Persuasion industry and media join in manipulating public.
Judd, Dennis R. ; Hellinger, Daniel
Despite their claims to "neutrality" and
"objectivity," the media today are embedded within the
cultural and political structures of society to a greater degree than
ever before. The ramifications of this are far-reaching. The traditional
safeguards provided by the press are endangered.
Yet, no one seems to notice. Media critics continue to reinforce the
myth of objectivity by their constant charges of "bias." In a
real sense media critics have become part of the problem.
Debates over bias, however, are shallow and uninteresting. It is far
more important to understand that over the past 25 years the media have
become a full-time partner in a political management industry made up of
a complex constellation of institutions and interests: media
specialists, public relations and advertising firms, consultants,
pollsters, professional campaign managers, fundraisers, reporters,
columnists and media corporations.
The media's role in the manipulation and management of opinion
has thoroughly eclipsed their historic reporting function. How the media
perform this role should become the focus of media analysis.
Approximately since the presidential election of 1968, the
manipulation of public opinion and of the electoral process has become a
significant growth sector of the American economy. Campaigns and
elections constitute an increasingly significant segment of this sector,
so much so that it now makes as much sense to treat campaigns and
elections as segments of the free-enterprise system as it does to treat
them as public-choice or public-policy mechanisms. Campaigns return high
profits to their investors in the same way that other markets do. The
political management industry sells candidates, access to politicians
and public policies.
Within the persuasion industry, campaigns play a specialized but
critical role as the mechanisms for securing allegiance and acquiescence
from the public; they legitimize the political system. If the New York
Stock Exchange is a system of arbitrage to decide stock prices, it may
be said that the modern political management industry is an arbitrage
system that establishes the rules and structures within which the
sellers and buyers of opinion, policy, and access can interact with one
another to determine product lines, pricing, and advertising strategies.
Profit-making media corporations are nested at the center of this growth
industry.
The 1968 Nixon campaign
The persuasion industry began maturing during the 1968 presidential
campaign season. As described by Joe McGinniss in his classic work, The
Selling of the President, 1968, Richard Nixon's pollsters and media
specialists made innovative use of survey and marketing techniques to
remedy negative public perceptions about Nixon and to reinforce negative
impressions of the Democratic candidate, Hubert Humphrey.
Nixon's campaign pioneered the use of focus groups to supplement
the information yielded by polling. By first screening spot ads in front
of focus groups, campaign managers were able to find ways to reliably
push voters' emotional buttons while avoiding concrete policy
proposals. Discovering that focus groups reacted strongly to
law-and-order themes, Nixon's media consultants prepared a series
of spot ads that framed the campaign (and launched the modern era of
professional campaign management). The spot ad, the spiritual parent of
MTV, ushered in the era of sound-bite politics.
One of Nixon's ads was composed of a collage of rapid-fire
images - a policeman at a call box, a bullet-shattered automobile
window, a rifle and switchblade, all interspersed with the faces of
anxious Americans. Another ad that showed scenes of urban riots carried
a Nixon voice-over calling for "some honest talk about the problems
of order."
Another round of technological refinements unfolded in the 1980 and
1984 campaign seasons. It is worth describing those campaigns in some
detail because in the intervening years the techniques pioneered then
have become routine. Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign relied on polls
and focus groups, test marketing, and various public relations
techniques already honed by Madison Avenue product advertisers.
Daily canvasses
By using polls and focus groups virtually on a daily basis,
Reagan's handlers found that, above all, what the public wanted in
a candidate was "sincerity." Though the Reagan team
accordingly avoided slick-looking ads as a way to project an image of
sincerity, the costs were staggering.
The 1980 campaign witnessed an escalation in both overall campaign
and media advertising costs. Reagan's 1980 campaign spent
$18,476,000 on television advertising, and $18 million more was spent by
"independent" PACs and by the Republican party. Overall, the
Reagan campaign machine spent almost twice as much as Gerald Ford had
spent in 1976.
In 1984, Reagan's handlers framed their candidate within a
vision of a resurgent, optimistic America. There was little need and no
desire to raise issues. Day by day the president reiterated a brief
litany of themes that had been echoed in previous four years of standard
commercial product advertising - national chauvinism (framed as
patriotism), militarism (presented as response to aggression) and order
(depicted as rugged individualism and adherence to the work ethic).
The campaign was directed by a group of professionals from the
advertising industry called the Tuesday Team. The best and the brightest
image makers - top executives and copywriters from the most successful
firms on Madison Avenue - took paid leaves of absence to work for the
Reagan effort. Star ad men on the Tuesday Team included advertising
gurus responsible for the Gallo Wine commercials, the Meow Mix singing
cat, and Michael Jackson's Pepsi-Cola videos. Pepsi ads inspired an
18-minute video, which premiered at the Republican convention. Pepsi
sales had soared after its commercials associated it with images of
ordinary, happy people at work and at play. Drawing on this motif, a
series of "Morning In America" spots conveyed the same
bubbling optimism. In early ads Reagan rarely appeared - a striking
contrast to the 1980 strategy, in which ads showed him addressing the
audience simply and directly.
