Showing posts with label oprah winfrey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oprah winfrey. Show all posts

Monday, February 04, 2008

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Oprah: "I Was Hoping To Run Into Hillary At The Gym" (with video)

Huffington Post, with video (01:12):
This morning on "Good Morning America," Diane Sawyer was interviewing Denzel Washington and Oprah Winfrey about their upcoming movie, "The Great Debaters" (Denzel directed and stars in the Oprah-produced flick).

Coincidentally, the "fancy Beverly Hills hotel" where they were promoting "The Great Debaters" was also playing host to Hillary Clinton, which allowed Diane to ask Oprah questions about her support of Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama and, more specifically, about her feelings towards his main rival.

For instance, what would Oprah say to Hillary if they ran into one another?
Oprah: "I was hoping to run into her at the gym this morning, and I'd say, 'Hi, how's things going?'
Oprah explained that her support in favor of Obama is not a vote against Clinton or any other candidate, but rather just that: support for Obama. But what if Obama is not the nominee, will Oprah support Hillary in the general election?
Oprah: "Obviously, I'm in this race because I'm believing that the person that I'm speaking up for is gonna take it all the way. And the if that doesn't happen, I might readjust my thinkin'."
Perhaps Oprah will readjust her thinkin' back to what it was in November 2005, when she told Hillary, "I hope you do us a privilege and run for office. ... [For] President of the United States."

Watch all of Oprah's thoughts (scroll down),: from ABC, 12/12.

Oprah also told Diane that she would not appear in political ads for Obama, explaining, "That's not the best use of my time."
Howie P.S.: Hey Denzel!! Penny for your thoughts?? It wouldn't take any of her time to allow the campaign to use video footage of her appearances for Obama.

Sunday, December 09, 2007

On the Road with Obama and Oprah

"Audio of Oprah Winfrey’s Iowa Speech"Eli Sanders (Slog, The Stranger's blog):
Give the speech a listen, and then tell me what it all means in the comments.
"Oprah Winfrey brings star power to Obama's SC campaign" (with videos):
WIStv, with videos.

"'I'm Tired of Politics as Usual'"

WaPo, page one:
DES MOINES, Dec. 8 -- Oprah Winfrey put her star power behind Sen. Barack Obama on Saturday, telling a rapt audience of thousands that she is joining the fight for the White House because she is "so tired" of the status quo in Washington.
"You know I've never done this before and it feels like I'm out of my pew," Winfrey told the crowd. "I'm nervous."

Without mentioning Obama's chief rival, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), by name, Winfrey made a vigorous case against her. Winfrey said she is concerned that "if we continued to do the same things over and over and over again, I know that you get the same results."

The popular talk-show host's dramatic appearance at a packed arena overlooking the state Capitol -- her first on behalf of a presidential candidate -- helped underscore the high stakes in the nation's first caucuses, scheduled for Jan. 3. Running neck-and-neck in the polls here and unable to predict how voters will react to sharp clashes close to the holidays, Clinton and Obama (D-Ill.) are campaigning furiously, with an emphasis on female voters.

Clinging to her role as the national front-runner, Clinton scrambled to match the moment with her own advocates, bringing in both her elderly mother and her daughter, Chelsea, to campaign with her for the first time. Clinton struck a low-key note, all but conceding that Obama's high-wattage events would dominate the weekend news, and continued her efforts to get Iowans to turn out for her on caucus day.

"I always think it's better to go to the caucuses with a buddy. Today, I've got some buddies with me," Clinton told an audience in introducing her family.

Leading up to Winfrey's speech, the Obama campaign all but ground to a halt as senior advisers in Chicago helped her prepare. Taking the stage in Des Moines accompanied by the candidate's wife, Michelle, Winfrey initially appeared nervous, and clutched a sheaf of papers as she spoke. But she quickly warmed to the crowd, her voice booming through the hall as she said that "this is not a time for any of us to shrink away from a new, bold path for our country."

Obama appeared last, and, describing Winfrey as "someone who moves an entire nation" acknowledged that he was not the main attraction of the day. Winfrey, beginning a three-day swing through Iowa, South Carolina and New Hampshire for Obama, shifted in her seat nervously as the candidate piled on praise. "This is a wonderful person. We love her. I am grateful for her being here," he said, before turning toward his guest and adding, "She's embarrassed."

