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YouTube at centre of 2008 presidential campaign
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YouTube at centre of 2008 presidential campaign
Level 1 Elementary Key words 1 Find the information 2 Look in the text and find this information as quickly as possible. 1. How many video questions have people sent in? 2. When did Richard Nixon and John Kennedy first debate on television? 3. How many questions has CNN chosen for the debate? 4. When is the next US presidential election? 5. How many people have watched the video about Barack Obama? 6. How many people have watched the video about Mr Obama and Mr Giuliani? 194 Debate brings YouTube to centre of 2008 presidential campaign Ewen MacAskill in Charleston July 23, 2007 Television, in the form of CNN, and the Internet, in the form of the video-sharing website YouTube, are joining together to show a debate between the Democratic candidates in the United States’ 2008 presidential campaign. Members of the public have sent in video-recorded questions for Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and the other candidates. People have sent in more than 2,300 videos which they have recorded on webcameras and mobile phones. One of them is a short 30-second video from someone with cancer who takes off her wig and says she would have a better chance of surviving the disease if she had health insurance. “If you were president, what would you do to provide cheap or free medical treatment for everyone in this country?” she asks. The organizers say the event is an important step for the Internet, in the same way that the televised debate between John Kennedy and Richard Nixon in 1960 was an important day in the history of television. But some bloggers, who want the Internet to be democratic and free for everyone to use, have said that they are not happy that CNN is part of this event. The fact that CNN has chosen the 25-30 questions has also made a lot of bloggers angry. The candidates will meet in a military college in Charleston, South Carolina and watch the questions on a large screen, 7.6 metres wide and 5.5 metres high. So far people have sent in questions about climate change, immigration, gay rights, welfare and foreign policy. US newspapers and television cover Iraq all the time but people have only sent in a few questions on this topic. CNN is checking the questions carefully but there might still be some difficult and uncomfortable questions for the candidates. Steve Grove, head of YouTube’s news and politics section, said: “A lot of these YouTube questions are emotional and personal. The person asking each question is in his/her own surroundings, and that person brings you into their world and into their reality. That makes it a very powerful experience.” Some of the videos do not ask questions at all: in one, a man plays guitar and sings a song about possible vice-presidents; another includes a talking duck; one man, talking about what petrol can do to the environment, drives a 1987 Chevy in his video. Phil Noble, founder of PoliticsOnline, said that it was very interesting that YouTube was now showing more and more videos connected with politics. “In the past, there wasn’t much technology in presidential campaigns. The difference in this election is that technology has become a key part of the campaigns. Each candidate’s campaign is now using YouTube all the time.” The Internet played a small part in the 2004 presidential election, when people gave money online to the campaign of the Democrat Howard Dean. Online Democratic bloggers played a bigger Download 7.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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