Negative political advertising
Oct. 31st, 2006 07:43 am"The difference between a positive ad and a negative ad is that the negative ad has a fact in it."
Historically I have basically bought into the conventional wisdom: that attack ads or negative ads are bad. A fact of life - and effective, which is why they are used - but bad.
John Geer, a poli-sci prof at Vanderbilt, did a survey in a book published earlier this year ("In Defense of Negativity") where he looked at nearly every presidential campaign TV ad since 1964. He rated them; "better" ads discussed relevant political issues of the day, had specific substance, and (perhaps most importantly) had documentation.
Negative ads scored better on all those.
Geer's comment: "[With attack ads] the threshold is higher. You need documentation and support. If a candidate just attacks, without documentation to back it up, it rebounds against the attacker and he looks like a fool."
It doesn't mean I want to watch them, of course. (Or the positive, content-free ones either.)
What I'm reading: Jack Campbell, Dauntless
Historically I have basically bought into the conventional wisdom: that attack ads or negative ads are bad. A fact of life - and effective, which is why they are used - but bad.
John Geer, a poli-sci prof at Vanderbilt, did a survey in a book published earlier this year ("In Defense of Negativity") where he looked at nearly every presidential campaign TV ad since 1964. He rated them; "better" ads discussed relevant political issues of the day, had specific substance, and (perhaps most importantly) had documentation.
Negative ads scored better on all those.
Geer's comment: "[With attack ads] the threshold is higher. You need documentation and support. If a candidate just attacks, without documentation to back it up, it rebounds against the attacker and he looks like a fool."
It doesn't mean I want to watch them, of course. (Or the positive, content-free ones either.)
What I'm reading: Jack Campbell, Dauntless
no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 04:35 pm (UTC)What this statement doesn't mention is whether the "fact" is real or made up. At this point, most of them are not real, at least not that I've seen. I am apalled by these things. I don't care for the ads anyway, like you, but the negative ones just turn my stomach and tell me that I don't like the candidate ...
no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 04:47 pm (UTC)As I mentioned, the negative ads tended to be much better grounded in documented facts. What the author found is that negative ads tend to be "truer" because most candidates won't call their opponent a wife-beater, or whatever, without a basis in reality. I didn't bother to post the article in full, but it was fairly persuasive.
no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 04:59 pm (UTC)One that Bill Mahar talked about Friday night on HBO deals with someone running for office on the east coast. He was accused in an ad of having called an escort service or something of that nature (phone sex, whatever) in a hotel that was paid for by his consituents. What *wasn't* mentioned is that:
a) he didn't make the call, one of his staff did;
b) the call was a wrong number, and the staff member immediately hung up and dialed the number he was TRYING to reach, which was another government agency, and the phone numbers were one digit off.
So while there is a "fact" in there, it's a half-lie as well, because they didn't tell the whole story, took something completely out of context and ran with it, and made a big stink of it.
This is just one example. Oh, and this ad was sponsored by the Republican Party. Bill Mahar showed the whole thing. It was cheesy and left a bad taste in the mouth, but more about the Republican Party than the candidate.
no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 05:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 05:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 07:00 pm (UTC)Sounds like the correction aspect of the system works!
no subject
Date: 2006-10-31 08:40 pm (UTC)That doesn't excuse the others. Kerry and the Gunboat stuff during the last Presidential campaign; the senator (or representative, don't know which, don't care) in Tenessee who's getting slammed by another Republican ad because gasp, he went to a Playboy Mansion party, and apparently they're lying about what went on, and so on. They make shit up. These are NOT facts. Yes, this guy went to the party, so what? What they claim happened at the party didn't ...
This may be asking a lot
Date: 2006-10-31 09:06 pm (UTC)Better? Okay. Now re-read the original post. Note that no mention is made of political party. (Both parties do negative ads, after all.)
The article I cited surprised me because it flew in the face of common wisdom (and my own general feeling) that negative ads have no redeeming value.
One of the points he was making is that they do. Which of these statements has more useful content (and is more likely to be backed up by documentable evidence):