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Vice President Harris is making a number of high-profile media appearances this week on some of the most popular news and entertainment programs in the country.
On Tuesday, she’s slated to appear on
on ABC
and
on CBS. On Thursday, she will take part in a Univision Town Hall in Nevada.
Harris also spoke with CBS News’s Bill Whitaker for an interview that aired Monday
and sat down with podcast host Alex Cooper for her show
, which aired on Sunday.
It’s a string of media appearances that the vice president’s campaign says is purposefully geared at reaching a wide variety of audiences on different platforms, especially as voting begins in many states around the country and Election Day inches closer.
“Vice President Harris is seizing this opportunity to reach voters where they are,” a Harris campaign official said in a statement ahead of the vice president’s interview with Cooper, adding that the appearance “underscores the importance of connecting with younger audiences, especially those who will play a crucial role in determining the outcome of the election.”
Major party candidates have sat down with
dating back to 1968. The show has a traditionally older audience and a massive reach, remaining the
for decades.
But with her interview with Cooper, who is a millennial, Harris became the first presidential candidate to ever appear on
one of the most popular podcasts
, especially
, where nearly 8 in 10 of the show’s listeners are under 35, according to metrics from Edison Research.
It’s a podcast
known for celebrity interviews and frank discussions, tailored to women, about topics like sex and relationships — not politics. But that didn’t stop Harris, who is banking on support from young voters this fall.
“I think you and your listeners have really got this thing right, which is, one of the best ways to communicate with people is to be real,” Harris told Cooper after being asked why she wanted to come on the show.
“I think, especially now, this is a moment in the country and in life where people really want to know they’re seen and heard,” she added. “And that they’re part of a community. That they’re not out there alone.”
Harris spoke with Cooper for about 40 minutes, spending the most time on the topic of protecting abortion access. The interview was an opportunity for Harris to try to reach a key voting bloc — Gen Z and millennial voters, who have turned out at lower numbers than older generations.
Cooper has also built a massive fan base online, with more than 11 million followers across her show and personal accounts on Instagram and TikTok. Plus,
has a politically and geographically diverse following, according to Edison.
Nearly half of the audience identifies as Democrats, compared to a quarter who are Republicans and 20% who are independents. Plus, the largest portion of Cooper’s listeners — a third — live in the South, an area with key swing states like Georgia and North Carolina.
It isn’t the first time Harris has veered outside of mainstream news media to appeal to voting blocs key to her potential victory. Last month, she went on the sports podcast
,
, hosted by former NBA players Stephen Jackson and Matt Barnes.
These moves are not unique to the Harris campaign. Former President Trump has also put an emphasis on reaching voters outside of traditional news outlets and on social media — a strategy that has been central to the campaign’s youth outreach.
While Trump has largely done interviews with news outlets that are friendly to conservatives, over the past few months, he and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, have also
and sat down for podcast interviews that have largely younger, male-dominated audiences.
That’s included conversations with influencers who also have some of the
, like Logan Paul — who has a combined following of 46 million across TikTok and Instagram — and Theo Von, who has collectively 14 million followers on the same platforms.