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- <text id=92TT1312>
- <title>
- June 15, 1992: Rock the Vote
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 15, 1992 How Sam Walton Got Rich
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 66
- Rock the Vote
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In this election year, pop stars, record firms and cable channels
- have launched a campaign to get 18-to-24-year-old Americans
- to "just say yes" to politics
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE C. SIMPSON
- </p>
- <p> Rapper Ice-T challenges his fans to take action. "We got
- two options," he says. "Either vote or hostile takeover. I'm
- down with either one. We're youth; we have to change things."
- Pop vamp Madonna literally wraps her otherwise scantily clad
- body in the American flag and cries out "Vote!" to the staccato
- rhythms of her hit song Vogue, ending with the admonition, "If
- you don't vote, you're going to get a spankie."
- </p>
- <p> O.K., the faces are standard currency on MTV, where these
- spots appear. And the beat is right. But what gives with all the
- flag waving? Well, yo, young America. These unconventional
- calls to patriotic duty are part of a broadly orchestrated
- campaign by celebrities, cable channels and record companies to
- get youths involved in the electoral process. "The idea," says
- Jody Uttal, co-founder of the voter-registration group Rock the
- Vote, which produced the Ice-T and Madonna videos, "is to raise
- the political consciousness of kids and to make voting hip."
- </p>
- <p> Right now it isn't. Only 33.2% of U.S. 18-to-21-year-olds
- voted in the last presidential election. That dismal turnout
- continued a steady decline since 1971, when the 26th Amendment
- lowered the voting age to 18. In that year 48.3% of the eligible
- young cast a ballot. Says Sanford D. Horwitt, director of the
- Citizen Participation Project for People for the American Way:
- "It's as though someone has done a very successful `Just Say No
- to Politics' campaign."
- </p>
- <p> Voting by all age groups has declined over the past three
- decades, of course, as leaders have floundered, scandals have
- mounted and cynicism has set in. But while their elders may
- recall the glory days of John F. Kennedy or even Franklin D.
- Roosevelt, people in the generation now coming of age have no
- memory of a time when politics was considered a noble endeavor
- and the men and women who practiced it were revered as pure
- heroes. "For a lot of people my age, their first political
- memory is Watergate," says Jonathan Cohn, a 22-year-old
- assistant editor at the American Prospect, a liberal quarterly.
- "That's not exactly a great foot to get started off on, where
- your President is a crook and the government is corrupt."
- </p>
- <p> Schools, labor unions and other institutions that once
- educated young people about voting have also fallen down on the
- job. In a 1989 survey of 1,006 youths by People for the
- American Way, only 12% rated voting as a basic tenet of good
- citizenship. "There's a whole generation of people growing up
- who should be our future leaders but who are very disaffected,
- and that's scary," says Cohn.
- </p>
- <p> Now rock musicians and other celebrities are stepping in
- to do the job. This week Elektra Entertainment is taking out
- full-page voter reg istration ads in 20 big-city newspapers,
- signed by 19 of its acts, includ ing Anthrax, KRS-One, Anita
- Baker and the Kronos Quartet. Rock the Vote lobbied in Congress
- for the "motor-voter" bill, which would offset the cumbersome
- registration procedures in many states by requiring that
- registration cards be issued along with driver's licenses.
- </p>
- <p> On television, live coverage of the Democratic and
- Republican conventions has been scheduled where many would say
- it belongs: on Comedy Central, the cable comedy channel. The
- anchor will be Saturday Night Live's Al Franken. Comedy Central
- plans to invite guest analysts ranging from Republican
- strategist Roger Ailes to gonzo journalist Hunter Thompson, as
- well as the candidates themselves. Entertainment is clearly the
- channel's first objective, but the producers insist their
- coverage will be informative too. "The hope is that by providing
- facts in this more appealing way, we will be seducing more
- people into this process," says Mary Salter, vice president for
- current programs and production.
- </p>
- <p> Such political activism is hardly free of self-interest.
- Comedy Central's ratings nearly tripled when it provided
- humorous commentary to accompany President Bush's State of the
- Union address last January. Its more ambitious convention
- coverage, it hopes, will woo even more viewers to the channel.
