a425couple
2025-04-01 22:57:12 UTC
Reply
PermalinkAs if this wasn't known already.
The problem is you can't push a turd down the road and even if you do,
it's still a turd
I did not know this. But, I'm not surprised.The problem is you can't push a turd down the road and even if you do,
it's still a turd
Thank you for posting about this.
Some keys:
" Yet social media seemed to ooze with enthusiasm and Gen
Z-friendly hipster appeal. >
Influencers flooded the web with neon-matcha green pro-Harris videos
Hey, maybe that's where the missing $25 mil disappeared to?
'How Dems secretly paid social media influencers to push Kamala Harris
during 2024 vote'
'Creators' coached on phrases, issues, themes to go 'pro-Kamala''
<https://www.wnd.com/2025/03/revealed-how-dems-secretly-paid-social-media-influencers-to-push-kamala-harris-during-2024-vote/>
'The abrupt withdrawal last year of President Joe Biden as the
Democratic presidential nominee, followed rapidly by his replacement
with Vice President Kamala Harris, irked many voters left out by the
process. Yet social media seemed to ooze with enthusiasm and Gen
Z-friendly hipster appeal.
Influencers flooded the web with neon-matcha green pro-Harris videos
synced to beats from singer Charli XCX's album "Brat" released last
year. The poppy rave videos, gushed journalists, showed that Harris
embodied the confidently independent "brat" vibe conveyed by the music.
Social media pages bubbled with memes celebrating Harris as the voice of
queer and black youth, in contrast with the Republican agenda of white
supremacy. Digital creator Amelia Montooth, in one viral TikTok video,
kissed a woman and tried searching for pornography, actions her sketch
suggested would be banned if Harris lost the election.
Harris, a career politician favored by the Democratic Party's
establishment, never quite fit the bill as an icon of activist
movements. But the sudden influencer buzz seemed to transform the stodgy
former prosecutor into an icon of the cultural zeitgeist.
As it turns out, the tidal wave of enthusiasm was not entirely genuine.
Much of the content, including Montooth's videos, was quietly funded by
an elusive group of Democratic billionaires and major donors in an
arrangement designed to conceal the payments from voters.
RealClearInvestigations obtained internal documents and WhatsApp
messages from Democratic strategists behind the influencer campaign. Way
to Win, one of the major donor groups behind the effort, spent more than
$9.1 million on social media influencers during the 2024 presidential
election – payments revealed here for the first time. The amount was
touted in a document circulated after the election detailing the
organization's accomplishments.
The effort supported over 550 content creators who published 6,644 posts
across platforms, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Twitch, and X. Way to Win
coached creators on phrases, issue areas, and key themes to "disseminate
pro-Kamala content throughout the cycle," a post-election memo from the
group noted.
The look behind the curtain reveals that at least some of the
image-making around the Harris candidacy was carefully orchestrated by
the same types of covert social media marketing often used by corporate
brands and special interest groups. Such campaigns provide the illusion
of organic support through the authentic appeal of trusted social media
voices.
Way to Win, in internal messages, touted its work with a stable of
Democratic Party-affiliated influencers and activists, including Harry
Sisson, Emily Amick, Kate Abu, and Dash Dobrofsky. The group also
overtly cultivated "non-political creators" – influencers typically
known for travel vlogs, comedic skits, or cooking recipes – and seeded
them with "positive, specific pro-Kamala content" that was "integral in
setting the tone on the Internet and driving additional organic digital
support." The effort often took the form of talking points that were
rapidly distributed to the in-network creators.
backed by Way to Win. "He's a football coach, that's hard," the
influencer continued. "It's time for Republicans to drop out, it's not
looking good for ya'll!"
In a series of internal presentations about the influencer campaign, Way
to Win emphasized its data-driven approach. "We know what messaging
works," noted Liz Jaff, a branding strategist working with Way to Win,
during a call with donors last year. She touted the use of an AI-based
focus group tool developed by Future Forward, the Harris campaign's
primary SuperPAC.
Jaff also explained the process for developing talking points that could
be inserted into organic-appearing messages and posts on social media.
"We then convey that to the influencers who take that into their own
words," continued Jaff. "We then test those videos and see what needs to
be boosted," she added, referencing paid media efforts to amplify
specific TikTok videos or favored streamers.
