As I continue to look at
the data I have gathered, I am attempting to read a little more between the
lines than what I previously stated in my first blog post. As far as the
walkthrough videos and Congress Camp 1 and 2, I still see the same similarities,
with the only difference being the content that the two are creating. Gaming
walkthrough videos usually do well on YouTube, and to my knowledge Congress
Camp is really the first time something has been done on that large of a scale.
I’m 21 and I had no clue the inner workings of the government, and Congress
Camp 1 and 2 showed that to me. Regardless of political standing, I believe that
due to her teaching the public something, she has established herself as a
source that people could potentially learn from, which explains her popularity.
The interesting thing when I compare Tulsi Gabbard’s and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cotez’s Instagram, their feeds are a lot alike. The two are very outspoken
on their political views, but Ocasio-Cortez posts more personal things, things
that could potentially provide a connection between her and her followers. Like
mentioned before, people are so used to the typical politician who we know
nothing about, and spend all of our lives supporting, and then they get hit
with a scandal. People are so shocked because we forget politicians are normal
people. They make mistakes just like the rest of us, and I think Ocasio-Cortez
is using that and walkthrough tactics to gain support.
As social media has evolved over the years, people always find new ways to utilize it. Whether it be to help with their own popularity, or to try and make an active change in the world. Though, it is expected that all these uses are going to be utilized because humans are different, and so social media will be different to match the specific person’s interests. Since the 2016 election when Donald Trump used social media as a campaign tool to help him win the election. Before 2016, politicians didn’t have a huge influence on social media, and no politicians were huge figures on the platforms. Most of the influencers were random people who the rest of the population found interesting. Though that all changed in 2016. Say what you want about Trump, but his strategy of using social media to spread his influence caught on like wildfire. Before Trump, no one took to social media to reach out to all of us about their ideas or what they want to do with the country. Then everyone started to...
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