Too many ballot measures? Just explain them in song

Americans will decide more than 150 state ballot measures on Tuesday -- up slightly from two years ago. That puts a lot of pressure on voters to study up on everything from marijuana legalization to gun control to the death penalty.

Californians in particular have a lot of homework to do. With 17 measures, their state has the longest ballot in the country this year. On top of that, there are 650 local measures around the state to decide on.

Voters are coming up with some creative ways to keep track of it all -- like resident Deborah Barron, who had a "Proposition Party" at her home in San Francisco's Mission District.

Like any good host, she had snacks and drinks ready. But she also had hand-outs for the 17 state ballot measures and for the 25 local measures facing San Francisco voters.

The half-dozen adults at her house divvied up the prep work and took turns leading the discussion - starting with Proposition 51, the $9 billion statewide school bond.

"I mean, I don't know," says Barron, a 43-year-old attorney in private practice. "Normally, I am 'Yes' on education ones, but..."

"I'm kind of 'No' on this too," chimes in 43-year-old Eric Quandt of Berkeley, who works in the San Francisco Public Defender's office.

"That's how I feel," adds Jane Ivory Ernstthal. "But I feel so wrong!"

The group laughs. "Are you voting against the education of our youth?" Barron quips.

But party-goers quickly get frustrated.

"Everybody's got college educations. All of us work in things that are impacted by this," Barron says. "Numerous of us are attorneys, who read law for a living. And we still can't figure out how to vote."

And if it's this hard for people who've been voting for years, imagine what it's like for first-time voters. Carlos Hurtado, a junior at the University of California, Davis, is feeling the pressure.

"It's just a lot, a lot to deal with," Hurtado says. "I gotta take some time on the weekend to look over everything."

Asked if he planned to vote on all of the ballot measures, Hurtado replies: "The ones that I feel strongly about."

"I'll probably just scan it, see what interests me," says Julietta Zuvia, another student at UC-Davis.

It's a strategy that might make some long-time voters cringe, but not Kim Alexander with the California Voter Foundation.

"I worry that people look at these 17 propositions and mistakenly think they have to vote on every single one of them - which they don't," Alexander says.

She says it's far better to leave something blank than to do what voters typically do, which is vote 'No.'

For voters who are overwhelmed by all those ballot measures, Alexander offers a California election tradition from her and her colleagues - the Proposition Song. She contributes on vocals and ukelele.