Sunday, March 23, 2008

Obama and Internet Interest

A friend of mine recently pointed out disparity amongst the number of videos about each presidential candidate on YouTube.com. This got me thinking and doing some additional research and what I found astonished me.

Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain each have their own "channel" on YouTube. However, the disparity in the number of views is absolutely astonishing. Barack's videos have received about 13 million views while Hillary's videos have received about 1.5 million and John's videos have received about 600,000.

Perhaps even more astonishing is the fact that Barack Obama's speech on race this past week has already been viewed about 3 million times. This means that the video of the speech is being viewed about 600,000 times in a single day or 25,000 times an hour or 416 times a minute or 7 times a second. In one day, Barack Obama's speech is being watched as many times as all of John McCain's videos combined.



Running for: President
Joined: September 05, 2006
Last Login: 29 minutes ago
Videos Watched: 2,268
Subscribers: 39,585
Channel Views: 13,202,839











Running for: President
Joined: July 21, 2006
Last Login: 2 days ago
Videos Watched: 1,752
Subscribers: 12,122
Channel Views: 1,422,989











Running for: President
Joined: February 23, 2007
Last Login: 1 day ago
Videos Watched: 782
Subscribers: 3,541
Channel Views:
615,400

2 comments:

Randall Bytwerk said...

That is remarkable data. I'm particularly struck by the rate at which his speech on race is being viewed. In the past, such a speech would have been seen in full only by those who tuned in. I suspect that more people will shortly have watched in YouTube than saw it as broadcast.

unspun said...

I was surprised that the Obama campaign had the speech at about 11am EST (8amPST). I would think that the campaign would have the speech at a time where more individuals would view it.
Nonetheless, I suspect that more individuals have watched the speech on YouTube now than on cable tv, even though MSNBC, Fox News, and CNN carried it live.