| last updated 
      10/22/2012 
		How Campaigns Seek to Control Candidate 
		Images I. 
		Controlling News Coverage of the Campaign.  Campaigns seek to 
		... 
			
			
			Control Media Access to the Candidate (and his team
			
			
			Influence the Media Agenda (and the public agenda) - Campaings can 
			shift emphasis because only a few issues can receive attention at 
			one time.
			
			Create 
			Credible Pseudo-events (see II, p. 320)
			
			Use 
			ads to contextualize news (Can candidates or opponents set the 
			media's theme for a story? - schemata)
			
			Blur 
			the distinction between news and commercials (use news style 
			visuals, clips of actual news stories, reality show style ads, etc.)
		 II. 
		Recognize and Adapt to "Media Concepts of Campaigning" 
			
			The 
			Campaign itself - metaphors 
				
				as 
				battle ("Bringing in the heavy artillery") No common ground
				
				as 
				game  ("Hail Mary, "4th down") It's all tactics.
				
				as 
				horse race (who's in the lead, "by a nose")
			The 
			Candidate -- IMAGE = policy positions, competency, and 
			character (a composite perception of the voter) 
				
				
				Typing candidates by expectations (front-runners, third-party, 
				minor candidate, contenders) impacts popularity and support
				
				Comparisons to previous 'similar?" candidates - stereotyping 
				(recent examples: comparisions of conservative women candidates 
				to Sarah Palin,
			
			Attacks III. 
		Adwatching 
			
			Little 
			fact checking now occurs by news agencies (CBS and NBC do some, others only occasionally; 
			however, internet fact checking organizations have grown.)
			
			
			Corrections may reinforce the ad (and its falesehoods)
			
			The U 
			of Penn. Annenburg Public Policy Center (Jamieson's home) does 
			operate a fact checking web site, 
			FactCheck.org 
		Discussion Questions: 
			
			What 
			sorts of campaign ads and techniques do you like? What ones might 
			influence your vote?
			
			What 
			sorts of campaign ads and techniques do you dislike? What ones might 
			influence your vote?
			
			If you 
			could write rules of campaign ads to improve campaigns, what rules 
			would you propose?
			
			How 
			would you alter presidential or other candidate debates' 
			rules, format, etc.?
			
			What 
			constitutes "fact checking" and "accurate" objective news and 
			"honest" advertising? |