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G.M. Returns to Facebook for a Test, for Now

A party to what had been one of the biggest recent divorces on Madison Avenue may be having second thoughts.

General Motors, which made headlines in May 2012 when it stopped running paid advertising on Facebook, said on Tuesday that it had begun a test program of paid ads on facebook.com aimed at consumers who check Facebook on their mobile devices.

The decision to conduct the test - involving a Chevrolet model, Sonic, aimed primarily at younger drivers â€" came after discussions between executives of G.M. and Facebook about working together again.

Although General Motors has continued to have a significant presence on Facebook through its free fan pages, the company’s decision to discontinue its paid ads drew a lot of attention because it came days before the first initial public offering of Facebook stock.

“Chevrolet is testing a number of mobile advertising solutions, including Facebook,” Chris Perry, vice president for United States marketing of the Chevrolet division of General Motors, said in a statement e-mailed to a reporter. The test is part of a new campaign for Chevrolet that carries the theme “Find new roads,” he added.

The test involves a mobile-only pilot campaign for Sonic, Mr. Perry said, that uses “newly available targeting and measurement capabilities on Facebook.”

According to Ryndee Carney, a spokeswoman at General Motors in Detroit, General Motors “worked closely with Facebook” on the idea for the test campaign, which was presented to “the Chevrolet digital team, Carat and Commonwealth.”

Those were references to two advertising agencies that work with G.M. Carat is the company’s media agency and Commonwealth is the creative agency for Chevrolet.

The decision by General Motors to end its paid ads on facebook.com was said at the time to have cost Facebook $10 million. The budget for the test campaign is not being disclosed.

The decision by G.M. to withdraw its paid ads from facebook.com was made by Joel Ewanick, the chief global marketing executive at G.M., who resigned in July 2012 about two and a half months after the decision was disclosed. There had been speculation when he left that his departure might hasten a reconciliation between Facebook and General Motors.



G.M. Returns to Facebook for a Test, for Now

A party to what had been one of the biggest recent divorces on Madison Avenue may be having second thoughts.

General Motors, which made headlines in May 2012 when it stopped running paid advertising on Facebook, said on Tuesday that it had begun a test program of paid ads on facebook.com aimed at consumers who check Facebook on their mobile devices.

The decision to conduct the test - involving a Chevrolet model, Sonic, aimed primarily at younger drivers â€" came after discussions between executives of G.M. and Facebook about working together again.

Although General Motors has continued to have a significant presence on Facebook through its free fan pages, the company’s decision to discontinue its paid ads drew a lot of attention because it came days before the first initial public offering of Facebook stock.

“Chevrolet is testing a number of mobile advertising solutions, including Facebook,” Chris Perry, vice president for United States marketing of the Chevrolet division of General Motors, said in a statement e-mailed to a reporter. The test is part of a new campaign for Chevrolet that carries the theme “Find new roads,” he added.

The test involves a mobile-only pilot campaign for Sonic, Mr. Perry said, that uses “newly available targeting and measurement capabilities on Facebook.”

According to Ryndee Carney, a spokeswoman at General Motors in Detroit, General Motors “worked closely with Facebook” on the idea for the test campaign, which was presented to “the Chevrolet digital team, Carat and Commonwealth.”

Those were references to two advertising agencies that work with G.M. Carat is the company’s media agency and Commonwealth is the creative agency for Chevrolet.

The decision by General Motors to end its paid ads on facebook.com was said at the time to have cost Facebook $10 million. The budget for the test campaign is not being disclosed.

The decision by G.M. to withdraw its paid ads from facebook.com was made by Joel Ewanick, the chief global marketing executive at G.M., who resigned in July 2012 about two and a half months after the decision was disclosed. There had been speculation when he left that his departure might hasten a reconciliation between Facebook and General Motors.



G.M. Returns to Facebook for a Test, for Now

A party to what had been one of the biggest recent divorces on Madison Avenue may be having second thoughts.

General Motors, which made headlines in May 2012 when it stopped running paid advertising on Facebook, said on Tuesday that it had begun a test program of paid ads on facebook.com aimed at consumers who check Facebook on their mobile devices.

The decision to conduct the test - involving a Chevrolet model, Sonic, aimed primarily at younger drivers â€" came after discussions between executives of G.M. and Facebook about working together again.

Although General Motors has continued to have a significant presence on Facebook through its free fan pages, the company’s decision to discontinue its paid ads drew a lot of attention because it came days before the first initial public offering of Facebook stock.

“Chevrolet is testing a number of mobile advertising solutions, including Facebook,” Chris Perry, vice president for United States marketing of the Chevrolet division of General Motors, said in a statement e-mailed to a reporter. The test is part of a new campaign for Chevrolet that carries the theme “Find new roads,” he added.

The test involves a mobile-only pilot campaign for Sonic, Mr. Perry said, that uses “newly available targeting and measurement capabilities on Facebook.”

