Chris Christie's youtube channel going viral

Jul 10, 2007
12,041
3
0
call it clever campaigning if you want, but we need more leaders like him, who tell it like it is. you know exactly where he stands, whether you agree with his position or not.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQ1n6Y_uWAI
http://www.youtube.com/user/GovChristie#p/u/6/PkuTm-ON904

A little shaky, the camera shows Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey shedding his sport coat at a town-hall-style meeting as a teacher criticizes what she sees as his attacks on her profession. He begins to respond, the woman tosses her head in frustration, and Mr. Christie goes for the jugular.
Enlarge This Image
YouTube

One of Gov. Chris Christie's YouTube videos has about 770,000 hits, more than all but six of the White House's YouTube posts.

Video Governor Christie Responds To Teacher During Town Hall (YouTube)

Related

*
Times Topic: Chris Christie

“I stood here and very respectfully listened to you; if what you want to do is put on a show and giggle every time I talk, well then I have no interest in answering your question,” he says, as the audience erupts in applause. “If you’d like to conduct a respectful conversation, I’m happy to do it. If you don’t, please go and sit down, and I’ll answer the next question.”

The testy exchange is vintage Christie — or, at least, vintage Christie on YouTube, where it has drawn more than 770,000 views, a number that dwarfs those of his peers around the country and has fueled the buzz about his being a potential national candidate. Since Mr. Christie took office in January, his staff has spread his message on YouTube, posting sharply edited videos of him talking tough or dressing down hostile questioners, a stark contrast with the set pieces that make up most other politicians’ offerings online.

The style and sheer size of the oeuvre — 163 videos — has helped make Mr. Christie, a Republican in a largely Democratic state, a YouTube sensation, with myriad fans around the country who can describe his goals, dislikes and manner.

“A lot of the political stuff online is really dry, but with Christie, there’s an entertainment factor,” said Nicco Mele, who teaches a class on the Internet and politics at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. “These videos don’t seem professionally produced, even though they are.”

Mr. Mele, who worked on Internet strategy for Howard Dean’s bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004, noted that “until now, the most visible impact YouTube has had on politics is catching gaffes, but that’s changing.” He said Mr. Christie’s approach was “very smart and unusual,” predicting “you’ll see other people adopt it.”

In the last two years, it has become standard for major political figures to have their own YouTube channels, allowing them to present a carefully tailored image directly to the public. But Mr. Christie’s effort, and its response, have been anything but standard.

The number of videos that Mr. Christie has released — an average of nearly four per week since he has been in office — easily eclipses fellow Republicans considered presidential contenders, even though the others have spent many more years in the limelight. Gov. Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota has 88 videos on his channel, the political action committee of former Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts has 55, and Gov. Haley Barbour of Mississippi has 49.

More telling, Mr. Christie’s clips have been viewed two million times — seven times as many as the other three combined. Even Sarah Palin’s channel has drawn less traffic (though other videos posted about her have more views).

The video of Mr. Christie’s exchange with that teacher, in Raritan in September, has been viewed more than all but six of the videos on the White House channel. A Robbinsville event where Mr. Christie contends that “the teachers’ union is about the accumulation and exercise of raw power” has drawn more than a quarter-million views, and one where he calls a local school superintendent “the new poster boy for all that’s wrong with a public school system that is being dictated by greed” has drawn more than 61,000.

The 2008 presidential candidates, particularly Barack Obama, pioneered the use of online video, but state and local politicians have deployed the tool in uneven ways. Mr. Christie hired one veteran of presidential campaigns, Patrick Jones, specifically to work with new media like YouTube and Twitter.

YouTube, started in 2005, is seen as crucial to reaching younger people who may not pay attention to talk radio or cable news. And the strategy’s success was evident as the governor stumped for Republicans around the country this fall.

“Christie, of course, is a YouTube sensation, so I’ve seen a lot of him,” Peter Beacom, 32, a software consultant, said at a campaign rally outside Minneapolis just before the election. “I have to admit, I’m fairly ignorant of Barbour and some of the others.”

A Sean Hannity or Don Imus interview has a bigger audience, but experts say the influence of online video may be greater. People learn of the videos from trusted friends or bloggers, they can replay them endlessly, and they often forward the links to others; and they are likely to pay closer attention to something they seek out rather than something that washes over the airwaves.

