (RTs)
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
Social Media During/Post Debate
October 28 - November 1, 2015
Website Shares Top Campaign Tweet (RTs)
34. QUESTIONS?
Graduate School of Political Management @GSPMGWU
John Brandt
Media Relations
johnbrandt@gwu.edu
Michael Cornfield Lara Brown
Associate Professor Associate Professor
corn@gwu.edu larambrown@gwu.edu
Zignal Labs @ZignalLabs
Pete Eskew D.J. Waldow
Head of East Coast Sales Director of Marketing
peskew@zignallabs.com djwaldow@zignallabs.com
Editor's Notes
Words can affect elections as well as reflect pre-election trends -- to the extent words circulate society and penetrate public consciousness (e.g., 47%).
Today, whenever words travel online, they can be converted into data. We can measure words circulation: by volume, over time, across news and social media channels, as connected to other words, even (roughly) according to the sentiment (positive/negative) attached to them.
Importantly, candidates say many words and campaigns are built around messages. This project is about understanding how those words and messages “play in Peoria.”
The PEORIA Project follows the candidates and their campaign messages, measuring the public echoes that surface in all types of media.
The primary research question is: what’s being said about the candidates and their campaigns?
Being in the undercard debate leads to substantially fewer mentions – both in mainstream and social media
As we discussed in our last report, we’re interested in similarities and differences between mainstream and social media voices. While it is too early to understand which way the arrow goes (do the news media cause social, vice versa, or are they independent conversations) we are interested in keeping track of the differences.
Our questions remain: Will one group identify the eventual party nominee earlier than the other? Who are the darlings in each category?
But for note, what is clear is that The Donald dominated social media, whereas, Bush captured a large portion of the mainstream media. Interestingly, Donald Trump was covered only slightly more than Jeb Bush by mainstream media. Also, the total numbers between the two sets of media types are very different – about 11.1M of the mentions of these 12 candidates are on social media platforms (Twitter, Facebook, Videos—YouTube, Vimeo, etc., and Blogs), whereas the other 1.1M are on news media (Broadcast TV, LexisNexis, News Sites). Hence, even if the news media are being more responsible in their candidate coverage – they are getting “drown out” by the conversations happening on social media. The volume is hugely different.
News of Biden not running garnered more mentions in a shorter period than the Benghazi hearing, but Clinton’s overall share of voice was larger this week than during either the pre- or post- debate periods. In short, the candidate who suffered “lost media oxygen” during the week was Bernie Sanders (down about 10
Of note – only HRC and Bernie had any social activity to speak of (all others were under 500 shares/RTs.
During the Benghazi hearing, Katy Perry was especially helpful to HRC – as was her campaign. Many of the most popular Tweets were from those who stood by and supported her.
Note – Echo conversion rate is the total # of website shares for the candidate’s website divided by the total number of social media mentions for the candidate. Ted Cruz continues to perform strongly on this engagement-seeking metric. Kasich and Fiorina impressed, while Clinton and Sanders underperformed given their otherwise strong digital engagement records.
The difference in scales is extraordinary (debates = social media events). These are both essentially two week periods, yet prior to the debate the most website shares HRC received were about 15K, but during and after the debate, her numbers reached over 50K. These charts show a great deal of social media activity on the part of Clinton and Sanders, which makes the low echo conversion rates that much more puzzling – but then again, understandable given the volume both are reaching (it’s hard to get more than 1% of nearly 4M people to engage).
The top retweets for both Sanders and O’Malley concerned criminal justice, raising the possibility of involvement by #blacklivesmatter.
Mike Huckabee enjoyed success live-trolling the Democratic debate.
All Trump! The trolling of the Democratic debate attracted far more retweeting than the Democrats’ trumpeting of the debate.
Huge variation on the GOP side: Christie no website post-debate shares – Trump had some, but still far, far fewer than Cruz. Rubio did well post-debate, but was non-existent before. Fiorina/Paul small # of RTs. Fiorina did better on website shares, especially post-debate. Cruz lots of website shares. Kasich appears to be “punching above” his weight-class in terms of website shares – though he was stronger before the debate (perhaps because of his comments on the trail about Trump and Carson) than during/after the debate.
Kasich’s word cloud and top hashtags show that he is using his social media strategically by targeting early primary states and promoting endorsements (the words “Illinois and Christine refer to an endorsement the governor received from the state senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno).
Even though the Ted Cruz line featured here was a stand-out dramatic moment in the debate, three comments by other candidates attracted more retweets.
Also, Jeb Bush tweeting a picture of his personalized cowboy boots is somewhat like his fantasy football moment, he believes he is connecting (being authentic and perhaps, funny), but it seems awfully forced.
This is one metric where Kasich fared poorly, in contrast to others.
Clinton’s comments outperformed Sanders in retweeting –and again the stand-out dramatic moment, when Sanders declared enough about Clinton’s email, did not register impressively on this metric.