According to Ryndee Carney, a spokeswoman at General Motors in Detroit, General Motors “worked closely with Facebook” on the idea for the test campaign, which was presented to “the Chevrolet digital team, Carat and Commonwealth.”

Those were references to two advertising agencies that work with G.M. Carat is the company’s media agency and Commonwealth is the creative agency for Chevrolet.

The decision by General Motors to end its paid ads on facebook.com was said at the time to have cost Facebook $10 million. The budget for the test campaign is not being disclosed.

The decision by G.M. to withdraw its paid ads from facebook.com was made by Joel Ewanick, the chief global marketing executive at G.M., who resigned in July 2012 about two and a half months after the decision was disclosed. There had been speculation when he left that his departure might hasten a reconciliation between Facebook and General Motors.



Alec Baldwin Said to Be in Talks to Join NBC’s Late-Night Lineup

A well-known name is the latest to surface in the populated field of late night television hosts: Alec Baldwin.

The Emmy-winning actor is in the mix for a spot in NBC’s late-night lineup, one executive involved in the network’s program planning said. The executive asked not to be identified because the talks were still in initial stages.

The most likely landing place for a show hosted by Mr. Baldwin would be in the latest of NBC’s entries, the show now called “Last Call.” That half-hour interview program currently stars Carson Daly.

Mr. Daly is also the host of NBC’s biggest show, “The Voice.”

NBC is in the midst of what looks like a complete overhaul of its late-night lineup. Last week, the network confirmed that Jimmy Fallon, now host of NBC’s “Late Night,” would be taking over the “Tonight” from Jay Leno when he steps down next February. The show will move from Los Angeles to New York with Mr. Fallon as star.

After that move was announced, speculation immediately began about who might succeed Mr. Fallon at the “Late Night’ show. Now the mutual interest between Mr. Baldwin and NBC about opening a late-night spot for the actor could result in three new late-night hosts for NBC.

Mr. Baldwin ended his much-praised run as a star on this NBC comedy “30 Rock” this season. He twice won the Emmy Award for Best Actor in a Comedy for his work as Jack Donaghy.

Mr. Baldwin has also been long regarded one of the best guests on late-night television shows. And he has won critical praise for a podcast series he created with WNYC radio in New York, called “Here’s The Thing.”

In the series, Mr. Baldwin has interviewed a wide range of guests, including David Letterman, Billy Joel, Kristen Wiig, Chris Rock, Lena Dunham, and the Indianapolis Colts quarterback, Andrew Luck.

The format of the half-hour podcasts takes Mr. Baldwin out of the studio and into some remote locations â€" like a star’s apartment - to conduct the interviews. The advantage of hosting a similar show for television would be that Mr. Baldwin could record several interviews in a single day and leave his schedule open to perform as an actor, either in movies or potentially another television comedy.

He is also a Broadway star, currently heading the cast of the play “Orphans.”



Alec Baldwin Said to Be in Talks to Join NBC’s Late-Night Lineup

A well-known name is the latest to surface in the populated field of late night television hosts: Alec Baldwin.

The Emmy-winning actor is in the mix for a spot in NBC’s late-night lineup, one executive involved in the network’s program planning said. The executive asked not to be identified because the talks were still in initial stages.

The most likely landing place for a show hosted by Mr. Baldwin would be in the latest of NBC’s entries, the show now called “Last Call.” That half-hour interview program currently stars Carson Daly.

Mr. Daly is also the host of NBC’s biggest show, “The Voice.”

NBC is in the midst of what looks like a complete overhaul of its late-night lineup. Last week, the network confirmed that Jimmy Fallon, now host of NBC’s “Late Night,” would be taking over the “Tonight” from Jay Leno when he steps down next February. The show will move from Los Angeles to New York with Mr. Fallon as star.

After that move was announced, speculation immediately began about who might succeed Mr. Fallon at the “Late Night’ show. Now the mutual interest between Mr. Baldwin and NBC about opening a late-night spot for the actor could result in three new late-night hosts for NBC.

Mr. Baldwin ended his much-praised run as a star on this NBC comedy “30 Rock” this season. He twice won the Emmy Award for Best Actor in a Comedy for his work as Jack Donaghy.

Mr. Baldwin has also been long regarded one of the best guests on late-night television shows. And he has won critical praise for a podcast series he created with WNYC radio in New York, called “Here’s The Thing.”

In the series, Mr. Baldwin has interviewed a wide range of guests, including David Letterman, Billy Joel, Kristen Wiig, Chris Rock, Lena Dunham, and the Indianapolis Colts quarterback, Andrew Luck.

The format of the half-hour podcasts takes Mr. Baldwin out of the studio and into some remote locations â€" like a star’s apartment - to conduct the interviews. The advantage of hosting a similar show for television would be that Mr. Baldwin could record several interviews in a single day and leave his schedule open to perform as an actor, either in movies or potentially another television comedy.

He is also a Broadway star, currently heading the cast of the play “Orphans.”



