
Virtual Carl hopes to help Carl DeMaio become San Diego's next mayor. (Photo courtesy of Voice of San Diego)
San Diego Mayoral candidate Carl DeMaio now has a virtual version of himself.
Virtual Carl is in a virtual office taking your questions. They’re actually his questions. In other words, if you don’t ask a question from a pre-set list Virtual Carl stands there and stares at you. I asked Virtual Carl who came up with this idea? No response. I then asked what he thinks of mayoral candidate Nathan Fletcher. Again, no response.
“It’s like when the Pirates of the Caribbean ride breaks down and you watch the same animated pirate over and over,” tweeted Gerry Braun, who works in the actual Mayor’s office.
A lot of Virtual Carl’s responses are anti-climatic. When asked what he would do if he won the lotto, Virtual Carl says he won the lotto when he was elected to the City Council but turned down the proceeds, meaning he’s not enrolled in the City’s pension system. When asked what makes him happy, Virtual Carl says nothing makes him happier than taxpayers getting good value for their tax dollar.
Kelly Davis, City Beat’s associate editor, discovered Virtual Carl yesterday and Twitter has been buzzing ever since.
I tweeted this morning: “Is Virtual Carl brilliant or weird?”
“Both,” tweeted Voice of San Diego CEO Scott Lewis. “Unlike others, he seems to really grasp there are unexplored and potentially powerful ways of communicating on the web.”
Voice’s Liam Dillon posted a story last night that put Virtual Carl up against Siri, iPhone’s new personal assistant. Siri seemed a little put off by the whole thing.
City Beat’s Davis posted a story last night, too.
“Responses range from enlightening (who knew Carl liked zombie flicks?) to predictable (his favorite vacation spot is San Diego) to fact-check worthy,” Davis wrote.
She tweeted today that she wouldn’t call the idea brilliant, and wondered who Virtual Carl would appeal to.
“My sense is this isn’t about that,” I tweeted back. “It’s more about doing something new, generating buzz, etc. Damn the torpedoes.”
DeMaio calls Virtual Carl a video town hall. Lorena Gonzalez has a different take.
“It only answers questions he wants asked … It’s fake boldness,” tweeted Gonzalez, the city’s top labor leader. “Bob Filner and Nathan Fletcher let me ask them questions live, unedited. Carl DeMaio won’t even answer my questions by computer.”
Virtual Carl – I love saying that – is a little odd and certainly not that risky, but it is out of the box. Has anyone running for office tried this before?
If nothing else, DeMaio once again has people talking and tweeting, and that’s Virtual Carl’s greatest gift to candidate DeMaio.
Follow me on Twitter: @tonymanolatos


Comments 8
Don’t dig on most of Carl’s political positions, in real life or the Sims version. Won’t be voting for the guy either. However, I appreciate any candidate that takes risks and breaks from the tired, warmed-over, status quo substanceless platitudes that the populus has endured from its mayors and mayoral aspirants for the last 15 years. Here’s to things new and different. What we’ve got now ain’t working a lick.
It’s easy squeezy to jeer from the sidelines, but Carl is always willing to try something new. I for one want a Mayor who’s willing to take a look at something new and see if it works. If not, you discard it and move on. Seems awfully sensible to me.
Ask him what he thinks of Gay Rights and the response is “Hey, let’s keep this a civil dialogue. San Diegans deserve that.” … What is uncivil about Gay Rights?
He’s not willing to try something new unless it’s a publicity stunt. We’re all talking about it, so I guess it worked. But is there really any value in what he has produced here? Or did he spend a bunch of campaign money on a publicity stunt? God help us if he gets in to office to spend taxpayer money on his bloated ego. Anybody but Carl!
I think the idea of being able to ask questions and get answer is neat. It’s probably not realistic to have it answer every question possible, but that’s just common sense.
Point Loman – I’m not sure I see the stunt, it’s an interactive tool. It would be a stunt if he promoted this thing with a press release/press conference. I don’t think that happened. It seems to have been picked up by media outlets organically.
Author
Thanks for the comments, folks. Glad you enjoyed the post.
Tony, it’s good to see you posting on Rostra again!
Ditto to that, Barry.
Author
Thank you, Barry & Jim! Happy to be here.