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Daisy (advertisement)

"Daisy", sometimes referred to as "Daisy Girl" or "Peace, Little Girl", is an American political advertisement that aired on television as part of Lyndon B. Johnson's 1964 presidential campaign. Though aired only once, it is considered one of the most important factors in Johnson's landslide victory over the Republican Party's candidate, Barry Goldwater, and a turning point in political and advertising history. A partnership between the Doyle Dane Bernbach agency and Tony Schwartz, the "Daisy" advertisement was designed to broadcast Johnson's anti-war and anti-nuclear positions. Goldwater was against the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and suggested the use of nuclear weapons in the Vietnam War, if necessary. The Johnson campaign used Goldwater's speeches to imply he would wage a nuclear war.

"Daisy"
Agency
Client
Running time60 seconds
Release date(s)September 7, 1964
CountryUnited States

The commercial begins with three-year-old Monique Corzilius standing in a meadow, picking the petals of a daisy as she counts from one to ten incorrectly. After she reaches "nine", she pauses, and a booming male voice is heard counting the numbers backward from "ten", in a manner similar to the start of a missile launch countdown. A zoom of the video still concentrates on the girl's right eye until her pupil fills the screen, which is then replaced by the flash and sound of a nuclear explosion. A voice-over by Johnson states emphatically, "These are the stakes! To make a world in which all of God's children can live, or to go into the dark. We must either love each other, or we must die."[1]

The ad was pulled after its initial broadcast but it continued to be replayed and analyzed by media, including the nightly news, talk shows, and news broadcasting agencies. The Johnson campaign was widely criticized for using the prospect of nuclear war, and implying that Goldwater would start one, to frighten voters. Several other Johnson campaign commercials would attack Goldwater without referring to him by name. Other campaigns have adopted and used the "Daisy" commercial since 1964.

Background edit

 
Lyndon B. Johnson's portrait, taken in December 1963

Following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as president of the United States in November 1963.[2] Many saw Johnson as a ruthless politician effective at getting legislation passed.[3] During his tenure as the Senate Democratic leader, he was referred to as "Master of the Senate".[4] He often used rhetorical techniques, including the famous "Johnson Treatment", to gather votes in the Senate.[5] In July 1964, he successfully urged Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act.[6]

In the 1964 United States presidential election, the Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater challenged Johnson.[7] In the aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis, nuclear war was one of the central issues of the campaign.[8] A public opinion survey conducted in 1963 showed that 90 percent of the respondents believed that a nuclear war was possible, and 38 percent thought it was likely.[9] The same year, Goldwater voted against the ratification of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, which eventually was passed by the Senate by a vote of 80–14.[10][11] Goldwater campaigned on a right-wing message of cutting social programs and pursuing an aggressive military policy. Contrary to Johnson's policies, he suggested the use of nuclear weapons in the Vietnam War, if necessary.[12] The Johnson campaign used Goldwater's speeches and his extreme political positions to imply he was willing to wage a nuclear war.[13] They portrayed him as a dangerous extremist, notably mocking his campaign slogan "In your heart, you know he's right" with the counter-slogan "In your guts, you know he's nuts".[14]

A public opinion survey in August showed that Johnson's accomplishments in office would likely yield him only limited support in the campaign.[15] Goldwater ran an attack ad in which a group of children recited the Pledge of Allegiance until their voices are drowned out by Nikita Khrushchev, the then Soviet leader, proclaiming "We will bury you! Your children will be communists!"[16][17] The Johnson campaign used several rhetorical techniques in the campaign. They emphasized Goldwater's extremism and the dangers of trusting him with the powers of the presidency.[13][18] Jack Valenti, a special assistant to Johnson, suggested that "our main strength lies not so much in the for Johnson but in the against Goldwater" vote.[19]

Creation edit

Before 1964, campaign ads were almost always positive. The opposing candidate or their policies were rarely mentioned.[20] In mid-June, John P. Roche, president of Americans for Democratic Action (ADA), a progressive advocacy group, wrote a letter to Bill Moyers, Johnson's press secretary, which said that Johnson was in a "wonderful strategic position", and that they could run a "savage assault" against Goldwater. He suggested that a billboard could be devised reading "Goldwater in 64—Hotwater in 65?" with a mushroom cloud in the background.[21][22] Johnson agreed to devote considerable financial resources to an electronic media campaign—$3 million (equivalent to $28 million in 2022) for local radio advertisements, and another $1.7 million (equivalent to $16 million in 2022) for television network program advertisements.[23] On July 10, the polls showed Johnson leading with 77 percent to Goldwater's 18 percent.[24] By late July, Johnson's polling numbers had declined to 62 percent.[24]