Polls show the top three Democrats -- Obama, Clinton and former senator John Edwards (N.C.) -- bunched closely at the front of the pack in Iowa. A central pivot point in the race, especially between Clinton and Obama, has been whether Democratic voters are looking for change or experience. Winfrey repeatedly proclaimed Obama as the only true change agent in the contest, discounting the Clinton campaign's argument that the former first lady represents both change and the experience needed to implement it.

"Experience in the hallways of government isn't as important to me as experience on the pathway of life," Winfrey said. "I challenge you to see through those people who try and convince you that experience with politics as usual is more valuable than wisdom won from years of serving people outside the walls of Washington, D.C.," Winfrey told the crowd estimated at more than 18,000.

"What we need is, we need a new way of doing business in Washington, D.C., and in the world," Winfrey said. "You know, I am so tired. I'm tired of politics as usual. That's why you seldom see politicians on my show -- because I only have an hour."

Winfrey said she has voted for as many Republicans as Democrats, declaring that her support for Obama is not about partisan politics. The Clinton campaign played down the significance of the moment and declined, as it has since Winfrey's decision to back Obama was first announced, to offer any direct rebuttals.

The crowd responded to Winfrey enthusiastically when she alluded to Obama's opposition. "We the people can see through all that rhetoric," Winfrey said. "We recognize that the amount of time that you've spent in Washington means nothing unless you're accountable for the judgments you made with the time you had.

"We need good judgment," she continued. "We need Barack Obama."

People began arriving hours before Winfrey's 3:30 p.m. appearance; about 23,000 tickets were dispensed, and attendees weathered subfreezing temperatures and a wintry mix of snow and ice to make it to Hy-Vee Hall.

Clinton's counterprogramming included three small-scale events scattered outside Des Moines. At a stop Saturday morning in Winterset, about 100 people gathered in a chilly warehouse at the local airport, where Clinton addressed health care, veterans' benefits and organic farming. Her daughter and mother sat off to the side of the stage, smiling and clapping with the crowd. Neither spoke, although Chelsea Clinton worked the crowd energetically afterward with a gracious "Hi, thank you for coming," while urging people to support Clinton on Jan. 3. Clinton ignored questions about the Winfrey event, turning away from the microphones to shake hands along the rope line.

It was far removed from the celebrity buzz generated by Winfrey, although Bea Leonard's 8-year-old grandson Spencer was giddy, having secured autographs from each of the three women on a baseball he had brought along. "She makes such a good impression," Leonard said, as Clinton carefully inscribed her name with a blue felt pen. But she said she is not ready to commit just yet. She also likes New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson.

Heidi Reimer, who works in an eyeglass factory in Afton, thought about driving into Des Moines for the Obama event but, worried about icy roads, took in the event here instead. "I'm kind of going a little more toward her," she said, gesturing toward Clinton. But the Winfrey factor gives Reimer pause. "I think it will make a difference," she said.

Maureen McGarry of West Des Moines, a political independent who is shopping both sides for a 2008 candidate, said she heard about Obama's stirring speech at the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner last month, and was disappointed that he did not deliver a repeat performance Saturday. Instead, Obama offered an abbreviated version of his stump speech.

"I was curious about Barack's message, that's why I got the tickets," McGarry said. "I thought there would be more." She came away impressed with Winfrey, and a little surprised at the force with which she delivered her endorsement." I love Oprah, but today was about finding out more" about Obama, she said. Her conclusion: "He's very charismatic."

Saralyn Alderman, 58, who drove from Ames for the event with her daughter and a group of friends, said she has followed Obama's career since he was elected to the Senate in 2004. She has never attended a caucus, but said she is committed to showing up this year. She is a big Winfrey fan, but said the candidate's appeal was not lost in the glare.

"It got a lot of people here, which is good," she said of the talk-show host's appearance. "But the ones I know came because of him."

Saturday, December 08, 2007

"Oprah dazzles crowd for Obama in Iowa" (with video)

AP, with video (02:30):
Talk-show diva Oprah Winfrey said worry about the direction of her country and a personal belief in Barack Obama pushed her to make her first endorsement in a presidential campaign, invaluable support in a tight race for the Democratic nomination.
The weekend "Oprahpalooza" lends A-list star power to Obama's campaign, drawing huge crowds that Obama hopes will translate into votes. Tens of thousands were expected to turn out for Winfrey's Iowa stops and her Sunday visits to South Carolina and New Hampshire with Obama and his wife. In South Carolina, the campaign ran out of the 18,000 tickets originally available for the biggest event and moved it to the 80,000-seat University of South Carolina football stadium.

