What 50 Cent Can Learn from the McCain Campaign
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The momentum to Obama's campaign is tangible at this point, but any premature
assumptions feels counter-intuitively dangerous. It's as if thinking about an Obama
election could derail the entire thing and start an era of Palin presidency that'll last 16 years,
re-writing the constitution on the back of a hockey jersey along the way. Still, every day (other than
those when the Dow drops 500+ points), Obama's momentum graces the front page of this site. His campaign is
resonating with the American people, reaching voters once thought unreachable for a liberal black man
with a degree from Harvard Law. Meanwhile, McCain's campaign appears to be shooting itself in the foot out of
a dire desperation to get noticed.
So what does this have to do with 50 Cent? As the presidential election gets down to the nitty-gritty, 50's new
album campaign is starting to get serious. Before I Self Destruct is the rapper/actor's fourth
full-length and set for release on the second Tuesday in December. Always atop the Hip-Hop Forbes List, the
artist born Curtis Jackson made his millions on the back of corporate investments and more than his share of
Rovian tactics. But if last year's "loss" to Kanye West -- when both artists released albums on the
same day -- didn't teach 50 Cent anything, maybe the apparent tanking of McCain's campaign will.
Divisiveness Doesn't Work...
"Divide and Conquer" may
be the most fundamental principal of the politics that got George W Bush elected. It also worked really well for 50
Cent. Fiddy ascended the thrown as King of New York by forcing fans to be with him or against him. Rap fans were either with
the terrorists (Ja-Rule, Fat Joe, any non-G-Unit rapper ever) or with 50 Cent's America. 50
tried that on last year's release of Curtis and while the increased attention it caused for the record's
drop date, it was still the most disappointing opening week of 50's career. The divide over divisiveness has
increased, as a generation of Millennials has gotten a little older. Working together is actually
kinda cool now, while argumentative fillibusting just seems childish. With the exception of FOX News,
nearly every major media outlet is attributing some of McCain's second-place poll position to
his overwhelmingly negative campaigning.
...Revealing A Little Vulnerability Does
Conversely, showing some humanity has boded well for two of Chicago's finest: Barack Obama and Kanye
West. Today, showing weakness is not synonymous with being weak. From the Senator's speech in
Philadelphia to the MC's penchant for self-deprecation, admissions of vulnerability are endearing
fans and voter
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