A partnership between the Doyle Dane Bernbach advertising agency (DDB) and Tony Schwartz, a sound designer and media consultant who was hired for the project, created the "Daisy" advertisement.[25][26] The DDB team consisted of art director Sid Myers, producer Aaron Ehrlich, senior copywriter Stanley R. Lee, and junior copywriter Gene Case.[27][28][29] The aim of the advertisement was to broadcast Johnson's anti-war and anti-nuclear positions. Schwartz based this concept on a previous public service announcement he created for the United Nations.[30] DDB handled the casting and filming, while Schwartz managed the audio integration.[31][32] Both Schwartz and the DDB team claim credit for the ad's visual elements, although their true creators are unclear.[26]

Synopsis edit

The advertisement begins with three-year-old Monique Corzilius, standing in a meadow in New York City's Highbridge Park picking petals off a daisy, counting from one to nine while birds chirp in the background.[33][34][35] She makes several errors as she counts. When she was unable to count to ten successfully during filming, it was decided that her mistakes might be more appealing to the voters.[36] After she reaches "nine", the girl pauses, as if trying to remember the next number. A booming voice is heard counting the numbers backward from "ten" in a manner similar to the start of a missile launch countdown.[37] Seemingly in response to the countdown, the girl turns her head toward a point off-screen, and the scene freezes.[38]

As the countdown continues, a zoom of the video still focuses on the girl's right eye until her pupil fills the screen, eventually blacking it out as the countdown simultaneously reaches zero.[36] A bright flash and thunderous sound of a nuclear explosion, featuring footage of a detonation, replaces the blackness.[36] The scene cuts to footage of a mushroom cloud, and then to a final cut of a slowed close-up section of the incandescence in the nuclear explosion.[1] A voice-over from Johnson plays over all three pieces of nuclear detonation footage, stating emphatically, "These are the stakes! To make a world in which all of God's children can live, or to go into the dark. We must either love each other, or we must die."[1][39] At the end of the voice-over, the explosion footage is replaced by white letters on a black screen, written all in capitals, stating "Vote for President Johnson on November 3". A voice-over reads the words on the screen, then adds "The stakes are too high for you to stay home."[40]

Broadcast, impact, and controversy edit

Extract from "September 1, 1939"

"All I have is a voice
To undo the folded lie,
The romantic lie in the brain
Of the sensual man-in-the-street
And the lie of Authority
Whose buildings grope the sky:
There is no such thing as the State
And no one exists alone;
Hunger allows no choice
To the citizen or the police;
We must love one another or die."[41]

W. H. Auden

DDB decided to broadcast the ad on Labor Day, when Johnson was supposed to begin his formal fall campaign.[42] "Daisy" aired as a commercial only once,[43] during a September 7, 1964, telecast of the film David and Bathsheba on The NBC Monday Movie.[44] As the film is based on a biblical story, it is considered a family film and believed to be appropriate for the advertisement, as its audience would be one the Johnson campaign wanted to target.[45] It was aired at 9:50 p.m. EST, in the belief that most of the young children would be asleep, leaving their parents watching the film. It was hoped that these parents would visualize their child in Corzilius's role.[45] Unlike previous popular political advertisements and Goldwater's ads, "Daisy" is based entirely on striking imagery and sudden changes in visuals, the lack of music enhancing the sense of realism.[46][47] Author Maureen Corrigan has noted that Johnson's line: "We must either love each other, or we must die" echoes line 88 of W. H. Auden's poem "September 1, 1939", which reads: "We must love one another or die."[48] The words "children" and "the dark" are also found in the poem.[48]

According to Press Secretary Moyers, the White House switchboard "lit up with calls" protesting the ad. Johnson called him and asked, "Jesus Christ, what in the world happened?"[40] Though initially surprised by the protests, Johnson was later very pleased with the ad and wanted it to be broadcast again, but Moyers convinced him that this was a poor idea.[40][49] Moyers later said that the ad "accomplished its purpose in one showing. To repeat it would have been pointless."[49]