In Iowa, spectators lined up hours early. Cameras flashed in the capacity crowd during Winfrey's speech, which opened and closed to loud applause and was frequently interrupted by cries of "We love Oprah."

Winfrey said she felt nervous and "out of my pew" as she addressed a gathering hall packed shoulder-to-shoulder in the largest gathering of Iowans in the campaign this year. But she did not hide her political convictions, making an argument for change from the Bush administration other than another Clinton in the White House.

Winfrey did not mention the current president or Obama rival Hillary Rodham Clinton by name, but was not subtle about her feelings for Clinton's argument that Obama doesn't have the experience to be president when she voted to authorize the war in Iraq.

"The amount of time you spend in Washington means nothing unless you are accountable for the judgment you made," Winfrey said. She said from the beginning Obama "stood with clarity and conviction against this war in Iraq."

"There are times that I even worry about what happens to our country," Winfrey said, standing on a small stage before a sea of people in the 100,000-square-foot hall. "That is why for the very first time in my life I feel compelled to stand up and speak out for the man who I believe has a new vision for America."

The campaign distributed 23,000 tickets for the Des Moines event and more than 10,000 for another later in Cedar Rapids. Thousands of people, many who don't normally participate in politics, came into his offices, volunteered and attended caucus trainings to score tickets.

The campaign said 18,500 people showed up in Des Moines. At least one person near the stage passed out, and paramedics came in to help.

Clinton countered Oprah-mania by debuting two other women on the campaign trail — her mother, Dorothy Rodham, and daughter, Chelsea. Neither had appeared publicly yet with the senator in her presidential bid.

The reluctant Chelsea Clinton's public emergence normally would have been big news, but it was a last-minute announcement that was overshadowed by hype surrounding Winfrey.

"Everybody wants to have his or her supporters speak out and try to persuade voters. At the end of the day, it's a choice between those of us who are running. I think most voters understand that," Hillary Rodham Clinton said after a campaign stop in Williamsburg, Iowa. "As we move toward the caucuses, voters are going to be weighing everything. I trust voters."

Clinton pledged "change across the generations" as she courted voters with her 88-year-old mother and 27-year-old daughter. "We're getting close to the caucuses," the senator said. "I always think it's better to go to the caucuses with a buddy. Today, I've got some buddies with me."

The Democratic race in Iowa is tight, with Obama, Clinton and 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards in a dead heat. Winfrey said she doesn't know if her influence on the presidential campaign will have the same impact as driving up the popularity of books and products featured on her show.

"I understand the difference between the Book Club and a free refrigerator," she said. "I understand the difference between that and this critical moment in our nation's history.

"Over the years, I have voted for as many Republicans as I have Democrats," Winfrey said — one line that didn't draw applause in the partisan crowd. "This isn't about partisanship for me. This is very, very personal. I'm here because of my personal conviction about Barack Obama and what I know he can do for America."

She said she is "tired of politics as usual," which is why she seldom invites politicians on her show to spread their rhetoric. Obama, she said, has an "ear for eloquence and a tongue dipped in the unvarnished truth."

Obama spoke after Winfrey, and acknowledged that he was under no illusions that the crowd was there to hear him. Indeed, some people left during his speech, although the majority stuck around to hear him.

"You want Oprah as vice president?" he asked the crowd that responded with enthusiastic cheers. "That would be a demotion, you understand that?"

The Obama campaign is particularly interested in winning over women, who have been leaning toward Clinton in the polls.

Terri Johnson of Urbandale, Iowa, lined up about two hours before the Des Moines event with three of her five children along. She said she had not been involved much in politics before, but was drawn to the rally by both Oprah and Obama.

"I would have voted for him without her, but it's nice to see Oprah," Johnson said, joking that she hoped Winfrey would have one of her famous giveaways. "I'd love to get a car."
Howie P.S.: Somewhat less gushy coverage from Ben Smith here, here and here.
Lynn Sweet is with Obama and Winfrey, "SOMEWHERE ON RTE. 80 EN ROUTE TO CEDAR RAPIDS, IA."

