We’ll be throwing a steak dinner at the Renaissance Hotel in Baton Rouge on Tuesday, April 5 at 6 p.m., and the headline speaker will be Louisiana’s new Attorney General Jeff Landry. All the cool people will be there, and you should be, too.
We’ve been wanting for some time to attach The Hayride’s name to an annual event, and we’re now taking the plunge and doing it. Hopefully we’ll be able to make this into an annual event and maybe even grow it beyond just a banquet – Louisiana could use an annual conservative shindig, and perhaps this might be it.
Tickets are $80. For a ticket that includes the VIP reception and a chance to meet the Attorney General, it’s $200. And we have sponsorship opportunities available; they’re $2500 each.
For tickets, click here to order. And if you or your company is interested in sponsoring the event, click here to contact us.
And here’s why, beyond just having a fun night and mixing with the swells, you should participate in this awesome spectacle.
First, last year most of our readers would probably agree we did everything possible to get the word out about John Bel Edwards and what was coming were he to get elected. And our traffic was at or near historical highs throughout that campaign.
But while the conservative perspective this site offered made perhaps a little dent as the public saw an alternative to the dead-tree media’s usual fare, it obviously wasn’t enough. People bought into the idiotic Honor Code narrative Edwards’ campaign spun out there, and a major reason for it was the coverage the race received. Newspapers and TV stations around the state spent most of the campaign trying to hound David Vitter about hookers and by Election Day virtually nobody knew that Edwards had never, in eight years in the state legislature, voted against a tax increase, as an example.
And we’ve had people tell us since then something that we’ve long known was true and that is the case for virtually every conservative news site – we simply don’t have a big enough megaphone.
But there’s a workaround available to us for that, and it’s this: people get their news mostly on the internet these days, and it goes even further than that. The overwhelming trend seems to be that it isn’t even the internet; people don’t just go to the New York Times’ front page so much anymore as they’ll follow it on Twitter and Facebook and then catch links to stories posted by the Times on social media.
Facebook, in particular, seems to be the major aggregator of news for people in Louisiana. We see that clearly in our own experience. Just yesterday, for example, this site had 16,915 page views, and 11,062 of them – 65 percent – came from people clicking on links to our content posted on Facebook – either at The Hayride’s Facebook page or by our readers in their own threads.
That’s powerful stuff, and it’s where the workaround comes from. Our Facebook following is pretty small, considering, mostly because we haven’t spent any money growing it. The Hayride’s Facebook page only has, as of this posting, 6,397 “likes.” By comparison, late last week when we did a quick study of Facebook pages of other media outlets around the state here’s what we came back with in terms of how many “likes” they have…
NOLA.com/New Orleans Times-Picayune
202,044
Baton Rouge Advocate
56,417
New Orleans Advocate
21,477
Lafayette Advertiser
21,443
Shreveport Times
23,795
Monroe News Star
20,946
Alexandria Town Talk
22,002
Lake Charles American Press
30,857
Opelousas Daily World
3,379
Hammond Star
11,938
Houma Courier
41,588
Gambit Weekly
30,044
Times of Acadiana
10,902
Baton Rouge Business Report
7,783
New Orleans CityBusiness
3,882
Dig Baton Rouge
10,829
Lafayette Independent
7,439
WWL-TV
243,654
WDSU
198,480
WVUE/Fox 8
205,227
WGNO
86,896
WYES
7,868
WAFB
193,673
WBRZ
95,488
WVLA
54,723
KATC
271,247
KLFY
158,202
KADN
1,652
KPLC
124,819
KVHP/Fox 29 Lake Charles
4,394
KNOE
95,292
KTVE/KARD MyArkLaMiss
95,757
KTBS
160,226
KTAL
50,710
KSLA
168,008
KMSS
47,936
WWL Radio
37,425
WRNO
5,423
WJBO
3,388
Talk 107.3
4,713
KEEL
3,087
Obviously, compared to TV stations and newspapers around the state there’s a megaphone issue. When those guys decide to act like stenographers for the Louisiana Democrat Party and elections get covered as opportunities to talk about hookers and legislative sessions as opportunities to spread stupid threats like there won’t be college football in the fall if your taxes don’t go up in the spring, lots of people are going to believe it because they won’t hear anything else.
But if there’s a conservative outlet pushing back against those kinds of narratives, maybe it gets harder to embed them in people’s minds and maybe we get a little less leviathan government as an end result.
So we’re trying to put together a budget to do Facebook ads and grow The Hayride’s Facebook page. The goal for this year is 100,000 likes – so we’ve got 93,600 to go. Social media experts we’ve talked to tell us that $50,000 would get us there, and therefore that’s what we’re looking to raise. The spring dinner is a project to put some of that funding together.
Plus, like we said above we need a conservative shindig in Louisiana.
So that’s the event. Once again, click here and get your ticket! We’ll see you at the Renaissance on April 5!