Initially, the commercial was referred to as "Peace, Little Girl".[50][51] Even though Goldwater's name was not mentioned, many Republican politicians and supporters objected to the commercial.[37][52] The same day, addressing his campaign rally in Detroit, Johnson said, "make no mistake, there's no such thing as a 'conventional nuclear weapon' ... To [use one] now is a political decision of the highest order. It would lead us down an uncertain path of blows and counter-blows whose outcome none may know."[53]

The ad appeared in stories on the nightly news and conversation programs and was frequently replayed and analyzed by network news broadcasting agencies.[47] Valenti suggested that broadcasting the ad just once was a calculated move.[40] Lloyd Wright of the Democratic National Committee said later "we all realized it would create quite a reaction", adding in a subsequent interview that Johnson's campaign strategy was based on defining Goldwater as "too impulsive to trust with the nation's defense systems".[54] Time magazine depicted Corzilius on the cover of its September 25 issue.[8][55] The Johnson campaign was criticized widely for trying to frighten voters by implying Goldwater would start a nuclear war. Thruston B. Morton, a Republican senator from Kentucky, told the Senate on September 16 that the Democratic National Committee was putting "panic-inspired falsehoods" on television;[56] and that President Johnson must take responsibility for them, adding the ad was aimed at "scaring the wits out of children in order to pressure their parents".[57] Within days of its broadcast, it was referred to as one of the most popular and controversial television commercials.[58] Fact magazine surveyed 12,000 psychiatrists, members of the American Psychiatric Association, asking whether Goldwater was "psychologically fit to serve as president of the United States".[59][60] Approximately 1,800 replies were received, among which were many claiming Goldwater was a "dangerous lunatic" and "compensated schizophrenic".[60] The publication of these results was controversial; Goldwater successfully sued and won $75,000 (equivalent to $631,000 in 2022) in punitive damages from Ralph Ginzburg, the magazine's publisher.[61] This ultimately led to the American Psychiatric Association implementing the "Goldwater rule", which prohibits psychiatrists from disclosing their opinions on a public figure's mental health unless they have personally examined them and obtained their consent.[62]

 
Barry Goldwater in September 1962

Nearly three weeks after its broadcast, Goldwater said that "the homes of America are horrified and the intelligence of Americans is insulted by weird television advertising by which this Administration threatens the end of the world unless all‐wise Lyndon is given the nation for his very own."[58] In his subsequent speeches, Goldwater defended his views and insisted he wanted "peace through preparedness".[63] In late September, he persuaded former president Dwight D. Eisenhower to appear in a filmed interview. He asked Eisenhower: "Our opponents are referring to us as warmongers, and I'd like to know what your opinion of that would be?"[63] Eisenhower referred to Johnson's accusations as "actual tommyrot [nonsense]".[63] Though the exact viewership of the commercial is unknown, Robert Mann, the author of the book Daisy Petals and Mushroom Clouds, estimates that approximately a hundred million people saw it.[64] Mann said, "What one of the brilliant aspects of the daisy girl spot was they never mentioned Barry Goldwater, never showed his image, because they didn't need to. The audience already had a lot of information on Goldwater's reckless positions and statements on nuclear war and nuclear weapons ... they were trying to use what the voters already knew."[64]

A few days later, the Johnson campaign released another advertisement, known as the "Ice-cream ad".[65] The advertisement begins with a young girl eating ice-cream, while a female voice-over warns of the presence of radioactive isotopes like strontium-90 and caesium-137, which originate from atomic explosions, in the food. She discusses the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, and Goldwater's positions against it, stating that if he is elected, "they might start testing [atomic bombs] all over again".[66] The Johnson campaign ran further advertisements in a similar vein, including "Confessions of a Republican" and "Eastern Seaboard".[67] A few days before the election, polls showed Johnson leading with 61 percent to Goldwater's 39 percent.[68] Johnson won the election in a landslide victory, receiving 486 electoral votes to Goldwater's 52.[69] Johnson received one of the largest margins of the popular vote in the United States history, defeating Goldwater by almost 15 million votes (22.6 percent).[70] As of the 2020 presidential election, Johnson has gained the highest share of the popular vote in a presidential election since it first became widespread in the 1824 election, and the "Daisy" ad is considered one of the most important factors in his landslide victory.[25]

