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Despite their questionable value, celebrity endorsements are welcome

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But Michael Cobb, associate professor of political science at North Carolina State University, said politicians are not like consumer goods. While some might rush out and buy a perfume promoted by Charlize Theron, nobody is eager to find out who she thinks should be president.

“People like celebrities because they’re attractive, they seem cool and they may have good taste, but that does not carry over to make them credible regarding political information. So their endorsements aren’t particularly persuasive,” said Cobb, who has done research on celebrity endorsements mostly with the country’s most fickle demographic — college-age voters.

Sometimes, when celebrities try to become political role models, it can have a negative effect, Nownes and Cobb agreed.

That could explain why concertgoers in New Orleans started walking out and booing Madonna when she endorsed Obama onstage. It’s a safe bet that fans didn’t dish out up to $400 a ticket to hear the Material Girl talk politics.

So just what do celebrities bring to the political table? Cobb said they mostly contribute to a candidate’s coolness factor. But that doesn’t always translate into votes.

Still, why wouldn’t Obama get a kick out of having Beyonce strut around wearing gold hoop earrings that spell out his name? And how cool it must be for the president to have Katy Perry parading around the stage wearing a skintight ballot box dress with a check by his name.

Romney hasn’t done shabbily either. He pulled a major coup when he got Clint Eastwood’s endorsement. He’s also got some rockers on his side, including Lynyrd Skynyrd frontman Johnny Van Zant and Kiss’ Gene Simmons.

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If celebrities don’t bring in the votes, the next best thing is money. No one can raise big bucks like Hollywood celebrities.

Sarah Jessica Parker hosted a dinner party at her New York brownstone, where hotshots like Meryl Streep and designer Michael Kors paid $40,000 a piece to sit at the dinner table with Obama.

Romney raked in $6 million at a Hollywood fundraiser that drew big names like producer Jerry Bruckheimer and actors Gary Sinise and Patricia Heaton.

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