- The motive of the record-industry executives who started Rock
- the Vote two years ago was to ward off censorship in the music
- business. They believed that their best defense against
- restrictive legislation would be to mobilize a constituency of
- voters among young music fans. Hence the organization set up
- voter-registration tables at rock concerts. (Twenty-eight states
- and the District of Columbia allow mail-in registration.) Last
- summer's successful Lollapalooza tour, which featured musicians
- ranging from Jane's Addiction to Ice-T, added 25,000 new voters
- to the rolls.
- </p>
- <p> Rock the Vote also helped recruit new voters in New
- Hampshire, even bringing director Oliver Stone to Dartmouth for
- a screening of his movie JFK, and to talk about the importance
- of participating in the political process. The result: 8,000 new
- voters, an estimated 90% of whom, according to Rock the Vote,
- cast a ballot in last February's primary. Future plans include
- a Sept. 15 TV special on voting featuring myriad famous faces,
- sponsored by youth-conscious Pepsi, and broadcast on the
- consciously hip Fox network, home to Bart Simpson and the trendy
- gang from Beverly Hills, 90210.
- </p>
- <p> MTV's plans are even more extensive. In addition to airing
- Rock the Vote public-service announcements, the music cable
- channel has assigned a reporter -- 24-year-old Tabitha Soren --
- to cover the campaign and file regular reports as part of what
- it calls its "Choose or Lose" campaign. "After 10 years we know
- we have the attention of our audience, so it's time to do
- something with it," declares creative director Judy McGrath.
- </p>
- <p> Soren's reports might best be described as rock news
- videos, complete with hip sound tracks, eye-popping editing
- techniques, funky graphics and plenty of youth-on-the-street
- sound bites ("I think Dan Quayle's hot," says one woman in
- response to a question about the Republicans). But there is
- substance too. The reports average four minutes in length --
- luxurious by network-news standards -- and take on issues
- relevant to young people, such as parental notification for
- teens who seek abortions.
- </p>
- <p> MTV has also collaborated with the League of Women Voters
- on a user-friendly guide to voter registration in all 50
- states, which will be distributed at events sponsored by the
- channel between now and November. In August MTV will air a
- weekend-long telethon, soliciting registrations instead of
- money. Viewers will be invited to phone in and speak to
- celebrities about where they can sign up to vote. "Kids emulate
- rock stars in everything else," says Soren, "so why not in
- this?"
- </p>
- <p> Although it clearly has its merits, pop patriotism does
- run the risk of trivializing the electoral process. What, for
- example, would have been the effect if Comedy Central had
- provided commentary when Mario Cuomo made his eloquent "family
- of America" speech at the 1984 Democratic Convention? Can it
- really be considered progress if youths vote for a candidate
- solely because Michael Bolton says they should? People need
- reasons beyond that, argues Curtis Gans, who heads the Committee
- for the Study of the American Electorate. "If we used that star
- quality to help kids figure out something they'd like to change
- in their community and showed them how to change it, then we'd
- have real politics."
- </p>
- <p> Until Madonna is moved to lead a rally to the local
- garbage dump, Gans favors educational efforts like the First
- Vote campaign sponsored by People for the American Way. Its
- classroom instruction method, in which teachers devote a social
- studies period to the electoral process and register students
- right in the classroom, is based on a Dade County, Fla., program
- that registers around 12,000 high school students every year.
- Meanwhile Channel One, the advertiser-supported television
- service that is provided to public and private schools, is
- planning a mock election in which its 7.1 million viewers,
- assisted by a teacher-preparation guide, can vote for their
- favorite candidates a week before the rest of the nation makes
- its choice.
- </p>
- <p> All this activity hasn't gone unnoticed in political
- camps. Bill Clinton, who played the saxophone on The Arsenio
- Hall Show last week, has accepted an offer to appear on a youth
- forum that MTV will air later this year, and the Bush campaign
- is seriously considering its own invitation. After all, with 27
- million potential voters between the ages of 18 and 24, it
- could be a definite advantage to be known, as they say on MTV,
- as a real buff dude.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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