Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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It's A Golden Age For Magazine Covers

It's A Golden Age For Magazine Covers | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The 2016 election and new administration come accompanied by a renaissance of political image-making: The release of new cover art by magazines like Der Spiegel and Time are met with thousands of shares and retweets. Each photograph and illustration is analyzed and picked apart by commentators. And fomenting all of this is a protest movement with a flair for signage that remixes, reappropriates, and borrows the work of these artists.

Not since George Lois's iconic work for Esquire in the '60s has cover art enjoyed so much popular and critical success. It’s a fascinating time to be an illustrator, designer, or painter working on political subjects. Co.Design asked some of the voices and pens behind today’s iconic cover art about their work—and what’s changed in the past three months....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The new administration has provided the mother lode of ideas for magazine covers, political cartoons and cable TV news programming.

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How Donald Trump Hijacked the Authenticity of the Web — Backchannel

How Donald Trump Hijacked the Authenticity of the Web — Backchannel | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

His credibility is zero, but by attacking political correctness he projects a true voice to his internet followers

In most ways, Donald Trump has taken poor advantage of the Net. He has not used it for organizing and spreading a movement the way the Occupy Wall Street or Arab Spring did. He has not used it to raise essential funding for his campaign, as Bernie Sanders does. He has not used it to build community among his supporters as presidential candidates since Howard Dean in 2004 have.

 

He has not even used it as the primary vehicle for getting his message out, relying instead on the countless hours of coverage broadcast media have provided for free — although he’s obviously no slouch at social media. But despite these missed opportunities, Donald Trump has utterly excelled in one single aspect of the Net. Leveraging — and perverting — one of its key values: Authentic speech.


Speech on the Net sounds very different than the voice of old media. When I was growing up, the media’s authoritative voice had the same accent. It was professionally enunciated, often presented as neutral and stripped of personal belief, always calm, and overwhelmingly male. Then the Internet liberated our voices, training us to expect people to speak for and as themselves, with all their idiosyncrasies and imperfections.


Trump’s voice is indeed authentic in that sense. After all, he is the first major candidate for the presidency of the United States who clearly writes his own tweets. Hillary Clinton (whom I support) tweets out carefully prepared campaign points that seem obviously to have been written by her staff — especially when the tweets are dispatched while Clinton is making a point in a live debate. Donald, on the other hand, just says whatever is crossing his mind at that moment, much of which is nasty, degrading, and untrue. The lack of a filter, the weird punctuation, the very clumsiness of its expression makes Trump’s Internet speech seem much more authentic than Clinton’s....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Interesting look at Donald Trump and social media.

leechdisplay's comment, June 16, 2016 11:25 PM
Thats cold
Juan Francisco García's curator insight, June 19, 2016 11:26 AM
Unbelievable
rachel caduri's curator insight, July 9, 2016 12:40 PM

This article makes a lot of valid points however, I think they are incorrect about one thing. While Donald Trump has said and done many unfavorable things, he has been able to do one thing correct, and that is create a following. While his ideas are not something I personally agree with, there are many that do and he has brought them all together. He has used the mass communication powers that Twitter allows to generate a community and voter-base. Like the article says, Trump has a certain authenticity and genuine nature about him and his tweets, that people are drawn to. Like one of module's discussed, CMC often allows people to hide behind carefully crafted tweets, messages, and profile pages in online dating. Though it is not for dating purposes, politicians and candidates do the same thing. They create an online and public persona based on what people want. Trump however, has broken all these rules and ideas, and a significant amount of people found that honesty refreshing. He did not hide behind political correctness as many have done.

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What Pantone Color Is Donald Trump?

What Pantone Color Is Donald Trump? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

No, Donald Trump didn't descend from Loompaland, but one look at his unmistakably orange complexion, and you'd be forgiven for thinking so.


Puzzled citizens have questioned the origins of the Republican presidential candidate's orange skin tone: Is it a Jersey Shore spray tan? The work of a cancer-causing tanning bed? The after-effects of chemical peels? A beta-carotene addiction? (Perhaps if he squeezed a few carrots between taco bowls.) Some have speculated what he would look like without the rumored fake tan.


We may never know the cause of Trump's sui generis skin tone—just as we may never know his firm policy stances—but we can deduce the nearest color, and what it means, thanks to the expert eye of the color company Pantone and its standards manuals. It's difficult to boil him down to just one color, but if you blended together all his hues, you would probably get Pantone 16-1449: the aptly named Gold Flame....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Political fun: The color gurus at Pantone solve one of this election season's greatest quandaries: What shade of orange is Donald Trump?

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