© 2024
NPR for Northern Colorado
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Obama Ad Buys Ensure 'No Escape' For Tampa During GOP Convention

The Tampa Bay Host Committee for the Republican National Convention began installing banners on Wednesday.
Edmund D. Fountain
/
AP
The Tampa Bay Host Committee for the Republican National Convention began installing banners on Wednesday.

At the end of August, the eyes of the political world turn to Tampa, Fla., for the Republican National Convention. It promises to dominate the national and local news in Tampa Bay that week and suck all the political air out of the room.

So if you're the Obama campaign, what do you do? How do you counterprogram Romney-palooza?

Apparently, by buying lots of TV airtime on The Bachelor, Dr. Oz and Rachael Ray.

FCC filings from Tampa Bay-area broadcasters reveal the Obama campaign also is investing heavily in shows such as The Mentalist, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition and Grimm.

So, even people who are trying to avoid the convention won't be able to.

"The Obama campaign is making sure there is no escape from the RNC," says Peter Schorsch, political consultant and author of the political website .

"I think he just wants wall-to-wall for people who are tuning out politics that week," he said. "He wants to remind them of the negatives of politics ... and Romney."

People in the Tampa Bay market don't need much reminding of the negatives of politics.

According to The Washington Post, more has been spent on campaign ads in the Tampa Bay media market ($16 million) between November and the end of July than in any other market in America.

The other market in the swing Interstate 4 corridor, Orlando, had the third-highest total in the U.S. with more than $14 million spent.

There's no evidence yet that the Obama campaign is spending a lot more money during RNC week. The campaign is already spending a lot, trying to match the Romney campaign and the pro-Romney superPACs.

One more thing: We had a lot of fun in our office debating whether the Obama campaign was targeting women with its ad buys. (Is Dr. Oz targeted toward women? Grimm?)

There's at least one Obama campaign ad buy that's targeted toward both sexes: during the Tampa Bay Buccaneers NFL game.

But considering the Bucs dismal season last year, you could wonder if anyone — male or female — will be watching.

Scott Finn is news director at WUSF in Tampa.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Related Content
  • The biggest single issue for Florida nurse practitioner Sofia Martinez is her support of the DREAM Act. But she plans to vote for Republican Mitt Romney, who has said he would veto the measure. Her view might seem full of contradictions, but that's common among voters in Hillsborough County, as they consider complex issues.
  • GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney's choice of Rep. Paul Ryan as his running mate seems to be uniting both Republicans and Democrats. Here's a quick look at the pluses and minuses of the decision, from the point of view of the man at the top of the ticket.
  • After GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney announced Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan as his running mate, the state was abuzz. Ryan provokes strong feelings across the political spectrum. But as a swing state, you'll still find leery independents.
  • Democrats have announced that San Antonio mayor Julian Castro will be the keynote speaker at that party's convention. In the past, that role has served as a platform for bigger things. Political scientist Costas Panagopoulos, who studies party conventions, was at that 2004 Democratic convention when the then-unknown Barack Obama dazzled the delegates. He talks to host Guy Raz about what makes a great keynote speaker.