If you've been tossing and turning at night, wondering what's making the cut on U.S. Sens. John McCain and Barack Obama's iPod playlists, help is here.
Blender surveyed the candidates late last month and have provided us with a helpful guide to John and Barack's musical tastes. The senator from Illinois likes Kanye West, among others; the senator from Arizona winds down with Neil Diamond, to name one of many.
Here's the full list:
| Barack Obama: | John McCain: |
|---|---|
| 1. Ready or Not - Fugees | 1. Dancing Queen - ABBA |
| 2. What's Going On - Marvin Gaye | 2. Blue Bayou - Roy Orbison |
| 3. I'm On Fire - Bruce Spingsteen | 3. Take a Chance On Me - ABBA |
| 4. Gimme Shelter - Rolling Stones | 4. If We Make It Through December - Merle Haggard |
| 5. Sinnerman - Nina Simone | 5. As Time Goes By - Dooley Wilson |
| 6. Touch the Sky - Kanye West | 6. Good Vibrations - The Beach Boys |
| 7. You'd Be So Easy to Love - Frank Sinatra | 7. What A Wonderful World - Louis Armstrong |
| 8. Think - Aretha Franklin | 8. I've Got You Under My Skin - Frank Sinatra |
| 9. City of Blinding Lights - U2 | 9. Sweet Caroline - Neil Diamond |
| 10. Yes We Can - will.i.am | 10. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes - The Platters |
Now if you click on the full article above, you'll see that the cartoon features both men wearing one of these:

I have my doubts. While we can confirm from a multitude of sources that Obama truly does have an iPod, I'm not so sure about McCain. Remember, this is the man who just learned how to turn on a computer with Cindy's help. I'm thinking it would take half of Apple's engineers to get McCain up and running with an iPod.
Which goes to my next point -- an article in yesterday's Washington Post points out the somewhat obvious fact that McCain is winning the "hey, kids, get out of my yard vote." If elected, McCain will be the oldest American to ever win the presidency. Of course the over-65 set likes his playlist more.
But wait -- what about the Millennial Generation? As our super-sharp intern Shana Hurley noted in her recent post:
First, we’ve noted that the Millennial generation has consistently displayed progressive values and has voted more heavily Democratic than other generations in their first few elections. New Politics Institute friends and collaborators Morley Winograd and Michael Hais argue that the Millennial generation represents a fundamental shift in American politics, a prediction reflected in these registration statistics, in their book Millennial Makeover. Moreover, in their NPI paper Progressive Politics of the Millennial Generation, they observed the striking disparity between Republican and Democratic Party identification among Millennials.
There's no doubt that seniors turn out to vote. Analysts have had ample opportunity to document this over decades. But while 2004 was really the first year many Millennials were old enough to vote in a presidential election, they turned out, and they turned out for U.S. Sen. John Kerry. Additionally, in 2006, according to exit polls and Pew Center data, 49 percent of Millennials gave Democratic as their party ID, with 35 percent identifying themselves as Republican.
So while McCain may be playing the seniors' song, Obama may want to add David Soul's 1997 No. 1, "Don't Give Up on Us," to his playlist. I think the Millennials will be listening.
As always, if you have any suggested additions to either Senator's iPod, leave them in the comments below. Don't know how? Read our help page.
















