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- Jan 24, 2004
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Hi,
Names that some not so nice Republican bloggers, supporters etc... could find quite fun and profitable to have. This is not an endorsment of these domains, but its going to be a long year and a half of some pretty nasty stuff from boths sides of the political arena.
Enom: Push
husseinobama .net
husseinobama .org
barackhussein com
husseinbarack .com
Osamahusseinobama. com
Osamabinobama .com
barackhusseinobama .biz
Best,
Dan
Names that some not so nice Republican bloggers, supporters etc... could find quite fun and profitable to have. This is not an endorsment of these domains, but its going to be a long year and a half of some pretty nasty stuff from boths sides of the political arena.
Enom: Push
husseinobama .net
husseinobama .org
barackhussein com
husseinbarack .com
Osamahusseinobama. com
Osamabinobama .com
barackhusseinobama .biz
SourceWill 'Hussein' Keep Obama Out of the White House? Does It Matter Where Hillary Sleeps?
NEW YORK, Feb. 20 /PRNewswire/ -- More than half (57 percent) of Americans agree strongly or somewhat that Barack Obama's middle name (Hussein) could hurt his chances in the 2008 presidential election, while just a quarter (24 percent) disagree strongly or somewhat, according to a survey by JWT and Adweek released today. Another 47 percent feel the fact that the freshman U.S. senator's last name rhymes with Osama could hurt his chances, while 33 percent disagree.
The random and representative survey of 1,022 Americans 18 or older, conducted by JWT on behalf of Nielsen Business Media's Adweek during the week ending Feb. 2, gauged the name recognition of top Republican and Democratic candidates for president: four Democrats (Senator and former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, Senator Barack Obama, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson and former Senator John Edwards) and four Republicans (former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Senator John McCain, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and Senator Sam Brownback). The survey also examined the associations and connotations that those monikers conjure.
"As this survey makes abundantly clear, name recognition can work for or against a candidate, depending on the connotations, associations and baggage that come with the name," says Ann Mack, director of trendspotting at JWT, the largest advertising agency in the U.S. and the fourth largest in the world. "A last-name-by-marriage can cause polarization, while something as seemingly trivial as a middle name can be a handicap."
Best,
Dan