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How We Advertised America

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Presentation on theme: "How We Advertised America"— Presentation transcript:

1 How We Advertised America
George Creel

2 The “Second Lines” The Second Lines: Battle for Public Mind (3)
“Back of the firing-line, back of the armies and navies…another struggle waged with the same intensity and with equal significance attaching to its victories and defeats.” “It was the fight for the minds of men, for the ‘conquest of their convictions.” (3)

3 The “Second Lines” Public Opinion and the “Great War”
American public was in large part opposed to US intervention in the First World War. Wilson: Anti-War Candidate (1916) Wilson ran for reelection in 1916 on the promise to keep the US out of the war, which had been raging on the Continent for almost two years.

4 The “Second Lines” Public Opinion and the “Great War”
When Wilson chose to enter the conflict in 1917, it then became necessary to explain why he (and the nation’s political leaders, in general) felt compelled to break his pledge of non-interference. Public Opinion Critical to War Effort For these reasons, shaping public opinion played a more significant role in the WWI than it had in any previous war.

5 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas
The war was not simply a military contest but a conflict “between opposed ideals and moral verdicts.” Hearts and Minds This battle would be a battle for the “hearts and minds” of the American public.

6 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas
End Public Uncertainty Need to eradicate the confusion and uncertainty people feel about the war in Europe. Forge “One White-Hot Mass of Instinct” “What we had to have was no mere surface unity, but a passionate belief in the justice of American cause that should weld the people…into one white-hot mass of instinct.” Create a “War-Will”

7 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures:
The Pitch: Contrast the 1) Threat of German Culture with: 2) The purity, and popularity of the US War Effort.

8 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures:
The Organization: Committee on Public Information (CPI) To organize the national propaganda effort, the government established a single committee, led by George Creel, known as the Committee on Public Information. It was also referred to as the “Creel Committee.” Who was Creel?

9 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures:
The CPI: Organizational Scope The work of the Committee was not only politically, but organizationally unprecedented. CPI Dimensions: Staff: 150,000 (mostly volunteer) Budget: 6.8 million

10 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures:
The Objective: Grassroots Mobilization The CPI “reached deep into every American community” and “every corner of the civilized… [with] the full message of America Idealism.”

11 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures:
The Plan: 1) Pamphlet Outlining Amer. Ideals 2) Coordinated Communication: a. Speaking Division b. Public War Exhibits c. Advertising Campaign d. Press Strategy f. Posters/Art

12 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures:
a. Speaking Division 1) Speaking Tours 2) 75, 000 Speakers 3) 755,190 speeches, 5200 communities b. Public War Exhibits 1) Every State Fair 2) Chicago: 2 million attended 3) Raised $ 1.4 million

13 The “Second Lines” Packaging the War: A War of ideas and Cultures
c. Advertising Campaign: 1) Press, Periodical 2) Still Photography 3) Film/Movie reels d. Press Strategy: 1) Official newspaper: 100k daily circulation 2) Nationally syndicated columns, Op-eds 3) Embedded Reporters (“permit system,” 9) f. Posters/Art: 1) Created over 1400 prints


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