Political usage and aftermath edit

The "Daisy" advertisement has been used or referenced in multiple political campaigns since first being shown and was an important turning point in political and advertising history. In his unsuccessful 1984 presidential campaign, Democratic nominee Walter Mondale created a commercial on secret communist nuclear weapons in space, which several newspapers compared with "Daisy" because Mondale's ad had a similar nuclear theme.[71][72][73] In his unsuccessful 1996 presidential campaign, Republican nominee Bob Dole used a short clip of "Daisy" in his "The Threat" commercial; during the piece, a voice-over emphatically states "Thirty years ago, the biggest threat to her [the 'Daisy' girl] was nuclear war. Today, the threat is drugs."[74][75] Other uses of "Daisy" include the 2007 Australian federal election, where the Australian Greens re-made it as one of their campaign ads on climate change.[76] "Daisy" was also re-made in 2010 by the American Values Network, to encourage voters to ask their senators to ratify the New START program.[77] Robert Mann concluded that "DDB brought to politics the same approach it applied to advertising automobiles, soap, and other products. In that way, "Daisy" Girl helped usher political advertising into the modern era."[78]

Corzilius became known publicly as the "Daisy" girl after the broadcast of the commercial, although she did not see the commercial herself until the 2000s, when she searched for it on the Internet.[36][55] Another child actor, Birgitte Olsen, falsely claimed that she was the girl in the commercial.[79] While campaigning for the 2016 presidential election, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton enlisted Corzilius to appear in a sequel to the ad that argued that Donald Trump was not competent to control nuclear weapons.[80] In the ad Corzilius said, "The fear of nuclear war that we had as children, I never thought our children would ever have to deal with that again. And to see that coming forward in this election is really scary."[81][82]

Almost 25 years after the commercial was first broadcast, when asked whether he approved of the "Daisy" commercial, Bill Moyers said:

Yes I did, and I regret that we were in on the first wave of the future. The ad was intended to remind voters of Johnson's prudence; it wasn't meant to make you think Barry Goldwater was a warmonger – but that's how a lot of people interpreted it. If my memory serves me correctly, we never touched on Vietnam in any of the political spots. It haunts me all this time that Johnson was portrayed as the peacemaker in that campaign, but he committed the country to a long, bloody war in Vietnam.[83]

See also edit

References edit

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  6. ^ "Landmark Legislation: The Civil Rights Act of 1964". United States Senate. from the original on April 16, 2019. Retrieved September 19, 2021.
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Works cited edit

Further reading edit

  • Lariscy, Ruth Ann Weaver; Tinkham, Spencer F. (1999). "The Sleeper Effect and Negative Political Advertising". Journal of Advertising. 28 (4): 13–30. doi:10.1080/00913367.1999.10673593. JSTOR 4189122.

