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"Let's face it: They help raise the money that you need to wage a serious campaign," said Robert Schmuhl, a professor of American Studies at the University of Notre Dame who has written about the intersection of politics and celebrity. "Most Americans today are involved in what we call the `celebrity culture' anyway. They understand how it works." One way Obama makes it work: Raffling access to donors, and not just to dinners with him, but ones that also offer star power at private affairs like the one at Parker's house. The contests typically ask donors to give $3 or whatever they can spare. The Obama campaign calls it a way to lure in donors who may not otherwise be involved in politics at all. Throw in Clooney, and watch the dollars flow. A fundraising dinner held at the star's house last month drew an eye-popping $15 million, with more of it coming from a low-dollar raffle than tickets to the event. That result showed how Obama's team, using Web ads and social media, is using celebrity to raise money from people who will never get in the room. Implicit in the arrangement is that access to Obama, the president of the United States, is not enough of a draw. Obama's campaign has gone so far to make its next "Dinner With Barack" raffle more enticing by telling would-be donors that they can help pick Obama's guest
-- naming Clooney and Parker as examples. All the star wattage comes as Obama's campaign is warning supporters that they need to give. Central to Obama's strategy is having a larger number of people giving small-to-medium donations. "The other side has the money," campaign manager Jim Messina said in one appeal to donors. "They know they can buy the election if they spend it." But Hollywood has the money, too. "There's a reason it feels like he's been here every two weeks for the last two years," Carrick, in Los Angeles, said of Obama. "Every time we turn around, there's someone on the radio telling you that you have to drive around the motorcade traffic."
[Associated
Press;
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