Ad: "American Stories, American Solutions: 30 Minute Special"
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» Candidate/Organization: Barack Obama
» Other Candidates Mentioned: Barack Obama
» Year: 2008
» States: Alabama,
Alaska,
American Samoa,
Arizona,
Arkansas,
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
Delaware,
District of Columbia,
Florida,
Georgia,
Guam,
Hawaii,
Idaho,
Illinois,
Indiana,
Iowa,
Kansas,
Kentucky,
Louisiana,
Maine,
Maryland,
Massachusetts,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Mississippi,
Missouri,
Montana,
Nebraska,
Nevada,
New Hampshire,
New Jersey,
New Mexico,
New York,
North Carolina,
North Dakota,
Ohio,
Oklahoma,
Oregon,
Pennsylvania,
Puerto Rico,
Rhode Island,
South Carolina,
South Dakota,
Tennessee,
Texas,
Utah,
Vermont,
Virgin Islands,
Virginia,
Washington,
West Virginia,
Wisconsin,
Wyoming
» Race: Presidential
» Party: Democratic
» Funded by: Candidate
» Disseminations: TV, Web
Ad Content
» Cues: A Common Man/Woman, Candidate Present, Candidate's Family, Childhood, Children, Church, Debate Setting, Elderly, Father, Flag, Hope, Jobs, Narrator, On-screen Writing, Outdoors, Parents, Photographs
» Issues: anti-Washington, Bipartisanship, Economy, Jobs, Values
» Tone: Positive
» Types: Biographical, Emotional, Issue, Personal, Record
» Music: Inspirational
» Narrator: Male
» Language: English
Analysis
By Tom Shales: Barack Obama fired the final salvo in the great battle of images that is the 2008 presidential campaign last night with a half-hour, multimillion-dollar television infomercial that could be considered not the "feel-good" but rather the "feel-better" movie of the year. Somehow both poetic and practical, spiritual and sensible, the paid political broadcast, which aired on seven major cable and broadcast networks (on Univision, it was identified as "Historias Americanas"), was a montage of montages, a series of seamlessly blended segments interweaving the stories of embattled Americans with visions of their deliverer, Guess Who. As political filmmaking, "Barack Obama: American Stories" was an elegant combination of pictures, sounds, voices and music designed not so much to sell America on Barack Obama as to communicate a sensibility. The film conveyed feelings, not facts -- specifically, a simulation of how it would feel to live in an America with Barack Obama in the White House. The tone and texture recalled the "morning in America" campaign film made on behalf of Ronald Reagan, a work designed to give the audience a sense of security and satisfaction; things are going to be all right. More...