External links edit

daisy, advertisement, daisy, sometimes, referred, daisy, girl, peace, little, girl, american, political, advertisement, that, aired, television, part, lyndon, johnson, 1964, presidential, campaign, though, aired, only, once, considered, most, important, factor. Daisy sometimes referred to as Daisy Girl or Peace Little Girl is an American political advertisement that aired on television as part of Lyndon B Johnson s 1964 presidential campaign Though aired only once it is considered one of the most important factors in Johnson s landslide victory over the Republican Party s candidate Barry Goldwater and a turning point in political and advertising history A partnership between the Doyle Dane Bernbach agency and Tony Schwartz the Daisy advertisement was designed to broadcast Johnson s anti war and anti nuclear positions Goldwater was against the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and suggested the use of nuclear weapons in the Vietnam War if necessary The Johnson campaign used Goldwater s speeches to imply he would wage a nuclear war Daisy source source source source source source source source track track track track track track track track AgencyDoyle Dane Bernbach Tony SchwartzClientDemocratic National Committee Lyndon B Johnson 1964 presidential campaignRunning time60 secondsRelease date s September 7 1964CountryUnited StatesThe commercial begins with three year old Monique Corzilius standing in a meadow picking the petals of a daisy as she counts from one to ten incorrectly After she reaches nine she pauses and a booming male voice is heard counting the numbers backward from ten in a manner similar to the start of a missile launch countdown A zoom of the video still concentrates on the girl s right eye until her pupil fills the screen which is then replaced by the flash and sound of a nuclear explosion A voice over by Johnson states emphatically These are the stakes To make a world in which all of God s children can live or to go into the dark We must either love each other or we must die 1 The ad was pulled after its initial broadcast but it continued to be replayed and analyzed by media including the nightly news talk shows and news broadcasting agencies The Johnson campaign was widely criticized for using the prospect of nuclear war and implying that Goldwater would start one to frighten voters Several other Johnson campaign commercials would attack Goldwater without referring to him by name Other campaigns have adopted and used the Daisy commercial since 1964 Contents 1 Background 2 Creation 3 Synopsis 4 Broadcast impact and controversy 5 Political usage and aftermath 6 See also 7 References 8 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editFurther information Lyndon B Johnson 1964 presidential campaign nbsp Lyndon B Johnson s portrait taken in December 1963Following the assassination of John F Kennedy Vice President Lyndon B Johnson was sworn in as president of the United States in November 1963 2 Many saw Johnson as a ruthless politician effective at getting legislation passed 3 During his tenure as the Senate Democratic leader he was referred to as Master of the Senate 4 He often used rhetorical techniques including the famous Johnson Treatment to gather votes in the Senate 5 In July 1964 he successfully urged Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act 6 In the 1964 United States presidential election the Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater challenged Johnson 7 In the aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis nuclear war was one of the central issues of the campaign 8 A public opinion survey conducted in 1963 showed that 90 percent of the respondents believed that a nuclear war was possible and 38 percent thought it was likely 9 The same year Goldwater voted against the ratification of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty which eventually was passed by the Senate by a vote of 80 14 10 11 Goldwater campaigned on a right wing message of cutting social programs and pursuing an aggressive military policy Contrary to Johnson s policies he suggested the use of nuclear weapons in the Vietnam War if necessary 12 The Johnson campaign used Goldwater s speeches and his extreme political positions to imply he was willing to wage a nuclear war 13 They portrayed him as a dangerous extremist notably mocking his campaign slogan In your heart you know he s right with the counter slogan In your guts you know he s nuts 14 A public opinion survey in August showed that Johnson s accomplishments in office would likely yield him only limited support in the campaign 15 Goldwater ran an attack ad in which a group of children recited the Pledge of Allegiance until their voices are drowned out by Nikita Khrushchev the then Soviet leader proclaiming We will bury you Your children will be communists 16 17 The Johnson campaign used several rhetorical techniques in the campaign They emphasized Goldwater s extremism and the dangers of trusting him with the powers of the presidency 13 18 Jack Valenti a special assistant to Johnson suggested that our main strength lies not so much in the for Johnson but in the against Goldwater vote 19 Creation editBefore 1964 campaign ads were almost always positive The opposing candidate or their policies were rarely mentioned 20 In mid June John P Roche president of Americans for Democratic Action ADA a progressive advocacy group wrote a letter to Bill Moyers Johnson s press secretary which said that Johnson was in a wonderful strategic position and that they could run a savage assault against Goldwater He suggested that a billboard could be devised reading Goldwater