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Who's behind SarkObama?
212 views | 27 Recommendations | 4 comments
It's a question that has been causing a certain amount of head scratching in Paris over the past couple of days and created quite a buzz in certain sections of the French media.
Posters have been slapped up recently in several spots around the French capital, based on the design of one created by graphic artist Shepard Fairey and used during Barack Obama's presidential campaign in the United States.
But instead of Obama's face, there's an image of the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, with policy statements such as "Making polluters pay" with the now world-famous famous slogan underneath "Yes we can."
Mysterious posters of French President Nicolas Sarkozy inspired by an iconic Barack Obama election image have sprung up across Paris, sparking a media guessing game about the origin of the campaign.
Modelled closely on a pop-art design by the US street artist Shepard Fairey in support of the Democrat's presidential bid, the dozens of posters pasted up in Paris last week show Sarkozy against a red, white and blue backdrop.
Each spells out a progressive policy goal -- "Making polluters pay?", "Producing clean and sustainable energy for Europe?" or "Saving each household 1,000 euros a year?" -- above Obama's slogan "Yes, We can".
The campaign has sent some sections of the French media into a real tizzy, with the weekly national magazine L'Express asking its readers for more pointers as to who exactly is behind it.
As a follow up, a French website, LePost.fr contacted Sarkozy's office at the Elysée palace to see whether the president or his centre-right party, Union pour un Mouvement Populaire (Union for a Popular Movement, UMP) were behind the campaign. "No" was the answer.
Meanwhile another French website Rue 89 (created a couple of years ago by former journalists of the left of centre daily Libération) not wanting to be left out of the buzz, helpfully guides anyone who's interested to another site, where users can actually run up their own version of the famous Obama poster.
Finally back to L'Express which in its efforts to shed light on the mystery tells us that apparently two SarkObamaniaque camps exist.
There are those who plastered Paris with the posters in the first place (true Sarkozy supporters the magazine suggests) and then those who opened a blog on Tuesday claiming that the first group were imposters (sic OUCH)
And what do you know, that's exactly what the first group claims of the other in an email sent to L'Express.
Confusing or what?
Apparently the mystery as to who is doing what, and why will be revealed some time soon.
December 3, 2008 at 01:56 am by Johnny Summerton, 212 views, 4 comments
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 01:58 on December 3rd, 2008
interesting, I wonder what the poster's point is
at 02:01 on December 3rd, 2008
modern Times, modern adds...
It worked once, why not twice?
at 09:10 on December 3rd, 2008
In the meantime, Sarkozy's attorneys are champing at the bit to see who to sue for misuse of image.
By the way, isn't there a French law against English in public, particularly in connection with the president's picture?
at 03:31 on December 5th, 2008
Politics is like sport every player wants to have a competitive advantage over his rival. Barak Obama came as a surprise to most commonly so called "seasoned old school" politicians. He represents a new breed of "mystic" in politics breaking conventional barriers of campagning. Almost but not similar charismatic style as Dr. Nelson Mandela. He will be a hard rock to crack for the Republicans, but a new breath of fresh air for world politics. Its not surprising Nikolas Sarkozy is attempting to emulate him. The landscape of politics will never be the same again.