The lofty promises of message mastery, however, often fell short. Way to
Win directly financed a series of clunky YouTube shows and liberal
identity politics-oriented social media skits designed to bring voters
out to support the Harris campaign and Democrats more broadly. There's
little evidence that such measures moved any significant numbers of
voters during an election in which Democrats lost historic levels of
support from key constituency groups – the youth vote, Latinos, and
black men swung significantly to Donald Trump last year, upending
decades of voting patterns.
Ilana Glazer, a comedian who starred in the Comedy Central show Broad
City, received Way to Win funding for a series of election videos called
"Microdosing Democracy," in which she half-heartedly endorsed Harris as
she lighted a spliff of marijuana. Another TikTok and Instagram series
backed by the donors, called "Gaydar," featured interviews quizzing
people on the streets of New York City about gay culture trivia with
little election-related content.
Way to Win also funded a caravan with an inflatable IUD to Philadelphia,
Washington, D.C., Raleigh, St. Louis, and other locations. The tour,
which featured content creators producing posts along the way, was
designed to bring attention to claims that Trump would ban contraceptive
devices.
In an apparent attempt to boost Harris' support among black men, Way to
Win directly funded a series of YouTube interview-style talk shows
called Watering Hole Media.
"I heard a brother say to me, 'Man, I didn't know I was going to be
excited when Kamala was selected,'" said Jeff Johnson, a managing
director with the lobbying firm Actum LLC who worked as a host for the
Watering Hole Mediaseries "Tap In." "One brother said, 'I'm not even
fully sure why,'" continued Johnson. "No, seriously, he said, 'When I
look at her, though, she reminds me of my aunt,' and I said yes, so
there is this communal piece."
The discussion, taped at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago
last August, buzzed about the "through line" from the Black Panthers to
the Nation of Islam to Harris' nomination, suggesting her candidacy
represented another moment in radical black politics.
The Way to Win-sponsored media group sponsored many similar discussions
attempting to buoy the Harris candidacy with appeals to racial identity
politics.
Despite the well-funded efforts, few tuned in. The seven video programs
produced at the DNC collectively garnered fewer than 1,000 views. One
video had fewer than 40 viewers.
Questions have mounted over the campaign spending decisions from Harris
and her supporting organizations. The Harris campaign and her SuperPAC
spent over $1.5 billion in the last months of the campaign, with much of
the money flowing to consultants and media advertising. Alex Cooper, who
hosted Harris for an interview on her "Call Her Daddy" podcast, was
baffled about why the campaign spent about $100,000 on a "cardboard"
temporary studio set that "wasn't that nice." Others have raised similar
concerns about payments to Oprah Winfrey's production firm.
"Our 2024 creator program reached key audiences with nearly a billion
views, but there's more to do, and we're applying lessons from last
cycle," a Way to Win spokesperson said in a statement to RCI.
"Sometimes in presidential campaigns, there are times when there aren't
any cost controls," observed Mike Mikus, a Democratic strategist in
Pennsylvania. "The biggest question is whether they had any empirical
evidence that this TikTok messaging would work."
The payments occupy a hazy area of election law. Way to Win structured
the funds through nonprofit corporations that paid various influencer
talent agencies – firms such as Palette Management and Vocal Media. The
money was not listed in Federal Election Commission disclosure portals
that show political funds spent during the campaign.
While television or radio ads require disclaimers showing the groups
responsible for paying for the advertisements, there are no equivalent
mandates for TikTok stars or Instagram personalities that receive
payment to promote election-related content. Despite some attempts to
reform election transparency regulations, minimal progress has been
made. The FEC has deadlocked over attempts to form new rules to govern
the influencer space, leaving the entire medium virtually lawless
regarding campaign cash.
Way to Win operates several entities and corporations, most of which do
not disclose donors. The group did not respond to a request for comment
for more information in this regard. However, the cache of documents
about the influencer campaign pointed to some clues. Way to Win hosted a
series of donor-only events in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., with
representatives of the Open Society Foundation, the charity backed by
billionaire investor George Soros. OSF did not respond to a request for
comment.
Democrats are hardly alone in payola for influencers. Republican
campaigns have spent several hundred thousand dollars on similar social
media marketing agencies that tout the ability to seed content with
popular accounts on X and TikTok.
But the attempted reach and spending of the pro-Kamala Harris 2024
effort is unprecedented. For Way to Win, the group justified the
spending sprees as the only way to compete with pro-Trump voices and
popular podcasts, such as Joe Rogan, which the Harris campaign eschewed.