in 64 Hotwater in 65 with a mushroom cloud in the background 21 22 Johnson agreed to devote considerable financial resources to an electronic media campaign 3 million equivalent to 28 million in 2022 for local radio advertisements and another 1 7 million equivalent to 16 million in 2022 for television network program advertisements 23 On July 10 the polls showed Johnson leading with 77 percent to Goldwater s 18 percent 24 By late July Johnson s polling numbers had declined to 62 percent 24 A partnership between the Doyle Dane Bernbach advertising agency DDB and Tony Schwartz a sound designer and media consultant who was hired for the project created the Daisy advertisement 25 26 The DDB team consisted of art director Sid Myers producer Aaron Ehrlich senior copywriter Stanley R Lee and junior copywriter Gene Case 27 28 29 The aim of the advertisement was to broadcast Johnson s anti war and anti nuclear positions Schwartz based this concept on a previous public service announcement he created for the United Nations 30 DDB handled the casting and filming while Schwartz managed the audio integration 31 32 Both Schwartz and the DDB team claim credit for the ad s visual elements although their true creators are unclear 26 Synopsis editThe advertisement begins with three year old Monique Corzilius standing in a meadow in New York City s Highbridge Park picking petals off a daisy counting from one to nine while birds chirp in the background 33 34 35 She makes several errors as she counts When she was unable to count to ten successfully during filming it was decided that her mistakes might be more appealing to the voters 36 After she reaches nine the girl pauses as if trying to remember the next number A booming voice is heard counting the numbers backward from ten in a manner similar to the start of a missile launch countdown 37 Seemingly in response to the countdown the girl turns her head toward a point off screen and the scene freezes 38 As the countdown continues a zoom of the video still focuses on the girl s right eye until her pupil fills the screen eventually blacking it out as the countdown simultaneously reaches zero 36 A bright flash and thunderous sound of a nuclear explosion featuring footage of a detonation replaces the blackness 36 The scene cuts to footage of a mushroom cloud and then to a final cut of a slowed close up section of the incandescence in the nuclear explosion 1 A voice over from Johnson plays over all three pieces of nuclear detonation footage stating emphatically These are the stakes To make a world in which all of God s children can live or to go into the dark We must either love each other or we must die 1 39 At the end of the voice over the explosion footage is replaced by white letters on a black screen written all in capitals stating Vote for President Johnson on November 3 A voice over reads the words on the screen then adds The stakes are too high for you to stay home 40 Broadcast impact and controversy editExtract from September 1 1939 All I have is a voice To undo the folded lie The romantic lie in the brain Of the sensual man in the street And the lie of Authority Whose buildings grope the sky There is no such thing as the State And no one exists alone Hunger allows no choice To the citizen or the police We must love one another or die 41 W H Auden DDB decided to broadcast the ad on Labor Day when Johnson was supposed to begin his formal fall campaign 42 Daisy aired as a commercial only once 43 during a September 7 1964 telecast of the film David and Bathsheba on The NBC Monday Movie 44 As the film is based on a biblical story it is considered a family film and believed to be appropriate for the advertisement as its audience would be one the Johnson campaign wanted to target 45 It was aired at 9 50 p m EST in the belief that most of the young children would be asleep leaving their parents watching the film It was hoped that these parents would visualize their child in Corzilius s role 45 Unlike previous popular political advertisements and Goldwater s ads Daisy is based entirely on striking imagery and sudden changes in visuals the lack of music enhancing the sense of realism 46 47 Author Maureen Corrigan has noted that Johnson s line We must either love each other or we must die echoes line 88 of W H Auden s poem September 1 1939 which reads We must love one another or die 48 The words children and the dark are also found in the poem 48 According to Press Secretary Moyers the White House switchboard lit up with calls protesting the ad Johnson called him and asked Jesus Christ what in the world happened 40 Though initially surprised by the protests Johnson was later very pleased with the ad and wanted it to be broadcast again but Moyers convinced him that this was a poor idea 40 49 Moyers later said that the ad accomplished its purpose in one showing To repeat it would have been pointless 49 Initially the commercial was referred to as Peace Little Girl 50 51 Even though Goldwater s name was not mentioned many Republican politicians and supporters objected to the commercial 37 52 The same day addressing his campaign rally in Detroit Johnson said make no mistake there s no such thing as a conventional nuclear weapon To use one now is a political decision of the highest order It would lead us down an uncertain path of blows and counter blows whose outcome none may know 53 The ad appeared in stories on the nightly news and conversation programs and was frequently replayed and analyzed by network news broadcasting agencies 47 Valenti suggested that broadcasting the ad just once was a calculated move 40 Lloyd Wright of the Democratic National Committee said