Hillary, Oprah and Barack and Forth

"For Clinton, Obama, style may be overshadowing policies"

"Clinton Team Turns Iowa Focus to Women"

"Two beautiful Dems stand before us"

"Winfrey's endorsement means more than most"

"Oprah's oomph: Will it boost Obama?"

"It's Oprah Day in Obama Country"

"Barack Obama shouldn't overestimate Oprah Winfrey's powers"

Friday, December 07, 2007

"Join Barack and Michelle Obama with Special Guest Ms. Oprah Winfrey, Live This Sunday on Ustream.TV"

adhocnews.de:

Join Barack and Michelle Obama with Special Guest Ms. Oprah Winfrey, Live This Sunday on Ustream.TVLOS ALTOS, Calif.USTREAM.TV/OBAMA-RALLY

On Sunday, December 9, at the University of South Carolina and LIVE on the web at www.ustream.tv, Senator Barack Obama, his wife Michelle and special guest Oprah Winfrey will speak to thousands of Obama campaign supporters at a Democratic political rally. The event, originally scheduled at an 18,000-seat arena, has generated so much buzz that it was moved to the 80,000-seat football stadium on the university campus. By streaming the event live on Ustream, the Obama campaign has the opportunity to reach an even broader audience from all around the country.


One of four political rallies being held this weekend that will feature Democratic White House hopeful Senator Barack Obama, his wife Michelle and special guest Oprah Winfrey. Huge crowds are expected to attend both in-person and live on the Internet as talk show queen Oprah makes her campaign trail debut.


WHEN:


December 9, starting at 12:30 p.m. EST

WHERE:


LIVE online at http://www.ustream.tv; broadcast from Williams-Brice Stadium at the University of South Carolina.


WHO:


Democratic presidential hopeful Senator Barack Obama, Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey.


Tuesday, November 20, 2007

"Oprah to stump for Obama" (UPDATED)

UPDATE: It will be interesting to see if some "dirt" on Oprah now enters the media landscape, as some political observers are predicting.

Lynn Sweet (Chicago Sun-Times):
MANCHESTER, N.H.—Oprah Winfrey is poised to campaign for White House hopeful Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) in Iowa and New Hampshire, the Chicago Sun-Times has learned.

Obama made the disclosure while working a crowd at Central High School here, after delivering an education policy speech. A man, Ralph Hoagland, asked Obama—who was mingling and shaking hands-- if Oprah was going to stump for Obama in New Hampshire.

“First she’s coming to Iowa,” Obama told Hoagland, who in 1963 was a co-founder of what is now the giant CVS pharmacy chain. “But we’ll talk about it. We’ll get her up here.”

A woman piped up. “We need her here.”

“Is she thinking of not coming up to New Hampshire?” Hoagland asked?

Obama replied, “No, no no. We’re just doing it one state at a time.”

During these mix and mingle events, it is common for reporters and photographers to follow Obama around as he works the room or a rope line and listen in as he chats.

I caught up with Hoagland after his Obama encounter. He is a member of Obama’s Northeast Steering Group, which is heavily involved in fund-raising. He hopes to bundle together $100,000 for Obama, with some of his efforts targeted to a small dinner with Obama on Dec. 2 in New York.

Oprah Winfrey can help, Hoagland said, “because I think that Oprah can say to women ‘you do not have to vote for the first woman president. Vote for what you need.”

The Obama campaign has long hoped Winfrey, who hosted a massive fund-raiser for Obama would be willing to go on the stump for him. Winfrey opened her Montecito, Calif. estate to Obama on Sept. 8 for a star-studded fund-raiser that took in about $3 million for Obama.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

"Oprah throws fete for Obama"

Chicago Tribune:
MONTECITO, Calif.-Helicopters carrying camera crews buzzed overhead and tinted glass covered the windows of almost every vehicle entering as Oprah Winfrey welcomed 1,500 guests yesterday evening to her sprawling estate in what was the biggest fundraiser of Sen. Barack Obama's political career.

As guests dined on mini-hamburgers, chicken tenders and corn on the cob, Obama bumped elbows with comedians Chris Rock and Whoopi Goldberg. Stevie Wonder, an Obama favorite, performed.
But it was the joint appearance by Obama and Winfrey, who never before has involved herself in politics in such a large way, that generated the greatest star power of the evening.

