Flying billboard takes Ru Ron Paul campaign to the sky
ABOARD THE RON PAUL BLIMP The big white airship heralding the "Ron Paul Revolution" dips and glides over downtown Baltimore, providing sky-high advertising for the maverick presidential contender from Texas. Paul's name is bannered on both sides of the 190-foot-long flying billboard. Inside the blimp's unheated cabin, the two young men most responsible for making the once-obscure Lake Jackson congressman into an Internet phenomenon are busy at work.
Elijah Lynn, 26, a locksmith and security expert from Colorado, is providing videostreams for the Republican candidate's fans on the ground and out in cyberspace. Trevor Lyman, 37, a music promoter from Florida, is trying to chart the next day's course.
The two masterminds behind this unorthodox campaign tool are clearly excited about their venture despite dealing with setbacks such as bad weather that prevented their flying to New Hampshire, and federal rules that stymied their plans to fly over the nation's capital. Both men are working without pay and are operating the blimp venture independently from the official Paul for President campaign. Their sole motivation, they say, is a newfound and passionate devotion to the libertarian-leaning GOP candidate from suburban Houston...
Posted by: Fred 2007-12-30 |