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The first six months of 2019 were full of surprises that may provide context about 2020's political climate and offer clues to political marketers for the crucial election year.
In the beginning of April, Buttigieg looked like the newest and most prominent member of the presidential-hopeful pinata club.
Cliff Sims' "Team of Vipers" has its ups and downs, and it's never more up (and riveting) then when it's getting down and dirty about Sean Spicer.
If traffic continues to plummet at this precipitous rate -- down 43% in September -- it won't be the second-most-trafficked right-wing website for long.
Imagine watching a radio show without commercial interruptions for 240 minutes. With bad lighting. And embarrassing technical glitches. Get the picture?
As evidenced by the coverage from the right, Warren surely provided her opponents with more arrows in their quivers to attack her.
Here are the most colorful conservative stories published on right-wing websites after the Sept. 27 SCOTUS confirmation hearings.
Consider the vast breadth of right-wing websites, combined with their ability to attract large audiences, over whom they have considerable influence.
Analyzing traffic trends and audience composition is often as important as dissecting the content coming from the right. It's not just what right-wing websites are saying. Who are they talking to? And is this audience growing or shrinking?
The quality, content and frequency of sites varies wildly, but they share one commonality. Personalities' names are baked into the URLs of their sites.
Sold. I know what I'm doing Sunday night.
You haven't told us anything about yourself! Surely you've got something to say. Tell us a little something.