"I call my home the Promised Land because I get to live Dr. King's dream," Winfrey told her guests, according to a source inside. "I haven't been actively engaged before because there hasn't been anything to be actively engaged in. But I am engaged now to make Barack Obama the next president of the United States."

The star-studded gathering marked the most visible effort yet for the billionaire media magnate in her effort to help the Illinois Democrat in his quest to win the Democratic Party's presidential nomination.

As Winfrey introduced Obama's wife, Michelle, the hostess called her the "first lady."

At times, Winfrey echoed Obama's stump speech. "How many hours you have spent in the halls of Washington is not the issue," she said, according to the source. "I want a man that has good sense."

Winfrey said she never expected to be involved in a presidential campaign. "When you have been called, no one can stand in the way of destiny," she reportedly said.

Once inside, guests had various levels of access, including seats in the grass on lime-green blankets that had "Obama '08" embroidered on them, a VIP reception and a later, much more exclusive dinner.

Yesterday's gathering was expected to raise more than $3 million. And it might be only the beginning of her support, with television ads featuring Winfrey and even speaking appearances possible.

It is not a simple prospect for any star, especially for one who so jealously guards her brand identity.

She's also testing the boundaries of her power. Winfrey has demonstrated an ability to turn obscure writers into best-sellers and start a top magazine from scratch, yet she has never before tried so tangibly to translate her influence into the political realm.

Some suggest that if any star is well-established enough to risk it, it is Winfrey. She is especially popular with women and African-Americans, crucial demographics for Obama as he competes against front-runner Sen. Hillary Clinton, who enjoys solid support from both those groups.

"As a marketer, Oprah's power lies in being able to make her recommendations seem very friendly, like they are coming from a girlfriend," said Kathleen Rooney, who is updating a 2005 book about the influence of Winfrey's book club.

Winfrey, who declined an interview request, has become good friends with both Obama and his wife in the past couple of years.

They didn't really know each other well until the fall of 2004, when Winfrey, inspired by Obama's national convention address, asked to interview the Obamas for her magazine.
Howie P.S.: More dish from Lynn Sweet in the Chicago Sun-Times.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

"The Magic Touch?"

WaPo:
Winfrey Lends Her Brand and Her Empire in Support of Obama's Presidential Bid--The Oprah-Obama '08 bumper sticker was meant to be only a lark, hawked on the Internet for $3.99 under the catchphrase "Just when you thought there was no hope for the Democratic Party . . ."

Turns out the sentiment, at least, may not be entirely fanciful.
Oprah Winfrey, the nation's wealthiest African American and host of an afternoon television program, endorsed Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) in May. Now, she is in discussions with his advisers about playing a broader role in the campaign -- possibly as a surrogate on the stump or an outspoken advocate -- or simply bringing her branding magic to benefit his White House bid.

On Saturday, Winfrey will host her first-ever presidential fundraising affair on the grounds of the Promised Land, her 42-acre ocean- and mountain-view estate in Montecito, Calif. -- an event that is expected to raise more than $3 million for Obama's campaign.

Although no guests will be permitted to enter Winfrey's house, a few dozen VIPs will have special access to Winfrey.

The fundraiser may be only the start. The Winfrey and Obama machines have maintained silence on the exact nature of their talks over what her role will be, but the idea of her appearing in television ads and other appeals is very much in play. She offered during a recent interview with CNN's Larry King: "My money isn't going to make any difference. My value to him -- my support of him -- is probably worth more than any other check that I could write."

Winfrey met Obama and his wife, Michelle, on the Chicago social circuit before his 2004 Senate bid, and they have remained friendly since. It was two years ago, when the Obamas attended the white-tie Legends Ball at Winfrey's Montecito home, that Winfrey first broached the idea of doing something she had never done before -- hosting a political event.

"I was saying wouldn't this be a great place for a fundraising," Winfrey recalled in an interview rebroadcast on her Web site. "I said it jokingly."

Since then, Winfrey has had the Obamas as guests on her television show, featured them in her magazine and gushed about the senator's potential to change American politics in repeated public appearances.

"For me, this was the moment to step up," she said in a recent radio chat with friend Gayle King.