"Our goal this year was to combat conservative content domination on
Instagram and TikTok. We did that," Way to Win claimed in a triumphant
memo to donors after the election.
"Had more Americans gotten their media from Instagram and TikTok," the
December memo argued, "Kamala Harris would be the next President of the
United States.'
Influencers flooded the web with neon-matcha green pro-Harris videos
Hey, maybe that's where the missing $25 mil disappeared to?
'How Dems secretly paid social media influencers to push Kamala Harris
during 2024 vote'
'Creators' coached on phrases, issues, themes to go 'pro-Kamala''
<https://www.wnd.com/2025/03/revealed-how-dems-secretly-paid-social-media-influencers-to-push-kamala-harris-during-2024-vote/>
'The abrupt withdrawal last year of President Joe Biden as the
Democratic presidential nominee, followed rapidly by his replacement
with Vice President Kamala Harris, irked many voters left out by the
process. Yet social media seemed to ooze with enthusiasm and Gen
Z-friendly hipster appeal.
Influencers flooded the web with neon-matcha green pro-Harris videos
synced to beats from singer Charli XCX's album "Brat" released last
year. The poppy rave videos, gushed journalists, showed that Harris
embodied the confidently independent "brat" vibe conveyed by the music.
Social media pages bubbled with memes celebrating Harris as the voice of
queer and black youth, in contrast with the Republican agenda of white
supremacy. Digital creator Amelia Montooth, in one viral TikTok video,
kissed a woman and tried searching for pornography, actions her sketch
suggested would be banned if Harris lost the election.
Harris, a career politician favored by the Democratic Party's
establishment, never quite fit the bill as an icon of activist
movements. But the sudden influencer buzz seemed to transform the stodgy
former prosecutor into an icon of the cultural zeitgeist.
As it turns out, the tidal wave of enthusiasm was not entirely genuine.
Much of the content, including Montooth's videos, was quietly funded by
an elusive group of Democratic billionaires and major donors in an
arrangement designed to conceal the payments from voters.
RealClearInvestigations obtained internal documents and WhatsApp
messages from Democratic strategists behind the influencer campaign. Way
to Win, one of the major donor groups behind the effort, spent more than
$9.1 million on social media influencers during the 2024 presidential
election – payments revealed here for the first time. The amount was
touted in a document circulated after the election detailing the
organization's accomplishments.
The effort supported over 550 content creators who published 6,644 posts
across platforms, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Twitch, and X. Way to Win
coached creators on phrases, issue areas, and key themes to "disseminate
pro-Kamala content throughout the cycle," a post-election memo from the
group noted.
The look behind the curtain reveals that at least some of the
image-making around the Harris candidacy was carefully orchestrated by
the same types of covert social media marketing often used by corporate
brands and special interest groups. Such campaigns provide the illusion
of organic support through the authentic appeal of trusted social media
voices.
Way to Win, in internal messages, touted its work with a stable of
Democratic Party-affiliated influencers and activists, including Harry
Sisson, Emily Amick, Kate Abu, and Dash Dobrofsky. The group also
overtly cultivated "non-political creators" – influencers typically
known for travel vlogs, comedic skits, or cooking recipes – and seeded
them with "positive, specific pro-Kamala content" that was "integral in
setting the tone on the Internet and driving additional organic digital
support." The effort often took the form of talking points that were
rapidly distributed to the in-network creators.
backed by Way to Win. "He's a football coach, that's hard," the
influencer continued. "It's time for Republicans to drop out, it's not
looking good for ya'll!"
In a series of internal presentations about the influencer campaign, Way
to Win emphasized its data-driven approach. "We know what messaging
works," noted Liz Jaff, a branding strategist working with Way to Win,
during a call with donors last year. She touted the use of an AI-based
focus group tool developed by Future Forward, the Harris campaign's
primary SuperPAC.
Jaff also explained the process for developing talking points that could
be inserted into organic-appearing messages and posts on social media.
"We then convey that to the influencers who take that into their own
words," continued Jaff. "We then test those videos and see what needs to
be boosted," she added, referencing paid media efforts to amplify
specific TikTok videos or favored streamers.
The lofty promises of message mastery, however, often fell short. Way to
Win directly financed a series of clunky YouTube shows and liberal
identity politics-oriented social media skits designed to bring voters
out to support the Harris campaign and Democrats more broadly. There's
little evidence that such measures moved any significant numbers of
voters during an election in which Democrats lost historic levels of
support from key constituency groups – the youth vote, Latinos, and
black men swung significantly to Donald Trump last year, upending
decades of voting patterns.
