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Strategic Press


A few selections:


The Fix: McCain ad mentioned as the best negative ad to date in the 2010 cycle
The Fix: The best ads we've seen so far in the 2010 midterms
The Fix: Are Primaries A Good Thing?
Race, Celebrity and the Presidential Campaign
McCain Expands Campaign Media Team
ONE Campaign Hits Airwaves
Brand on the Run


John King's Political Fact Check


THE DAILY RUNDOWN: SPI once again makes the Top Ten
THE DAILY RUNDOWN: Nobody does viral ads better than Fred Davis
FIRST READ: Top 10 TV ads
Countdown with Keith Oberman:
Blagojevich's hair a political liability?



Attack ads on Murray may have had effect


California Senate: How Carly Fiorina Pulled Off Her Big "Upset" in the GOP Primary


Meet the Man Who Brought You "Demon Sheep" and Who May Change the Face of GOP Ads Forever


The Tim James "Language" Spot

Fox News, The O'Reilly Factor
Alabama Gubernatorial Candidate Tim James Defends Controversial 'Learn English' Ad
Mobile Press-Registry
Breaking News: Gubernatorial candidate Tim James' ad ignites Alabama GOP primary
Fox News Sean Hannity
Frank Luntz Focus Groups the "Language" Ad on Hannity


Political Attack Ads Hit the Net


Carly Fiorina's Barbara Boxer Blimp Campaign

The Washington Post
Morning Fix: The Boxer blimp, the Demon Sheep and Fred Davis
Los Angeles Times
PolitiCal: Demon Sheep creator strikes again
SF Weekly
The Snitch: Adman Behind 'Demon Sheep,' Boxer Blimp Has No Idea How He'll Top This


Nerd Surge


Revenge of the GOP Nerd


Hoekstra leads, but the 'Nerd' is gaining


Fox News Discusses Rick's "One Tough Nerd" Ad


Carly Fiorina's Demon Sheep Campaign

Yahoo News
Bizarre attack ad heats up California Senate race
National Review Online Weekend
Demon-Sheep Strategist Says More Ads to Come
Time.com
The GOP Mastermind of Carly Fiorina's Demon-Sheep Ad
Los Angeles Times
Fiorina's 'demon sheep' creator speaks


The Problem With Illinois Politics? It’s the Hair (Blagojevich’s, That Is)
As Economic Crisis Peaked, Tide Turned Against McCain
McCain Team Scrambles to Rescript Show


The Anti-Obama Campaign That Didn't Happen
Halperin's Take: The Five Most Important People in American Politics Not Running for President


Political Firms Find D.C. Office Means Business


Four Media Geniuses Dish on Smart Spots, Writer's Block and Paris Hilton


The Republicans' Ad Man in St. Paul


California ad firm aligned with Cornyn campaign



McCain Beefs Up Ad Roster for General Election
California Governor's 'Backwards' Spot a Masterpiece



Can McCain’s Ads Win an Oscar?



Governors Join in Creating Regional Pacts on Climate Change



Dan Quayle appearance on The Tonight Show



Rush Limbaugh "Bug Zapper"



10 questions for Fred Davis



Corker conquers -- Ford falls just short with good Nashville numbers



Hotline ON Call: GOP Adman Becomes ONE With Poverty



Strategic Perception joins McCain campaign team



Political ads go up against DVR tech



California Governor's 'Backwards' Spot a Masterpiece

Brands Opponent With Indelible Imagery of Retreat

The Schwarzenegger 'backwards' ad creates an image that voters will not soon forget.

By Bob Garfield
Published: August 27, 2006 in Advertising Age

What a concept: Dusk in America.

Twenty-two years after Ronald Reagan spun out-of-control deficits into "rebirth," California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has contrived to run the greatest American political ad essentially in reverse, and so to cast his hapless opponent into the ominous gloaming. It's a cruel masterpiece.

Between now and November, Schwarzenegger can get caught groping Miss Teen Fresno, the California Republican party can make Barry Bonds its chairman and President Bush can declare war on Oregon.

Arnold is still a lock.

This has nothing to do with his performance as governor, which in our opinion has been erratic at best. Nor with the qualifications of his opponent, state Treasurer Phil Angelides. It certainly has nothing to do with a Republican resurgence; the GOP has brilliantly maneuvered itself Out of its so-called permanent majority in Congress and may run third in the mid-terms to the Whigs.

No, credit here goes only to the campaign ads, which began running about five minutes after Angelides got the nomination, and which etched the contest in stone: The Democrat represents a step backward for California.

"It was a time of gray skies, punishing taxes, disappearing jobs, a state near bankruptcy," says the gravelly-voiced narrator, over gunmetal images of life in reverse. Buildings being deconstructed. Traffic moving backward. Angelides himself dismally moonwalking in super-slow motion. "Will California move backward with politician Phil Angelides, who promises to raise taxes on California families by $10 billion, or keep moving forward protecting the California dream for you and your family? That's our choice."

Well, of course, in reality that isn't the choice. The text is really just boilerplate rhetoric, ignoring the state's ongoing fiscal and political crises and trotting out the threadbare pieties of the GOP. But that hardly matters because, for one thing, claims that Schwarzenegger has moved California forward are plainly subjective and therefore not demonstrably false.

But more than that, the text is scarcely important. What counts here is the imagery -- the indelible imagery -- of retreat. The political consultancy Strategic Perception, Hollywood, has taken the stirring optimism of Reagan's "Morning in America" and found its reciprocal: a grim and pessimistic vision of an Angelides governorship. Talk about gloom and doom. In this quintessential example of campaign noir, sunny Californians are deprived not only of prosperity and progress, but of the sun itself.

It's bleak. It's simple. It's devastating.

Like the "flip-flop" charge that destroyed Stuttering John Kerry, "backward" has defined Angelides from the start and will do so till the finish. Worse yet for the challenger, Schwarzenegger's 5-1 cash advantage will enable himto drum the definition into the head of every voter many times over.

There is always, of course, the possibility that voters will resist such blunt, disingenuous tactics and carefully examine the campaign's assertions against the available facts. Perhaps they will parse the "$10 billion tax on families" rhetoric and see that the tax is intended for those earning more than $250,000. Perhaps they will question what, exactly, in Schwarzenegger's term of office has propelled the state forward. And perhaps the 49ers will go to the Super Bowl.

Except that they won't.

No, this race is over. For the Democrats, it can only now serve as fair warning for what is to follow in the presidential race in two years' time. Whoever wins the nomination had better be prepared to face instant branding from the competition. Bush could indeed invade Oregon. But what's that against, for example:

Hillary=bitch.

~ ~ ~

Review 3.5 stars
Ad: Skies
Agency: Strategic Perception
Location: Hollywood, Calif.