A.I.G.

BREAKING: Gov’t Buyout, AIG, & Obama’s “Brand Black”

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Obama 2008

WOW.

Things are moving even faster than I thought in the re-ordering of the American economy. It’s four PM on Wednesday 3/18/09. Although many people don’t know or don’t yet understand, the link between government and finances has been totally changed.

Yes, we had AIG (see below), and the foreclosures.

But now… check this…. the U.S. government is buying a TRILLION DOLLARS in mortgaged backed securities in order to create instant liquidity in the markets (read: cash you can borrow to buy a home or a market.) I never thought the hip hop chant to “make money money, make money money mon-EEE” would become so literal.

Yes, I am a news geek; and a politics geek; and I am astounded. I linked from the NYT to this handy dandy URL you can share with your friends. tinyurl.com/USmakes-fakes-Money.

I wrote the article below earlier this morning. Already it seems dated. But bear with me as I breathe.

F

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I’ve been guesting on WNYC’s syndicated morning show The Takeaway with John Hockenberry. (Adaora Udoji is on maternity leave.) We’ve been talking a lot about branding. Some folks told us about the brands they missed (”Bit ‘o Honey” and the “Reggiebar” candy bars each got a vote).

Other folks talked about what they would rename/rebrand “too big to fail/too small-minded to give up the multimillion dollar bonuses” insurer AIG as…

Amigos in Gold

Amateurs Implementing Guile

Anti Inflammatory Geeks

A**holes Invoking God

As If God

Appalling In Greed

(And that’s just from the journalists!)

Listeners wrote, among others:

Absolutely Insufferable Greed

Angry Investor Gross

But let me take a turn here.

Yesterday, I was invited to address the US Mission to the United Nations, now led by Ambassador Susan Rice. I was part of a panel that examined how and why then-Senator Obama won the Presidency; and what lay ahead. I spoke about Brand Black, or blackness as a mature political brand, just as hip hop is now a mature media brand. Every product/entity/person who wants market share starts out in the experimental, spaghetti against the wall.

Of all the people who start blogs, relatively few keep it up and even fewer find a longterm audience. If they do find an audience—not just bloggers but political candidates, preachers, musicians, etc.—then they enter the brand-building phase. They try to bring on a core constituency first, then expand that constituency. For hip hop, the core constituency was urban blacks/Latinos, adding graf artists, b-boys and b-girls, streetcorner wisemen…. and then multicultural urban youth… and then multicultural global youth. As hip hop has become a mature brand, you see stars like Ice Cube and Queen Latifah moving into mainstream family-oriented film; P. Diddy and Russell Simmons crossing onto Broadway; Simmons into philanthropy and spirituality; and Jay Z into the economic CEO/Beyonceed celebrosphere. My argument in the speech, which I will elide, concerned the use of hip hop as a feedback loop that helped make blackness a culturally mature brand that had political capital.

Since this is a blog post and not a dissertation, peep this:

First, check out Jay Z solo.

Then, Obama on the stump.

Then the remix:

When Obama first made the gesture, it split the world into three camps: people who thought he actually had dirt on his shoulder (maybe three people or less worldwide); people who got the intent of the gesture (back up off this; you don’t matter); and people who got the specific reference to hip hop and the 2003 hit by Jay Z.

The use of hip hop signifiers and metaphors, as well as support from the hip hop community, really drove the Obama campaign at first. The hip hop generation (or at this point, really two generations) were the “early adopters” of Brand Obama. The Civil Rights generation were later adopters of Brand Obama. And Brand Obama stood on…. the shoulders of the Civil Rights generation, who took blackness from an exiled/discredited “brand” among anti-integrationist whites to a nearly-mature brand that lacked one thing… the sense that a black man could be president.

I didn’t know that Obama would win. No one did. But Obama used hip hop to leverage early youth support, which in turn built numbers for what political scientist William Jelani Cobb of Spelman calls “The Black History Month Massacre” (Obama winning 10 Dem primaries and caucuses in a row), which in turn helped justify Civil Rights generation political figures/superdelegates like John Lewis switching their allegiance from Sen. Clinton to Sen. Obama.

In the end, Brand Obama leveraged hip hop to take the White House… a final signal that “Brand Black” is mature and thriving. What happens next? I don’t know. But I’m eager to see, hear, and write more, especially now that politics has a soundtrack.

Daily News Roundup: Computer-side Chats?

Monday, November 10th, 2008

from FreakingNews.com

FDR had radio; Kennedy had TV; Obama will tap the Web. The Obama campaign will keep its list of some 10 million supporters and build from there as it creates a new, Web-savvy White House communications operation. Check out the Obama transition Web site, where members of the public can share their own vision of the country’s future (under the idealistic sub-heading of “Open Government”). What might direct Web-based communication from the White House look like? Expect blogs, e-mail, and text messages for those on the list, and maybe even display and video ads targeted to specific geographic regions or running next to news stories relevant to policies for which the White House needs to drum up support. Used well, it could mean more open government. But technology alone is no guarantee.

