I had a little fun last week, briefly mocking Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) new campaign video. The Republican lawmaker who’s spent his career fighting for the rich presents himself in the clip as some kind of nouveau-populist, with over-the-top music and a visual montage better suited to a Michael Bay movie.
It did not occur to me at the time to appreciate its total number of views, which, as it turns out, is far more interesting than the video itself.
According to YouTube, this video was posted by McConnell’s campaign team on Thursday morning, and by mid-day Friday, it had 651,021 views. Just 16 minutes later, it had 1,036,039 views. And then, between Friday afternoon and right now, it managed to get about 40,000 views.
To borrow a word, I’m calling bullpucky. There’s just no way this is legit. There are plenty of companies folks can pay to increase their YouTube views total artificially, and I have a strong hunch Team McConnell wrote a nice check and bought 1 million hits to their silly video.
Which, if true, is kind of a sad move for a Senate Minority Leader to have to resort to.
McConnell’s claim seemed fishy to Aaron Blake and Rachel Weiner, who explored further.
Did the video really go viral? “It doesn’t have the characteristics of an organic viral video,” said Eugene Lee, Founder and CEO of ChannelMeter, a YouTube analytics site. A viral video, he said, would have more pickup in social media and would accumulate views steadily rather than spiking quickly and then dropping off. He suggested that it was a “paid buy” — this article from the Daily Dot explains how YouTube views can be bought.
McConnell’s campaign attributes the sharp increase in views to an innovative social media strategy and the presidential campaign quality of the video.
Is this claim possibly true? Yes. Is it likely? Not even a little.








