Barack Obama: man of the first times. It is the first U.S. President of color, is the first ever to win the presidency on a former war veteran; is the first to theoretically win the election ahead of the vote and is the first to have done so on the internet. Obama is probably destined to be remembered for many reasons, historians, political scientists, and especially by scholars of communication.
The web is populated by supporters of Democratic candidate during the election campaign. From the most popular YouTube and Facebook, to the individual blog network users, and finally to the comments of the articles on the human race in Chicago. But they were not only citizens of the world using the web to sponsor their political sympathies. The same president-elect made the most of their communication skills to navigate a world that more and more. The race started on the Internet of Obama from the primary. Its staff regularly published on YouTube, a channel reserved for the former Illinois senator directly ( BarackObamadotcom ), all video conferences and debates, until the last speech in Chicago in which Obama, newly elected , thanked everyone who had supported.
not enough, the thanks of the President of the United States also came up for Facebook to all users enrolled in groups that supported him. On my bulletin board of the popular social network, the day after the election, came the warning an e-mail of thanks for the support and trust I had placed in him during the election campaign. Even if the message ended with "God Bless America", I must admit that I have made an impression to be thanked by the President of the United States, or those for him. I was an American citizen I would feel especially close to the man who will lead my country and, in these times of political disillusionment, I think the closeness between citizens and their institutional representatives is more essential than ever. Barack Obama should have understood this and managed to be perceived by America as the man closest to her problems, not only politically but also physically. The wave of enthusiasm that has built around his candidacy was assembled from the shores of the islands of the sea of \u200b\u200bthe internet has broken the surfer McCain.
Obama is not, however, the first politician to have institutionalized the Internet and in using it for what it is: the means of mass communication, the most popular nowadays. The British Queen Elizabeth II, in fact, has long understood the potential of the web.
After becoming the second "g" on the Google logo and have declared a regular visitor to Youtube, has opened here The Royal Channel, the channel that looks closely at the royal house. So, after deciding to make public all over the internet York House costs and making the subjects involved in their lives, how could anyone make a network, the queen has turned the Internet into its most important means of communication, until you get to wish you a Merry Christmas to Britain directly on Youtube.
The web is populated by supporters of Democratic candidate during the election campaign. From the most popular YouTube and Facebook, to the individual blog network users, and finally to the comments of the articles on the human race in Chicago. But they were not only citizens of the world using the web to sponsor their political sympathies. The same president-elect made the most of their communication skills to navigate a world that more and more. The race started on the Internet of Obama from the primary. Its staff regularly published on YouTube, a channel reserved for the former Illinois senator directly ( BarackObamadotcom ), all video conferences and debates, until the last speech in Chicago in which Obama, newly elected , thanked everyone who had supported.
not enough, the thanks of the President of the United States also came up for Facebook to all users enrolled in groups that supported him. On my bulletin board of the popular social network, the day after the election, came the warning an e-mail of thanks for the support and trust I had placed in him during the election campaign. Even if the message ended with "God Bless America", I must admit that I have made an impression to be thanked by the President of the United States, or those for him. I was an American citizen I would feel especially close to the man who will lead my country and, in these times of political disillusionment, I think the closeness between citizens and their institutional representatives is more essential than ever. Barack Obama should have understood this and managed to be perceived by America as the man closest to her problems, not only politically but also physically. The wave of enthusiasm that has built around his candidacy was assembled from the shores of the islands of the sea of \u200b\u200bthe internet has broken the surfer McCain.
Obama is not, however, the first politician to have institutionalized the Internet and in using it for what it is: the means of mass communication, the most popular nowadays. The British Queen Elizabeth II, in fact, has long understood the potential of the web.
After becoming the second "g" on the Google logo and have declared a regular visitor to Youtube, has opened here The Royal Channel, the channel that looks closely at the royal house. So, after deciding to make public all over the internet York House costs and making the subjects involved in their lives, how could anyone make a network, the queen has turned the Internet into its most important means of communication, until you get to wish you a Merry Christmas to Britain directly on Youtube.