Black comedians are testing the waters, like, with an assassination joke. Tommy Davidson told the audience at Comedy Union in Los Angeles that he would do a bit on President-elect Barack Obama’s inauguration speech, and almost immediately they heard a fake gunshot and he went down. Some laughed, others didn’t know how to react. It’s all part of an awkward new phase for black comedians, who traditionally find the funny by venting about inequity but who now don’t want to spoil the hope and optimism inspired by Obama’s presidency, according to one African American Studies professor. They may be treading lightly for a while.

Good cop, bad cop: Biden’s role is clearer now. With a tough, foul-mouthed Democrat as chief of staff (that’s Rahm Emanuel), and since Democrats will not have a filibuster-proof majority in Congress, the Obama administration will need to rely on good cop Vice President-elect Joe Biden to cross the aisle and smooth negotiations when needed. Meanwhile, Obama will likely spend the first one to two years of his presidency collaborating with three core Bush appointees: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Michael Mullen, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, and FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III.

The middle class will get tax cuts sooner, not later, according to Obama chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. That also means taxes will be raised for those making more than $250,000. However, Obama supporters probably shouldn’t hold their breath that all of his more sweeping proposals, such as near-universal healthcare, will happen as quickly.

Toppled titan AIG will get another government bailout. The amount of rescue money has increased to $150 billion from what was originally an $85 billion bailout, but the rules have changed a bit. The new plan involves direct investment rather than assuming debt, and the company’s top executives now face salary and bonus limits.

Daily News Round-Up: Ice for Your Bloody Mary

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008
How deep do mortgage-backed securities go?

How deep do mortgage-backed securities go?

Good morning, party people! It’s probably not quite time to tune up the violins, à la the Titanic, but if we haven’t actually hit an economic iceberg, we’re in awfully cold water.

AIG has (seriously, thankfully, even for those of us without any actual “investments” or “money in the bank”) been floated a lifesaver by New York State and the Feds.  And Bank of America ate Merrill Lynch.  I hope it was tasty.

If you’re interested in what happened to Lehman, this is a good Google answer (link courtesy of New York Mag).

Russia has shuttered their market early two days in a row.  On Tuesday, after the market dropped 11 points, Putin was confident the Russian market would recover.  On Wednesday, the market dropped 6.4 percent in the first two hours and was closed before any more “recovering” could happen.

I said, hey, it’s cold in here… A near-miss for a real-life SNL moment.  I’m actually not sure why Clinton wouldn’t appear in public with Palin… oh, wait… are Americans shallow? Eh, whatever. I’m over her. Please, won’t someone join me? I guess not.

Things do not look good in Galveston. Too bad we’re all busy snarking the next VP and shoving cash under our mattresses. Don’t worry, though. FEMA and Chertoff are there. Whew.

Seriously, it’s okay: In the future, we’ll all be eating superfoods, anyway! (Here’s hoping for a nutritiously-complete Bloody Mary mix.)

And, finally, the Mets are out… of first place. You’re shocked, I’m sure. LA and Chi-town are still riding high, as is Tampa Bay and, now, Philly. Tick tock, tick tock…

Rise and Shine: Daily News Roundup

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

And the financial meltdown continues … Asian and European markets were down this morning, after the Dow Jones industrial average dropped 504 points yesterday. It was the largest single-day decline for the index since the first day the markets opened after 9/11. News of Lehman Brothers filing for bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch’s sale to Bank of America quickly took the back seat to reports that American International Group, better known as A.I.G., one of the world’s largest insurers, needed stabilizing. The Fed declined to give the company a loan of $40 billion, so the state of New York stepped in to allow A.I.G. to borrow $20 billion.

Of course, our two intrepid presidential candidates had something to say about all of this … The New York Times summarized their positions thusly: John McCain said the current troubles on Wall Street were because of greedy investors, while Barack Obama placed blame at the feet of politicians who relaxed regulations during headier times.

There’s a real storm to recover from, too … Residents in Galveston, Texas are being urged to stay away from their island home after rescuers and city officials surveyed the damage yesterday. The west end of the island and the Bolivar Peninsula were hardest hit by Hurricane Ike – the surge from the storm completely washed over the narrow strips of land.

Forget U.S. Central Command, and bring the surge to the financial markets … General David Petraeus handed over command of U.S.-led forces in Iraq to General Raymond Odierno today. Odierno may be an unknown name stateside, but he served as the second-ranking U.S. commander in Iraq for 15 months until February. Petraeus heads to Central Command next month, where he will be in charge of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.