With Popularity Fading at Home, Is Jindal the New Romney

Monday’s article on the nation’s least popular governors did not include Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, because he is not up for re-election in 2014. (Louisiana’s next gubernatorial election will be in 2015, and Mr. Jindal will not be eligible, having served two consecutive terms.) But recent surveys suggest that Mr. Jindal has become very unpopular in his home state amid a series of battles on fiscal policy. A March poll from Southern Media & Opinion Research put Mr. Jindal’s approval rating at just 38 percent, against 60 percent disapproval. His numbers had been similarly poor in February survey by Public Policy Polling.

Some national political commentators are treating the news as being self-evidently injurious to Mr. Jindal’s chances of capturing the Republican presidential nomination in 2016. Obviously, Mr. Jindal has plenty of time to turn around his image in Louisiana. But if he doesn’t, would Republicans really consider nominating someone who is so deeply unpopular among his own constituents

Actually, you don’t have to go back very far to find a precedent for when Republicans did exactly that. Their nominee last year, Mitt Romney, was very unpopular among Massachusetts voters by the time he finished his single term as governor in 2006.

The chart below tracks Mr. Romney’s approval and favorability ratings during his term, based on data from PollingReport.com. Mr. Romney was reasonably popular throughout most of his tenure (as Mr. Jindal has been). But Mr. Romney numbers declined once he began to reposition himself as a candidate for national office (for instance, in gradually shifting his stance on abortion and contraception toward the right).

By late 2005, Mr. Romney badly trailed Massachusetts’s attorney general, Thomas F. Reilly, then considered the leading Democratic nominee for the 2006 gubernatorial election, in head-to-head polling. Mr. Romney’s polling did not improve any after he declined to run for a second term. Instead, the last poll conducted during his term, by The Boston Globe in October 2006, put his favorability rating at just 34 percent against a 54 percent unfavorable rating â€" similar to Mr. Jindal’s numbers now.

There are differences, of course, between Mr. Romney’s standing and Mr. Jindal’s â€" notably that it is much more difficult for a Republican to be popular in Massachusetts than in Louisiana. Nevertheless, this ought to demonstrate that having strong approval ratings in one’s home state is not a prerequisite for gaining the presidential nomination.

This is not to suggest that Mr. Jindal’s approval ratings in Louisiana won’t matter. It could constrain the way that he talks about his executive record. It could affect the way that local political reporters cover his candidacy, although how much that might spill over into national coverage is unclear. (Poor approval ratings at home might be more problematic for a candidate from an early-voting state like Iowa, New Hampshire or South Carolina, because reporters from those states can figure prominently in national coverage. It might also be problematic for a candidate from New York, New Jersey, Virginia or Maryland, because those states are in the national news media’s figurative and literal backyards.)

What matters more is how prominent Republicans react to Mr. Jindal’s home-state problems. The nomination process, especially at this early stage, is largely an insider’s game. Will Republican thought-leaders and prominent conservative news and opinion outlets spin the news by praising Mr. Jindal as a principled champion of conservative fiscal policies Will they compare Mr. Jindal to Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who became unpopular after curtailing public-sector unions, but whose image recovered enough for him to win a recall election

Or will even conservative news outlets begin to treat Mr. Jindal as a candidate with “electability” issues The Republican presidential field is liable to be more competitive in 2016 than in 2012. If Mr. Jindal’s executive record is no longer seen as uniformly successful, it could reduce his comparative advantage against candidates like Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, who have some similar strengths to Mr. Jindal but who lack his executive experience.

And what about the precedent established by Mr. Romney It is a favorable example for Mr. Jindal in the sense of demonstrating that a candidate can be nominated despite poor home-state approval ratings. But Republicans may not see it that way if they regard Mr. Romney as having been a poor nominee. Instead, they may seek out a candidate whom they perceive as nimble and skilled enough to push the policy window toward the right without sacrificing his popularity â€" perhaps someone like Senator Marco Rubio of Florida.

None of this is to address the question of whether home-state popularity is in fact a leading indicator of how a candidate will come to be seen by voters elsewhere in the country. My personal view is that you could do a lot worse for reference points - local voters have a lot more information on a candidate. But I haven’t seen much research on the topic, and it is easy to think of some contrary examples (for instance, Sarah Palin was very popular in Alaska in 2008 but played poorly on the national stage).

Mr. Jindal’s home-state troubles are a reminder, however, that it can be difficult for a candidate to serve in an executive role and to position himself for national office at the same time. There was a series of active governors nominated by the parties between 1988 and 2000 (Michael S. Dukakis, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush). But there have been none since. Mr. Romney was a former governor but was almost six years removed from office at the time of his nomination and talked little about his executive record in either the primaries or the general election.

As the parties have become more nationalized, demanding greater ideological fealty from their candidates, sitting governors may face an unpleasant choice between working to preserve their standing among their constituents while alienating national party leaders - or pursuing a national agenda at the price of their home-state popularity.