Being originally from Pittsburgh (RP and I were neighbors, and his family's dairy delivered milk to us for years), I have many friends there. One of them called me last night and said there were approximately 750 people.
This is a huge disappointment to me. I've said it all along and will continue to say it. There is strength in numbers. Had there been a larger venue with an overflow crowd, there would be something for the press to report.
For a century Pittsburgh was the "Steel City" and the 5th largest corporate headquarters in the US. You'd think that after losing hundreds of thousands of good paying manufacturing jobs to JP Morgan, et al, taking their businesses to China, that there wouldn't be enough room on the Pitt campus for all the people who wanted to cheer on the only candidate who would help them as POTUS.
This is the single biggest failure of grassroots. We should be organizing campaign stops with thousands of cheering people. It costs nothing to take a couple of hours out of your week to attend a rally, and we have the most important public speaker alive today to deliver the goods.
This speech was attended mostly by college students who are there anyway. My friend said there were less than 50 people over the age of 21, in a greater metropolitan area of 2 million. No video. No pictures. No reports. In the city where Ron grew up, there was no virtually reception at all.
I can easily deliver 25 people to a rally. In the Pittsburgh meetup group there were 403 members. If each of them encouraged 10 people to attend, there would have been close to 5,000 people at the Pitt rally.
It ain't like Ron will be back in Pittsburgh any time soon.
Bosso
I was at this rally and it was not a failure of the grassroots at all, let alone the "single biggest failure."
Like the IUP event earlier in the day, this event wasn't even posted to the official Ron Paul site until two days beforehand. We immediately printed up fliers and had some of our foot soldiers post them around town Wednesday. Within hours somebody had ripped almost all of them down. Despite this, and the fact that 9pm is pretty late for those who don't live near the city and have kids and/or jobs, the place was packed and the atmosphere was quite electric (watch the video someone posted above). Like IUP, which I also attended, it was standing-room-only with virtually zero advanced notice or help from the media.
Also, I was working the table just inside the door so I talked to almost every person that came in. There were a lot of young people, but I promise you that the notion that there were "less than 50 people over age 21" is an inaccurate estimation. I'd say it was three or four times that, at least.
We sent out press releases to the media; only one or two outlets showed up, and none with video cameras that I know of. Paul was on KDKA Wednesday night and Thursday morning, so there is no question that they knew about this event. Furthermore, while it's not Mellon Arena, this was not a tiny venue. The Pittsburgh media covered IUP and the venue was half the size, if that, so the "too small to cover" excuse just doesn't fly. (Not to mention that they had to drive over an hour away to that one while this one was in their own backyard.)
Between the two rallies, we got our delegate lists into the hands of nearly one thousand of the most dedicated Paul supporters in southwestern PA. We distributed thousands of slimjims, signs, and stickers. The libertarians got hundreds of signatures for ballot access. We got dozens of new people to sign up for our meetup and about twenty new volunteers to sign up for election day. Aside from the television media not showing up at the Pittsburgh rally, which was out of our control, the day was a big success.
Let me give you one more testament to the event's success. Before Dr. Paul announced his visits to PA, one of our delegate candidates felt abandoned and was questioning whether or not he could in good conscience vote for a candidate who did not bother coming to our state. Even after Ron announced that he would be coming, this delegate was still considering voting against Paul if he did not get high poll numbers. Here is the message he sent me last night:
"I wanted to tell you that having been to the rally in Pittsburgh tonight that I am reminded of why I began this journey. It is because Ron Paul cured my apathy. You can safely report that I will cast my vote for Ron Paul at the convention. Please let me know what I can do to help."