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The Celebrity Endorsement Season Begins

August 28, 2008 - 8:18am

Sheen photo

The most fundamental problem for California initiative sponsors is: how to get the public's attention? The ballot is typically crowded each cycle with several complicated measures. (13 so far this November). The print media is in sharp decline, with fewer reporters and less space to cover such measures. And TV news is a cesspool of crime and celebrity.

What to do? Many sponsors have fixed on the same strategy: endorsements from Hollywood celebrities. And unlike in candidate campaigns, where the candidate has to lead the campaign, the celebrity endorsers often become the public face, appearing in ads and at press conferences. In many cases, the campaigns trade on the vast public knowledge about the celebrity and even their troubles -- diseases, addictions, etc. -- in  way that matches the message of the campaign. In a November election, the celebrity season usually begins about Labor Day, when initiative campaigns typically begin public events and TV advertising.

Yesterday saw the first big endorser: Martin Sheen is backing the "No on Prop 5" effort, the LA Times reports. The initiative would expand funding for drug treatment and divert more drug offenders from prison into treatment. Sheen, whose own struggles with alcoholism and whose son has battled drug addiction, has a clear public profile on the issue. And he's an old pro at initiative campaigns. He opposed Prop 36, a similar measure approved by voters in 2000.