Ilana Glazer, a comedian who starred in the Comedy Central show Broad
City, received Way to Win funding for a series of election videos called
"Microdosing Democracy," in which she half-heartedly endorsed Harris as
she lighted a spliff of marijuana. Another TikTok and Instagram series
backed by the donors, called "Gaydar," featured interviews quizzing
people on the streets of New York City about gay culture trivia with
little election-related content.
Way to Win also funded a caravan with an inflatable IUD to Philadelphia,
Washington, D.C., Raleigh, St. Louis, and other locations. The tour,
which featured content creators producing posts along the way, was
designed to bring attention to claims that Trump would ban contraceptive
devices.
In an apparent attempt to boost Harris' support among black men, Way to
Win directly funded a series of YouTube interview-style talk shows
called Watering Hole Media.
"I heard a brother say to me, 'Man, I didn't know I was going to be
excited when Kamala was selected,'" said Jeff Johnson, a managing
director with the lobbying firm Actum LLC who worked as a host for the
Watering Hole Mediaseries "Tap In." "One brother said, 'I'm not even
fully sure why,'" continued Johnson. "No, seriously, he said, 'When I
look at her, though, she reminds me of my aunt,' and I said yes, so
there is this communal piece."
The discussion, taped at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago
last August, buzzed about the "through line" from the Black Panthers to
the Nation of Islam to Harris' nomination, suggesting her candidacy
represented another moment in radical black politics.
The Way to Win-sponsored media group sponsored many similar discussions
attempting to buoy the Harris candidacy with appeals to racial identity
politics.
Despite the well-funded efforts, few tuned in. The seven video programs
produced at the DNC collectively garnered fewer than 1,000 views. One
video had fewer than 40 viewers.
Questions have mounted over the campaign spending decisions from Harris
and her supporting organizations. The Harris campaign and her SuperPAC
spent over $1.5 billion in the last months of the campaign, with much of
the money flowing to consultants and media advertising. Alex Cooper, who
hosted Harris for an interview on her "Call Her Daddy" podcast, was
baffled about why the campaign spent about $100,000 on a "cardboard"
temporary studio set that "wasn't that nice." Others have raised similar
concerns about payments to Oprah Winfrey's production firm.
"Our 2024 creator program reached key audiences with nearly a billion
views, but there's more to do, and we're applying lessons from last
cycle," a Way to Win spokesperson said in a statement to RCI.
"Sometimes in presidential campaigns, there are times when there aren't
any cost controls," observed Mike Mikus, a Democratic strategist in
Pennsylvania. "The biggest question is whether they had any empirical
evidence that this TikTok messaging would work."
The payments occupy a hazy area of election law. Way to Win structured
the funds through nonprofit corporations that paid various influencer
talent agencies – firms such as Palette Management and Vocal Media. The
money was not listed in Federal Election Commission disclosure portals
that show political funds spent during the campaign.
While television or radio ads require disclaimers showing the groups
responsible for paying for the advertisements, there are no equivalent
mandates for TikTok stars or Instagram personalities that receive
payment to promote election-related content. Despite some attempts to
reform election transparency regulations, minimal progress has been
made. The FEC has deadlocked over attempts to form new rules to govern
the influencer space, leaving the entire medium virtually lawless
regarding campaign cash.
Way to Win operates several entities and corporations, most of which do
not disclose donors. The group did not respond to a request for comment
for more information in this regard. However, the cache of documents
about the influencer campaign pointed to some clues. Way to Win hosted a
series of donor-only events in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., with
representatives of the Open Society Foundation, the charity backed by
billionaire investor George Soros. OSF did not respond to a request for
comment.
Democrats are hardly alone in payola for influencers. Republican
campaigns have spent several hundred thousand dollars on similar social
media marketing agencies that tout the ability to seed content with
popular accounts on X and TikTok.
But the attempted reach and spending of the pro-Kamala Harris 2024
effort is unprecedented. For Way to Win, the group justified the
spending sprees as the only way to compete with pro-Trump voices and
popular podcasts, such as Joe Rogan, which the Harris campaign eschewed.
"Our goal this year was to combat conservative content domination on
Instagram and TikTok. We did that," Way to Win claimed in a triumphant
memo to donors after the election.
"Had more Americans gotten their media from Instagram and TikTok," the
December memo argued, "Kamala Harris would be the next President of the
United States.'