Over on the New Yorker Online site, Silvia Killingsworth has coined and is trying hard to push a term she invented. Here's the context from the original post:
Besides being hard to identify, the Latino vote is not a winner-take-all proposition. That hasn’t stopped any of the candidates from trying to pander to Hispanics—heck, let’s coin a new term here: "Hispandering" — by using their only common denominator: the Spanish language.
It's an obvious enough term, I guess; it also shows up on the Red State Blog, Michelle Malkin's blog, and so on. There are about 53,000 hits on Google.
It make me wonder whether there are other blended terms like that involving the idea of attempting to appeal to a (perceived) special-interest group. It seems like there might be, but I'm drawing a blank. (About the only thing I can think of, which is only related because it's about politics and target audiences, is the phase dog-whistle politics.)
2 comments:
Double-Tongued Dictionary gives an earlier date--July 29, 2002--for the first Kaus usage of "hispander" (in Slate), but the link is broken. This is the best I could do: http://www.vdare.com/articles/gop-cant-win-great-hispandering-competition
They credit Kaus, tho. Did they maybe change their headline? Mystery.
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