Research to guide the media blitz consisted of a $2-million operation
to monitor public opinion via a massive telephone survey research
program implemented at both the national and state levels. Called
"PINS" (Political Information System), the system permitted a
simulation of various campaign themes in order that the most effective
could be selected. Each morning of the campaign, beginning on June 1,
reports were analyzed with as many as 300 tables of data generated by 21
specialists. Armed with reams of data, campaign staff could make
day-to-day adjustments. As in 1980, television commercials always were
test marketed and shown to focus groups before being cleared for
broadcast.
The first step in the PINS system involved the purchase of a list of
household names and telephone numbers from a consumer research firm.
From this list four "waves" of 250 names were chosen.
Telephone interviews of those comprising each wave began in June. In
early October, the sample number in each wave was increased to 500, and
in the last two weeks it reached 1,000. Toward the end of the campaign,
instead of national tracking, the team focused the PINS system on 20 to
25 key states. The effort required to make all this work was
astonishing; across the country 520 interviewing stations were used for
seven hours each night.
The Reagan team took the use of focus groups to a new level of
sophistication. Intensive, in-depth interviews were conducted with more
than 50 focus groups to help them compose effective "issue
development" messages and to search for the strongest "Unique
Selling Proposition" (a phrase already well-known to product
marketers). Additionally, the "TRACE copy-testing
equipment/methodology" was used to measure audiences'
second-by-second responses. In TRACE, people in a focus group register
their reactions to what is being said or shown through hand-held devices
that measure palm moisture and temperature.
George Bush's 1988 campaign relied on a similar level of
technology. His campaign staff conducted a daily national poll
supplemented with statewide polls and polls of special interest groups,
as the basis for a new campaign message every morning.
The message, whether about crime or taxes, was then packaged into
snappy lines and witty phrases; to create the sound bites that are
useful for television news. Selected groups of voters that made up the
Reagan coalition were assembled in theater like rooms and given
hand-held meters to register their positive or negative reactions to
various messages.
Democrats catch on
During the 1992 campaign season, Bush's well-oiled campaign
machinery fell apart. We can understand Clinton's victory only by
appreciating that Democrats had finally caught up with the Republicans
in their sophisticated use of media and public relations. Clinton's
lead advertising firm, Deutsch Inc. had made a name in the New York
metropolitan area by hawking Pontiacs, athletic shoes and furniture.
Bill Clinton was able to situate his campaign within the themes being
used that year by the advertising industry. As the economy lurched
toward recession in 1990, advertisers shifted their sales pitches to
link their products to consumer worries about the future and the need to
economize in uncertain times. Insurance and investment companies used
spot ads intended to convince potential clients that they could find
financial security in troubled times; the communications giant, MCI, ran
ads urging businesses to switch (presumably from AT&T) because the
economic times demanded change.
It is essential to understand that the political management industry
is not dismantled after each election and reassembled anew for the next.
Even individual candidates do not have to start from scratch when
entering politics, since they can call upon political consulting firms,
media specialists, fundraisers, advertising agencies and pollsters with
established reputations for winning campaigns.
Like the Pentagon, the political management industry is in a state of
constant readiness, and it also has the additional advantage of being
always at war. The industry relies on and makes possible a permanent
campaign.
The permanent campaign industry
The Reagan White House virtually invented the permanent campaign as
it is practiced today. After Reagan's second inauguration, the PINS
technique and the "Strongest Unique Selling Proposition" were
implemented on a week-to-week basis by a team of presidential advisors
called the Blair House Group. Their job, in part, was to position the
president against telegenic backdrops symbolizing the themes in his
remarks.
Over the course of his eight years in office, Reagan's
propaganda team carried out 500 national surveys of 500,000 voters.
Monthly surveys of 1,000 to 2,000 interviews each were conducted, much
more than the number reported by the leading polling organizations such
as Gallup, Yankelovich and Roper and Harris. During 17 periods
identified as crises, such as when Libya was bombed, daily
"brushfire surveys" of 800 respondents each were done every
two days. Profiles of voters in key congressional districts were
undertaken so that effective campaigns could be organized to swing
public opinion in those districts. Profiles of key celebrities,
especially television news anchors, also were maintained (Tom
Brokaw's file was 10 pages long).
It was this organization that later helped George Bush turn the tide
of public opinion in support of the Gulf War. At the time of Iraq's
invasion of Kuwait in August, 1990, polls showed that only 25 percent of
the American public regarded the invasion as a problem. Two big public
opinion firms, the Wirthlin Group (in charge of Reagan's 1984
campaign) and Hill & Knowlton were charged with the task of changing
the public's mind. The campaign was waged using the same techniques
and with the intensity of a presidential bid, at a cost of at least $15
million by December, when the Administration decided to go ahead with
military action.
Invading the White House
The media strategists and pollsters who helped Bill Clinton win the
1992 election carried the permanent campaign into the White House.
Pollster Stanley Greenberg was assigned the task of providing the new
president with a system comparable to the PINS system used by
Reagan's team.