later we all realized it would create quite a reaction adding in a subsequent interview that Johnson s campaign strategy was based on defining Goldwater as too impulsive to trust with the nation s defense systems 54 Time magazine depicted Corzilius on the cover of its September 25 issue 8 55 The Johnson campaign was criticized widely for trying to frighten voters by implying Goldwater would start a nuclear war Thruston B Morton a Republican senator from Kentucky told the Senate on September 16 that the Democratic National Committee was putting panic inspired falsehoods on television 56 and that President Johnson must take responsibility for them adding the ad was aimed at scaring the wits out of children in order to pressure their parents 57 Within days of its broadcast it was referred to as one of the most popular and controversial television commercials 58 Fact magazine surveyed 12 000 psychiatrists members of the American Psychiatric Association asking whether Goldwater was psychologically fit to serve as president of the United States 59 60 Approximately 1 800 replies were received among which were many claiming Goldwater was a dangerous lunatic and compensated schizophrenic 60 The publication of these results was controversial Goldwater successfully sued and won 75 000 equivalent to 631 000 in 2022 in punitive damages from Ralph Ginzburg the magazine s publisher 61 This ultimately led to the American Psychiatric Association implementing the Goldwater rule which prohibits psychiatrists from disclosing their opinions on a public figure s mental health unless they have personally examined them and obtained their consent 62 nbsp Barry Goldwater in September 1962Nearly three weeks after its broadcast Goldwater said that the homes of America are horrified and the intelligence of Americans is insulted by weird television advertising by which this Administration threatens the end of the world unless all wise Lyndon is given the nation for his very own 58 In his subsequent speeches Goldwater defended his views and insisted he wanted peace through preparedness 63 In late September he persuaded former president Dwight D Eisenhower to appear in a filmed interview He asked Eisenhower Our opponents are referring to us as warmongers and I d like to know what your opinion of that would be 63 Eisenhower referred to Johnson s accusations as actual tommyrot nonsense 63 Though the exact viewership of the commercial is unknown Robert Mann the author of the book Daisy Petals and Mushroom Clouds estimates that approximately a hundred million people saw it 64 Mann said What one of the brilliant aspects of the daisy girl spot was they never mentioned Barry Goldwater never showed his image because they didn t need to The audience already had a lot of information on Goldwater s reckless positions and statements on nuclear war and nuclear weapons they were trying to use what the voters already knew 64 A few days later the Johnson campaign released another advertisement known as the Ice cream ad 65 The advertisement begins with a young girl eating ice cream while a female voice over warns of the presence of radioactive isotopes like strontium 90 and caesium 137 which originate from atomic explosions in the food She discusses the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and Goldwater s positions against it stating that if he is elected they might start testing atomic bombs all over again 66 The Johnson campaign ran further advertisements in a similar vein including Confessions of a Republican and Eastern Seaboard 67 A few days before the election polls showed Johnson leading with 61 percent to Goldwater s 39 percent 68 Johnson won the election in a landslide victory receiving 486 electoral votes to Goldwater s 52 69 Johnson received one of the largest margins of the popular vote in the United States history defeating Goldwater by almost 15 million votes 22 6 percent 70 As of the 2020 presidential election Johnson has gained the highest share of the popular vote in a presidential election since it first became widespread in the 1824 election and the Daisy ad is considered one of the most important factors in his landslide victory 25 Political usage and aftermath editThe Daisy advertisement has been used or referenced in multiple political campaigns since first being shown and was an important turning point in political and advertising history In his unsuccessful 1984 presidential campaign Democratic nominee Walter Mondale created a commercial on secret communist nuclear weapons in space which several newspapers compared with Daisy because Mondale s ad had a similar nuclear theme 71 72 73 In his unsuccessful 1996 presidential campaign Republican nominee Bob Dole used a short clip of Daisy in his The Threat commercial during the piece a voice over emphatically states Thirty years ago the biggest threat to her the Daisy girl was nuclear war Today the threat is drugs 74 75 Other uses of Daisy include the 2007 Australian federal election where the Australian Greens re made it as one of their campaign ads on climate change 76 Daisy was also re made in 2010 by the American Values Network to encourage voters to ask their senators to ratify the New START program 77 Robert Mann concluded that DDB brought to politics the same approach it applied to advertising automobiles soap and other products In that way Daisy Girl helped usher political advertising into the modern era 78 Corzilius became known publicly as the Daisy girl after the broadcast of the commercial although she did not see the commercial herself until the 2000s when she searched for it on the Internet 36 55 Another child actor Birgitte Olsen falsely