On August 6, 2008 Hilton appeared in a 1 minute 50 second long video  online, "Paris Hilton Responds to McCain Ad", directed by Adam  McKay and posted on the Funny  or Die website. The video featured Hilton in a parody advertisement, and was made in response to a  television campaign advert "Celeb", by the 2008 John McCain  presidential campaign. In Celeb, McCain briefly compared his  rival Barack Obama to that of celebrities such as Hilton and Britney Spears, going on to question his readiness to lead  and criticize his energy policy.
In what The Washington Post opined "might  just be her best acting role yet," Hilton appears in the video wearing a leopard  print swimsuit. She starts out by suggesting that her personal mention by McCain means  that she must now be a candidate in the presidential race,  and goes on to mock McCain, and critique the expected qualities and  lifestyle of a celebrity in comparison to that of a US president. In a 30 second  segment, in the style of an academic speaker, Paris compares and contrasts  the policies of McCain and Obama for solving the US energy  crisis, and goes on to propose a 'compromise solution' combining  elements of both.
The video received 7 million views in two days garnering worldwide  press coverage, and drew both written and verbal media response from  both campaigns. The merits and drawbacks of the 'Paris compromise  solution' with regard to energy policy, as well as its contrast to the  adversarial political campaigns, generated multiple comments from US  political commentators, as well as Speaker of the House Nancy  Pelosi and Congressman Michael Burgess.
Continuing the spoof campaign, in October, Hilton featured in a  second parody video posted on Funny or Die, the 2 minute 20 second long "Paris  Hilton Gets Presidential with Martin Sheen", alongside Hollywood  actor Martin Sheen, with his son, actor Charlie  Sheen, appearing in a cameo role. Hilton, heavily made up and in a  green evening dress, interviews Martin Sheen in a kitchen, discussing  various political issues, seeking his advice from his days playing a  fictional President on The  West Wing.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
2008 parody Presidential campaign
Posted by Unknown at 12:48 PM
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