What is new to the 1990s is the ability of the opposition to also
wage a permanent campaign. Behind the leadership of Newt Gingrich,
Republican issue positions and image opportunities are well coordinated
even though the party does not hold the White House. The contents of the
"Contract With America" was decided only after careful
polling. Over the next year, Gingrich's major problem will be to
hold his troops together in the face of the intense competition for the
Republican presidential nomination.
Among other effects, the permanent campaign presided over by the
political management industry has succeeded in substituting image for
substance. The average sound bite in political commercials shrank from
43 seconds(!) in 1968 to around 10 seconds by 1992. An industry that
revolves around instant image-making and manipulation requires ever
larger doses of organizational and bureaucratic coordination, a fact
made obvious by the multiple faux pas that infected Bush's campaign
in 1988 and that have bedeviled the Clinton White House.
Such expertise is becoming ever more abundant. Educational
institutions recognize the potential for career opportunities in the
political management field. The Graduate School of Political Management
at the City University of New York, for example, offers "advanced
certificate programs consistent with its stated objectives of providing
students with the knowledge and skill base for professional work in
political management."
The rise of the political management industry has coincided with the
rapid consolidation of media outlets into fewer and fewer hands. Ten
corporations earned more than half of all U.S. media revenues in 1984,
and the consolidation of the media has proceeded apace since then.
Converting news into entertainment
Corporate ownership has made news programs into modes of
entertainment. The 1980s saw massive firings of research staffs and a
drastic reduction in documentary reporting. Staff reductions made news
organizations more dependent on prepackaged information, coming in the
form of photo opportunities, staged news events, and videotapes provided
by government officials and public relations firms.
When Walter Cronkite retired in 1981, CBS News turned its news
division over to its sports director, Van Gordon Sauter. In 1984,
NBC's news operations were placed under the control of Lawrence
Grossman, a career advertising man who had made his mark in the
entertainment division. The recently proposed merger between ABC and
Disney Productions is an appropriate punctuation confirming what has
happened to the news.
News-as-entertainment has taken on a quality indistinguishable from
political campaigning. A typical network news program is composed of a
collage of soundbites overlaid with anchors' voice-overs. Since
actual discourse is too complicated and takes too long, the utilization
of code language is a necessary adjunct of soundbite news.
Coded language
Perhaps the most consequential example of this is the coded language
signifying race. As Thomas and Mary Edsall have shown so well in their
book Chain Reaction, the Republican Party led the way in the development
of a distinctive American discourse that refers to race without ever
mentioning it directly. The coded language denoting race includes such
terms as taxes, big government, quotas, reverse discrimination, welfare,
and family values. For three decades the Republicans have inserted crime
and disorder into the code language on an as needed basis.
As it happens, crime has become the media's favorite code as
well. Whereas the Republicans employ codes for partisan advantage, the
media employ them because sound-bite journalism absolutely require codes
of some kind, and racially coded language carries some of the highest
entertainment values in American culture. Thus (mostly inner-city) crime
has become the mandatory lead and the principal formula for local
television news across the country. The O.J. Simpson trial, though, has
become the big breakthrough because it seemlessly weaves news,
entertainment, race, and celebrity gossip into a soap opera/morality
play.
It is not particularly relevant to assert that the use of a coded
language shows media bias. What it reveals, rather, is the degree to
which the media help create and sustain the political and cultural
environment on which they allegedly report. The media, nevertheless,
blunder straight ahead as if nothing had ever happened to compromise
their position as an independent set of institutions. When they do so,
it serves up sometimes delicious entertainment, and sometimes
knee-slapping farce.
Remember the Nightline program of Aug. 1, with Cokie Roberts
reporting on the ABC-Disney merger? She led off by interviewing a media
critic, who was given the job of pointing out the dangers of the merger.
Then she went to the two CEOs. No Saturday Night Live skit could have
improved on it when her boss, Thomas Murphy, started by pointing out
that the merger would be particularly good for ABC's employees
"including, you, Cokie."
As funny as it is, what the Cokie Roberts episode demonstrates is the
degree to which the media have become intertwined with corporate
America. This is the same corporate America that contributes so much
money to political campaigns and the same corporate America that hires
lobbyists to influence politicians. Media coverage of campaign finance
reform (and many other issues) is exactly equivalent to the Nightline
skit. The media surely receive more money from the campaign industry
than everyone else combined. They also must derive a large proportion of
their revenues from the continuing campaign. In the mid-1990s that is
the story that needs to be covered.
The political management industry cannot be dismantled, nor can the
media be disentangled from it. Even so, the media are not worse,
overall, than they have ever been. Media objectivity was always a myth,
and it is a relief to be rid of it. We have to accept the corporate news
for the entertainment genre it has become. For actual news as we used to
mean it, we can celebrate the rebirth of the partisan press; KDHX and
its sibling radio stations elsewhere; The Riverfront Times and its kin;
the magazines by the dozen.
Public radio? Yes, but it's so earnest, and the features are so
long. We will get our news there, but for entertainment, you can't
beat network news.
* Portions of this article are drawn from the authors' book, The
Democratic Facade, Wadsworth 1994.
Dennis R. Judd is a professor of political science at University of
Missouri-St. Louis.
Daniel Hellinger is a professor of political science at Webster
University.