home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT1596>
- <title>
- July 13, 1992: On TV, It's All Deja Vu
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 13, 1992 Inside the World's Last Eden
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 27
- On TV, It's All Deja Vu
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Ross Perot, the king of content-free sound bites (whose
- favorite, of course, is "I could sound bite it for you, but I
- won't"), is preparing his first wave of television commercials.
- Though filming has yet to begin, Perot's ads will probably ape
- his insistence that campaign promises are made to be broken, so
- he won't make any. In other words, as befits the man who seems
- so far to be running for President of Hallmark, there will be
- lots of homilies and little else.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to the beginning of The Big Act, Campaign '92 --
- The General Election. The candidates will appear on the TV talk
- shows for as long as they can, but the big-bucks paid-TV
- campaign is coming, and it promises to resemble its
- predecessors. A review of political commercials since they began
- 40 years ago (currently on display at New York City's American
- Museum of the Moving Image) is instantly familiar. The themes
- and techniques are timeless. Sophistication varies, but the
- efforts of all the candidates routinely combine soft biography
- and positive ads with a whole lot more of the other kind -- the
- attack spots designed to skewer an opponent.
- </p>
- <p> In 1948, when only 400,000 U.S. households had TV sets,
- Tom Dewey called political commercials "undignified" and
- refused to run them. Nineteen million homes had television by
- 1952, and Dwight Eisenhower didn't need convincing. The
- predominant feature of Ike's $1.5 million effort (which had as
- its slogan the nonincumbent's perennial favorite: "It's Time for
- a Change") was forty 20-second spots called "Eisenhower Answers
- America." In tone and substance, the same ads have been run by
- almost every candidate since the '50s (including George Bush and
- Bill Clinton during this year's primaries) -- softball queries
- served up by ordinary voters that the candidates hit out of the
- park. By today's standards, Ike's spots were crude, but they had
- a bit of Perot about them. Corruption was an issue in 1952, and
- Ike said (as Perot would) that while he didn't know "how many
- crooks" there were in Washington, he would "find out" and "get
- rid of " them. No specifics, just the inchoate hope that a "man
- of action" would act.
- </p>
- <p> Adlai Stevenson was appalled. "This isn't Ivory soap vs.
- Palmolive," he said. "I think the American people will be
- shocked by such contempt for their intelligence." With four
- years to rethink, Stevenson got the message. In a technique
- repeated subsequently whenever the "outs" face an incumbent,
- Stevenson in 1956 recounted Ike's unfulfilled 1952 promises.
- "How's that again, General?" Stevenson intoned endlessly,
- adding, "Yes, it's time for a change."
- </p>
- <p> In a swipe at Stevenson, who was divorced, Ike's spots
- targeted the women's vote by portraying the President as a
- "traditional family man." Mamie was used repeatedly; her "smile
- and modesty and easy natural charm make her the ideal First
- Lady," said the G.O.P. spots. Bush may be more subtle, but
- Barbara will undoubtedly surface as the Republicans seek to
- remind voters of Clinton's once troubled marriage.
- </p>
- <p> In commercials that may foreshadow yet another aspect of
- Bush's offerings this year, Richard Nixon in 1960 turned every
- question toward the strength he and Bush share -- foreign
- policy. Even civil rights took on a foreign dimension in Nixon's
- hands. "When we fail to grant equality at home," he said, "it
- makes for bad news around the world." John Kennedy couldn't
- match Nixon's experience, so (as Perot and Clinton might do)
- J.F.K. used a jingle to say that he too was "seasoned through
- and through, but not so doggone seasoned he won't try something
- new."
- </p>
- <p> Negative commercials have run the gamut from benign to
- sledgehammer. Kennedy ran a tape of Eisenhower's inability to
- recall anything significant that Nixon had done as Vice
- President. In 1964 Lyndon Johnson became the first candidate to
- use the words of his opponent's challengers in the primaries,
- replaying what they had said as they considered the horrific
- prospect of Barry Goldwater's ascendancy. Does anyone doubt that
- Bush will find some use for Paul Tsongas' derisive description
- of Clinton as a "pander bear"?
- </p>
- <p> "Weather vane" commercials, attacking an opponent's
- flip-flops, are a decades-old staple. Goldwater had changed his
- mind on a range of issues; Nixon said the same of George
- McGovern in 1972; and everyone this year will strike at his
- opponents' waverings -- and probably over the same issue, taxes,
- where all three have bobbed and weaved at one time or another.
- </p>
- <p> Another oldie but goodie destined for recycling is the
- man-in-the street commercial, in which residents of Arkansas
- will trash Clinton's governance. Similar spots failed against
- Carter in '76 and against Reagan in '80, but Bush will be sorely
- tempted to try again.
- </p>
- <p> We may not see any Willie Hortons in 1992 (the voters seem
- wise to such blatant manipulation), but there is little cause
- for optimism. A survey of Bush and Clinton media mavens
- confirms that only a fool would ignore the lesson of 40 years.
- As a Bush aide puts it, "Negative works. Everything else is
- fluff that cushions the impact. We'll be down in the gutter
- again -- and probably sooner rather than later." To which a
- smiling Clintonian says, "Yep, that's right. History teaches
- that the high road only takes you home."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-