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  • Debate By Numbers


    Using transcripts from CNN and the New York Times debate analyzer, I crunched some stats from last night's GOP debate.

    • 3: Number of times Hillary Clinton was mentioned
    • 4: Number of times Bill Clinton was mentioned
    • 2: Number of times Mitt Romney mentioned health care
    • 0: Number of times any other candidate mentioned health care
    • 5: Number of times Rudy Giuliani said "Islamic"
    • 3: Number of times any other candidate said "Islamic," "Islam," or "Muslim"
    • 4: Number of times Duncan Hunter addressed Anderson Cooper as "Cooper." No other candidate followed suit.
    • 2: Number of times the candidates mentioned President Bush
    • 26: Number of times, according to CNN's transcript, the audience laughed
    • 5: Number of times the audience laughed after watching a question from a YouTube user
    • 7: Number of times the audience laughed after a Fred Thompson joke
    • 4: Number of times the audience laughed after a Mike Huckabee joke
    • 0: Number of times the audience laughed after Ron Paul or Duncan Hunter said something

    Also, a breakdown of which candidates speak the fastest. Mitt Romney's mouth was a-flappin', while Fred Thompson, unsurprisingly, was the slowest talker.

    Talker Words Seconds Words/sec
    Moderator 2174 812 2.68
    YouTube Questioners 2398 942 2.55
    Giuliani 3163 945 3.35
    Huckabee 1942 587 3.31
    Hunter 918 293 3.13
    McCain 2034 670 3.04
    Paul 1288 431 2.99
    Romney 3223 831 3.88
    Tancredo 830 221 3.76
    Thompson 1841 625 2.95

     

    If you'd like, feel free to compare the words-per-second statistics to the Democrats'.

  • Demographic Breakdown


    Through 23 questions, the breakdown of the main characters in the questions:

    White men: 15

    White women: 6 (including the woman from Alabama wearing a hijab)

    Black men: 1

    White cartoon character: 1

    No Latinos, thus far.
     

  • FoxBrosStudios Background Check


    That question from FoxBrosStudios--the one that one of the candidates scolded for exercising poor gun safety--is a low-concept offering from the award-winning team that brought you the under-the-radar hit Vigilantes. The Web-based comedy series takes place on the U.S.-Mexico border, and a cursory glimpse suggests it follows the Citizen Border Rangers, a fictional version of the Minutemen vigilantes that keep watch on the border for illegal immigrants. There's a lot of swearing (bleeped out) and a lot of jokes about the ineptitude of border security, both among vigilantes and the government.
  • Emilyekins Background Check


    Throughout the evening, we'll be doing spot background checks on some of the YouTube questioners' video libraries.

    Emilyekins, who wants to return to the small government of the GOP's past, is a blank slate on YouTube. She is a new aunt, though, and judging by her favorite videos, she's a Ron Paul kind of gal. She's a graduate student in political science at UCLA. Google freaks me out sometimes.

  • ConservativeVoiceUSA Background Check


    ConservativeVoiceUSA, who asked the amnesty question, is a brooding vlogger. Every video on his YouTube page has the same dimly lit background that made for the awful-looking image you saw on your TV. He's 49, a Fred Thompson supporter, and has video titles like "ILLEGAL ALIENS MURDER 12 LEGAL AMERICANS DAILY 4380 A YEAR." Something tells us he fancies Tom Tancredo, too.
  • Pudgenet Background Check


    Throughout the evening, we'll be doing spot background checks on some of the YouTube questioners' video libraries.

    First up, pudgenet, who sang a nice little diddy for the candidates. Pudgenet, né Chris Nandor, is a budding musician who sings Lisa Loeb in his spare time. Nandor is the man behind the scenes at Slashdot, according to his Wikipedia page. The rest of his political-themed songs are up at a snazzy-looking Web page. Insta-judgment tells me that "Osama bin Laden, You Ruined My Birthday" is worth a listen.

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