Obama: candidate and hot-selling fashion statement
By Sinead Carew
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shoppers in New York City might be excused for mistaking Barack Obama for a cult hero in the league of Bob Marley or Che Guevara because like those youth icons, he is being marketed as a fashion item.
Retailers in Manhattan and on the Web are using creative slogans and images to profit from the image of the Democratic White House hopeful as he campaigns against Republican rival John McCain ahead of the November election.
There are campaign buttons, jewelry, teddy bears and even women's underwear thongs. And this merchandise is being sold online at unprecedented levels in a presidential campaign, according to academics and vendors.
"Young people are acting like it's some kind of revolution. He's in demand right now. He's selling better than everybody," said Union Square vendor Edwin Shan, 37, who sells T-shirts hand-painted with images of Obama.
Or, as another Union Square vendor, Maria Khomenko, 21 explained: "Obama is like a trademark now." She said she planned to add him to her line of T-shirts depicting James Brown, Jimi Hendrix, and the first man on the moon.
Trendy clothing chain Urban Outfitters stocks T-shirts that read "Obama for yo Mama" and "Barack 'n' Roll." Republican items include a "Vote '08" T-shirt sporting a red elephant.
Martin Brill, of apparel specialist Sweetwater Consulting, said other big stores would be unlikely to follow suit for fear of alienating some buyers and that Urban Outfitters runs that risk even if many of its young clientele support Obama.
"We just try to sell products that appeal to our customers. We're not making any kind of political statement at all," Urban Outfitters Chief Financial Officer John Kyees said.
FASHION STATEMENT
Columbia University professor David Rogers said Obama sells as a fashion statement, "appearing in the consciousness of many youths with the excitement and iconic imagery which drives a youth brand" like revolutionary Guevara or singer Bruce Springsteen.
Penn State political science professor Eric Plutzer, who studies youth voting trends, said America's young see Obama's candidacy as "more than politics as usual," and that the craze for Obama items reflects high numbers of young supporters.
"There's always merchandising but I think merchandising is much more of a popular phenomenon among young citizens."
"I think (Obama's) drawing large crowds of young people in a way we've not seen probably since the 1968 presidential campaign," Plutzer added in a reference to Robert Kennedy's White House run.
Others likened the popularity of the Illinois senator to that of President John F. Kennedy.
Sales of Obama gear are well ahead of those depicting Republican rival U.S. Sen. John McCain, who appears on badges and other traditional campaign items, some Web retailers said. Continued...