Historically, there's little evidence that celebrity endorsements have done much to draw voters to political candidates. In fact, there is some consensus among political strategists that while mega-stars might generate an occasional burst of media attention, they are often not worth the downside that a close association with Hollywood can create.

But several political analysts pondered the impact of a full-court press by Winfrey and said they believe her involvement could be different.

"When you think about Oprah's success in selling books, you can't laugh off the fact that she can sway many, many people," said Donna Brazile, who managed Al Gore's 2000 campaign. "She has a very large following -- and we're talking about people who hang on her every word."

Among the weapons in Winfrey's arsenal: the television program that reaches 8.4 million viewers each weekday afternoon, according to the most recent Nielsen numbers. Her Web site reaches 2.3 unique viewers each month, "O, the Oprah Magazine," has a circulation of 2 million, she circulates a weekly newsletter to 420,000 fans and 360,000 people have subscribed to her Web site for daily "Oprah Alerts" by e-mail.

More than that, though, the Nielsen tracking data show that her most loyal viewers are women between 25 and 55 -- a group that also votes in large numbers in Democratic primaries. National Election Pool exit polling from 2004 showed that women older than 45 represented a third of the electorate in the Democratic primary contests in New Hampshire, Iowa and South Carolina.

How powerful can an association with Winfrey be? On Sept. 19, 2000, George W. Bush trailed Gore in the Gallup-CNN-USA Today poll by 10 percentage points, and struggled particularly with women voters. Then he sat down on Winfrey's couch. They talked about his decision to quit drinking, his love for his wife and daughters, his religious faith and the legacy of being a president's son.

The following week, the same poll showed Bush with a two-point advantage -- a statistical tie. News reports called it the "Oprah bounce."

Winfrey said in an audio Web chat last week that, this year, the Obamas will be her only political guests.

"It would be really disingenuous of me to be sitting up there interviewing other people . . . pretending to be objective," she said.

Winfrey's show is not subject to any "equal time" obligations, because Federal Communications Commission rules do not apply to news programs, interview shows and documentaries in which the candidate is not the sole focus.

Obama's chief rival for the Democratic nomination, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), will not be completely deprived of a daytime audience packed with potential women voters. She landed a slot on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" yesterday and will likely be back.

On Tuesday, former president Bill Clinton made an appearance on Oprah. But the talk show host made clear that Clinton had solicited the appearance himself, and they did not dwell long on politics, instead talking about his new book "Giving" and his global good works.

He said his wife had pointed out that she is 15 years older now during her campaign than he was when he ran. "I said, 'Well, nobody made you run, girl,' " Clinton said.

Oprah asked him what his title would be if his wife were to win.

"I don't know -- my Scottish friends say I should be called 'First Laddie,' " Clinton said. "It's the closest thing to 'First Lady.' " He added: "I'm not so worried about what I'm called as what I'm called upon to do."

The possibilities of Winfrey's fledgling partnership with Obama are immense but uncertain, said Mark Anthony Neal, a professor of African American studies at Duke University. They really raise a single, pivotal question: Can Winfrey do for a political candidate what she did for books?

What Winfrey did for books is the stuff of marketing legend.

Between 1996 to 2002, titles recommended by "Oprah's Book Club" typically resulted in sales of more than a million copies, a staggering number considering that a typical novel might be judged a success with 20,000 sales. Winfrey disbanded the club in 2002, though she later reinstated it, drawing her loyalists to classic titles.

Susan Harrow, author of a book that advises commercial and charitable groups on how to land appearances on Winfrey's show, said she is convinced a Winfrey pitch will work on voters.

The reason, she said, is that her viewers are more than just a television audience. "They are followers."

"People trust her opinion, I think, even more than they trust their own," Harrow said.

Neal isn't as certain.

"She can deliver a constituency to the marketplace, no question," Neal said. "People feel very differently about spending their money than they do about casting a vote."

But the sway over people's money, at least, will be evident as cars snake up Pacific Coast Highway into Montecito, and vans shuttled the well-heeled donors from parking facilities to Winfrey's compound Saturday.

If it wasn't clear to her loyalists how big a step it was for her to offer up this mansion for a fundraiser, she hammered that point in her chat with King.

"To offer it, you're right," Winfrey said, "it's no small thing for me. . . . I'm really not a political person. I believe that he offers a fresh opportunity of hope for America. So that's why I'm in it. I probably won't ever be in it again."