Parmelee shows how presidential primary campaign videocassettes
serve many functions for candidates on their road to the White
House. These videocassettes, which include images and issues often
based on polling data and focus groups, are sent out before the
primaries to battleground states to establish an initial image of
the candidate.
A variety of methods are used to explore the videocassettes of
the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates--Gary Bauer,
Bill Bradley, George W. Bush, Steve Forbes, Al Gore, and John
McCain--who released presidential primary meet the candidate videos
during the 2000 race. Frame analysis, quantitative content
analysis, and in-depth interviews with the producers of these
videos were employed to provide answers to Parmelee's main research
question: What function do candidate videos serve in presidential
primary campaigns? Findings indicate that these videos, which can
run from 5 to 20 minutes in length, serve a clear educational
function to explain the candidates' stand on key policy issues. The
videos--which are mailed to voters, journalists, and potential
doners, and shown to Democratic and GOP faithful at party
functions--also serve as fundraisers, surrogate speakers, and
inoculators. But, while the videos share some common functions,
each campaign targets its video to a slightly different audience
based on the campaign's overall strategy. Of particular interest to
scholars, students, and other researchers involved with American
presidential politics and political communications.
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