“Political opinion is formed by people talking to each other — it’s the community that amplifies the content,” said Andrew Rasiej, co-founder of Personal Democracy Forum and techPresident, Web sites devoted to the intersection of politics and the Internet. “Campaigns and candidates are realizing they need to be media organizations, they need to aggregate audiences.”

Michael DuHaime, the governor’s chief political strategist, argued, in classic image-maker style, that “the viral nature of his YouTube videos has less to do with the medium than it does the man.” They work, Mr. DuHaime said, because of the governor’s “real accomplishments and his clear, direct way of communicating his vision for the state.”

But experts said Mr. Christie’s effective, animated speaking style was enhanced by the videography style of his aides.

Many clips are less than five minutes long, and generally have an impromptu, almost homemade feel, shot with a hand-held camera in school gyms and firehouses, carefully edited to show Mr. Christie at his most earnest and funny, pacing with a microphone and giving detailed answers to constituents’ questions.

There he is at an October town-hall-style meeting in Monmouth Junction, dripping with sarcasm as he characterizes the Legislature as being overly concerned with trivial issues. There he is ridiculing the teachers’ union this fall in Scotch Plains, and back in June in Robbinsville, comparing it to a playground bully.

“I’ve said, ‘You punch them, I punch you,’ ” he said. “The fight is about who is going to run public education in New Jersey — the parents and the people they elect, or the mindless, faceless union leaders who decide that they’re going to be the ones who are going to run it because they have the money and the authority to bully around school boards and local councils.”

People who have worked for Mr. Christie say that he is perfectly capable of modulating his tone and that he can use scolding and ridicule strategically. YouTube viewers, though, hear the governor saying with a shrug that this is just who he is.

“I have an Irish father, and I had — and I had before she passed away six years ago, a Sicilian mother,” he told an audience in May. “For those of you who have been exposed to the combination of Irish and Sicilian, it has made me not unfamiliar with conflict.”

source: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/01/nyregion/01youtube.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
 
Last edited:

ayabe

Diamond Member
Aug 10, 2005
7,449
0
0
Is it really viral when that's the intent and everything is staged?

Yeah he's telling it like it is alright, like with that education grant horseshit.....:roll:
 

PJABBER

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2001
4,822
0
0
We need a Chris Christie in the Governor's office of every State and in the White House.
 

Scotteq

Diamond Member
Apr 10, 2008
5,276
5
0
Heh - Around here, his name provokes almost as much reaction as Pal**.
 

Jadow

Diamond Member
Feb 12, 2003
5,962
2
0
Which ones are sharply edited as the Times claims? The ones I've seen have been several minutes long with not a single edit.
 

Jadow

Diamond Member
Feb 12, 2003
5,962
2
0
Heh - Around here, his name provokes almost as much reaction as Pal**.

To equate the two is ludicrous. Christie can make an intellgent arguement and discuss complex topics. Palin is think Africa is a country and says "you betcha Shawn" a lot.
 

soundforbjt

Lifer
Feb 15, 2002
17,788
6,041
136
These are all taped by members of his staff. They are "staged" by the simple fact that he knows when the "tape is rolling" and when it's not. His way of gaining support if he decides to run for pres..BTW only mostly conservatives are watching these.
 
Jul 10, 2007
12,041
3
0
These are all taped by members of his staff. They are "staged" by the simple fact that he knows when the "tape is rolling" and when it's not. His way of gaining support if he decides to run for pres..BTW only mostly conservatives are watching these.

nope, look at the comments in the videos. many seem like teachers' union leaders/members.
 

Scotteq

Diamond Member
Apr 10, 2008
5,276
5
0
To equate the two is ludicrous. Christie can make an intellgent arguement and discuss complex topics. Palin is think Africa is a country and says "you betcha Shawn" a lot.

He can, indeed. He has also pissed off a lot of people: The Unions (Teacher's in particular) hate him. He's also been accused of misusing the court systems, and of abusing his powers against political opponents. And never forget that he's a Republican Governor in a stongly Democrat~controlled state. Their reaction to his name is akin to the reactions people around here have to the Mama bear's. Though in my estimation, Christie is clearly up to the task he has taken on, while Palin... clearly isn't.


Which ones are sharply edited as the Times claims? The ones I've seen have been several minutes long with not a single edit.



Not edited, but picked and chosen.
 
