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Tracy-Ann Oberman

ByTracy-Ann Oberman, Tracy-Ann Oberman

Opinion

Twits like Galloway are spot on

April 19, 2012 15:42
2 min read

A boy band called One Direction recently broke all records by becoming the first British group to have an album go straight into the US charts at number one. Never mind that this group of sweet young things were cobbled together out of the rejects from the X Factor by Simon Cowell. Never mind that their nickname is "Five Guys Named Bieber", that their output is anodyne - these boys beat both the Beatles and the Stones to the honour hands down. How did they win this race? Through the power of social media.

Yes! Social media. For anyone over the age of 14 the world of Twitter, Beebo, YouTube and Facebook sounds like a passing fad. Well, think again

Two weeks before grim George Galloway got elected, he hired Naweed Hussain to head up his strategy campaign. Hussain immediately harnessed the power of Twitter and Facebook. Hussain said of Galloway's jaw-dropping victory: "We had two weeks to communicate very fast and directly to young people". Within two weeks, he galvanised a huge group of youngsters who had probably never seen themselves as political with speedy, bite-sized timely messages on the sites that interested them. The shocking thing about GG's victory is just this. It was the youth that voted him in.

Social media sites have immediacy. They have played a major part in all recent social uprisings. This is the future of education and information. Forget TV news, forget newspapers. The tweet is where it's at.