1:13:04 And you believe him. When you bite into that sandwich and say, mm-mm, that was good. He's not getting paid by Popeye's. It must be really good. And when you fast forward and look at Obama, what did he say? We've been telling stories. He gets up there, gives you a great, wonderful story. You lower that barrier down. Now we can save the pitch. It doesn't matter about who I know what what my policies are. It doesn't matter. Hope and change. How you quantify that? You can't. Well, you know who else is a good storyteller on today's stage? Of course, of course. Kamala Harris is fantastic storyteller. And you know who else is? Mr. Donald Trump. Oh, he's well, that's why he can go for an hour and a half.
1:13:58 As an elephant, he doesn't know how to nudge subtly, but yeah, he can. That's right. And he's got your nostalgia, make America great again, literally calling back to nostalgic times, although misinterpreted by many. Yeah, great storytellers. That's what you need. It's interesting about Trump because he truly is the first internet president. Barack Obama was incapable of the interpersonal type of communication style or dialogue even that is necessary to make social media work. Now it was, there were no examples, it was early, so I don't think he really
1:14:45 There's no one who really understood how that worked at the time and they're basing it on old metrics. Trump figured, I think he's already always known this, make a lot of noise, big noise, big, big, and he's very good. Scott Adams, the Dilbert cartoonist, wrote a book about persuasion and how Trump was going to win and he predicted it based on Trump's persuasion techniques which goes right back to the beginning of this program, Edward Bernays. Yes, and for lack of a better term, Trump is the useful idiot in this situation. The reason why I say that is not in how that sounds but he's had an opinion on everything so he doesn't appear to be an influencer.
1:15:34 It's natural when he says something. is naturally received because he has an opinion on everything. So he's perceived the same way as the guy that Popeye's will use to say, oh this guy, he's not an influencer. He's just another blogger. He's just a Twitter guy with a lot of followers. Right. He's not trying to say you something. I mean, he's not, that's not what would be his role. He says what he says and what he feels. That would be the perception. That's the perception. When Barack Obama goes to tweet, it's an agenda base. Yes, with bullet points. Right. Yeah. So just to go and show you, I mean, that's, we're seeing, it's amazing how we've seen these, is it the dog, is it the dog wagging the tail or the tail wagging the dog? Well, you made another great point. It works both ways. It benefits both sides. Just like Obama benefited Gandhi retroactively. The question I ask is, are the advertised looking back and looking at studying Trump, like how was he so successful?
1:16:35 Yeah, he doesn't come across as an influencer. Is that the conversation being had? I don't know. I don't have an answer. It's more of a question, but... Well, I think generally accepted is that it was the beef. It was an ongoing beef situation and here came Popeyes of politics, Donald Trump lumbering along, and he goes, hey, you guys suck. Your chicken sandwich, no good. It's bad. It's sad. And then it turned into a media frenzy and it was Donald Trump 24-7 throughout the entire election cycle and he was the Popeyes of that election. Yeah, Sleepy Joe, Pocahontas, low energy Jeb. I mean he was...
1:17:22 Well, he had the branding down too. That's all part of the persuasion game. And that's the clap back. That's a slap down, whatever you want to call it. That was the point I'm making that he latched himself onto Jeb Bush. If Jeb Bush would have brushed him off and paid him no attention, he can't win. Right. But he made an attack so potent that you have to reply back. And when you've done that, you brought him to your level and then you don't have the leverage anymore. Yeah, so here's the challenge for a company like Twitter, and I agree. Obviously, that's where we're going to see almost $2 billion of digital advertising for this entire election, $6.8 billion in total, of which just under $3 billion goes to television, then there's a piece to radio and print, etc. But still, almost $2 billion for digital.