Last edited:

PJABBER

Diamond Member
Feb 8, 2001
4,822
0
0
I was LOLing when Christie called out that one teacher for making faces at him while he was addressing the group. Christie telling her that he wouldn't bother with replying to her unless she got serious was so typical of him - doesn't shy away from dealing directly with the jackass performances of his critics. She was acting like one of her students and he did what any good teacher would do!

Anyone here remember the Crazy Eddie commercials? The teachers unions hate this guy. They have been so used to being toadied to that he is driving them insaaaaaaane!
 

CPA

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
30,322
4
0
I love Christie, and I would argue that his style and aura is not the result of carefully scripted videography, he is like that even live - just catch him on CNBC and you will see him go full bore.
 

OBLAMA2009

Diamond Member
Apr 17, 2008
6,574
3
0
look, there have already been threads about this phat phuck here and hes already been revealed for the corrupt, posing idiot that he is. that teacher asked a reasonable question and when he "confronts" her hes obviously doing it to create a phony youtube incident and ends up coming off as just plain rude and phat. republican politicians like this phat phuck always go after teachers and nurses who provide essential services in society and who dont even make that much (nj teachers only make $55,000 according to that video) . why doesnt he go after the cops who make many times what teachers make (here in sf, ca many cops sit on streetcorners giving out traffic tickets and pull in $250,000-550,000--no joke). this phat phuck will never do that because the prison guards/cops unions support him.
 

Scotteq

Diamond Member
Apr 10, 2008
5,276
5
0
look, there have already been threads about this phat phuck here and hes already been revealed for the corrupt, posing idiot that he is. that teacher asked a reasonable question and when he "confronts" her hes obviously doing it to create a phony youtube incident and ends up coming off as just plain rude and phat. republican politicians like this phat phuck always go after teachers and nurses who provide essential services in society and who dont even make that much (nj teachers only make $55,000 according to that video) . why doesnt he go after the cops who make many times what teachers make (here in sf, ca many cops sit on streetcorners giving out traffic tickets and pull in $250,000-550,000--no joke). this phat phuck will never do that because the prison guards/cops unions support him.


...because he's the Governor of New Jersey, not California.


But thank you for your highly researched, well thought out, and eruditely expressed opinions.
 

theeedude

Lifer
Feb 5, 2006
35,787
6,197
126
So wait, he's bashing a good Republican county for paying too much for a school superintendent?
 

Blackjack200

Lifer
May 28, 2007
15,995
1,688
126
...because he's the Governor of New Jersey, not California.


But thank you for your highly researched, well thought out, and eruditely expressed opinions.

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/09/nj_police_salaries_rank_highes.html

Just last week, Gov. Chris Christie proposed more cuts to benefits for public employees, including police. Possible changes include rolling back a 9 percent pension increase from 2001 and requiring cops to serve more years to get the same pensions.
 

OBLAMA2009

Diamond Member
Apr 17, 2008
6,574
3
0
So wait, he's bashing a good Republican county for paying too much for a school superintendent?

i doubt $200,000 is overpaying someone with that job or any chief executive job for that matter. where i live i think they paid the superintendant of schools more than $350,000. that person probably has a advanced degree in education and decades of experience. hes also been approved for that salary by a school board that is satisfied with his work. but $250,000 a year for a traffic cops?
 

OBLAMA2009

Diamond Member
Apr 17, 2008
6,574
3
0

one county in that article had cops making an average of $120,000. if theyre making that much salary i guarantee you there are cops in nj making $200,000-300,000 a year by working overtime. that is what they do here in california. those are the real poster children for greed and corruption, not the teachers and nurses. instead that phat phucks outrage is directed at teachers making $55,000 rather than traffic cops making $120,000, how disgusting and phat of him!
 
Last edited:

Scotteq

Diamond Member
Apr 10, 2008
5,276
5
0

theeedude

Lifer
Feb 5, 2006
35,787
6,197
126
What about big bank managers living in NJ making tens of millions while their banks in NY are getting bailed out? Where is Christie's outrage at them?
 

Scotteq

Diamond Member
Apr 10, 2008
5,276
5
0
one county in that article had cops making an average of $120,000. if theyre making that much salary i guarantee you there are cops in nj making $200,000-300,000 a year by working overtime. that is what they do here in california. those are the real poster children for greed and corruption, not the teachers and nurses. instead that phat phucks outrage is directed at teachers making $55,000 rather than traffic cops making $120,000, how disgusting and phat of him!



NJ Teacher Salaries are the 5th highest in the nation:

http://www.teacher-world.com/teacher-salary/new-jersey.html