claimed that she was the girl in the commercial 79 While campaigning for the 2016 presidential election Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton enlisted Corzilius to appear in a sequel to the ad that argued that Donald Trump was not competent to control nuclear weapons 80 In the ad Corzilius said The fear of nuclear war that we had as children I never thought our children would ever have to deal with that again And to see that coming forward in this election is really scary 81 82 Almost 25 years after the commercial was first broadcast when asked whether he approved of the Daisy commercial Bill Moyers said Yes I did and I regret that we were in on the first wave of the future The ad was intended to remind voters of Johnson s prudence it wasn t meant to make you think Barry Goldwater was a warmonger but that s how a lot of people interpreted it If my memory serves me correctly we never touched on Vietnam in any of the political spots It haunts me all this time that Johnson was portrayed as the peacemaker in that campaign but he committed the country to a long bloody war in Vietnam 83 See also editComparative advertising FearmongeringReferences edit a b c Hess 1980 p 99 Wicker Tom November 23 1963 Kennedy is Killed by Sniper as he Rides in Car in Dallas Johnson Sworn in on Plane The New York Times Archived from the original on June 10 2021 Retrieved September 19 2021 Kearns 1976 p 393 Lyndon B Johnson Master of the Senate United States Senate Archived from the original on September 16 2021 Retrieved September 19 2021 Wicker Tom May 9 2002 Remembering the Johnson Treatment The New York Times Archived from the original on April 9 2014 Retrieved September 19 2021 Landmark Legislation The Civil Rights Act of 1964 United States Senate Archived from the original on April 16 2019 Retrieved September 19 2021 Lerner 1995 p 751 a b Rothman Lily September 7 2014 September 7 1964 History s Most Infamous Political Ads Time Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Mann 2011 pp 12 13 Barry Goldwater What He Says and Thinks Nuclear Test Ban The Telegraph July 22 1964 Archived from the original on September 17 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 via Newspapers com Kimball Daryl Taheran Shervin September 22 2015 Nuclear Testing and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty CTBT Timeline Arms Control Association Archived from the original on August 29 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 Donaldson 2003 p 246 a b Dallek 2004 p 184 Barry Goldwater the conservative s conservative dies at 89 Racine Journal Times May 30 1998 Archived from the original on September 28 2021 Retrieved September 28 2021 via Newspapers com Dallek 2004 p 182 Twitchell 2000 p 159 Katz Jessy September 28 1995 Keeping 30 second bits of political history on ice The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on July 5 2021 Retrieved August 17 2021 Bump 2014 p 1 Dallek 2004 p 183 Donaldson 2003 p 247 Roche John P June 12 1964 John P Roche letter to Bill Moyers PDF Conelrad com Archived PDF from the original on June 13 2018 Retrieved August 10 2021 via Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library and Museum Mann 2011 pp 48 50 Dallek 2004 p 185 a b Mann 2011 p 47 a b Mashon Mike September 7 2016 Daisy The Most Effective Political Commercial Ever Library of Congress Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 a b Fox Margalit June 30 2008 Much sought after media man and father of the daisy ad The Montreal Gazette Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Bates amp Diamond 1992 p 123 Weingarten Elizabeth February 27 2012 The Grandfather of Negative Campaign Ads Gets Back in the Game The Atlantic Archived from the original on March 5 2021 Retrieved September 21 2021 The Men Who Made Daisy Conelrad com Archived from the original on April 21 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Daisy The Complete History of An Infamous and Iconic Ad Conelrad com Archived from the original on September 16 2008 Retrieved May 16 2016 Marshall 1997 p 232 Newman 1999 pp 737 738 Hruby Patrick September 24 2012 Where Are They Now Daisy Girl The Washington Times Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 11 2021 Novicki Dan September 7 2019 The Daisy Girl political ad still haunting 50 years later USA Today Archived from the original on May 11 2020 Retrieved August 17 2021 Twitchell 2000 p 157 a b c d Daly Michael March 19 2012 A Grown Daisy Girl Recalls Her Infamous Attack Ad Newsweek Archived from the original on December 24 2020 Retrieved August 10 2021 a b Altschuler 1990 p 12 Kiley Brendan July 3 2016 New play Daisy explores the commercial that changed U S politics The Seattle Times Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Kavanagh 1995 p 155 a b c d Dallek 2004 p 186 Taylor 1992 p 483 Mann 2011 pp 62 63 Jost et al 2017 p 327 Twitchell 2000 p 158 a b Bump 2014 p 2 Bump 2014 p 3 a b Christiansen 2018 p 61 a b Corrigan Maureen September 25 2019 W H Auden s Poem September 1 1939 Still Resonates in Times of Crisis WJCT Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 11 2021 a b Shales Tom February 17 1983 Merlin of the Media The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2021 TV Foul Cry Hurled At Demos 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Girl returns for Hillary Clinton The Arizona Republic Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 11 2021 Hall Jane November 12 1989 Bill Moyers Holds a Mirror Up to America The veteran journalist airs his views on tabloid TV celebrity journalism and dramatic reenactments Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 11 2021 Works cited editGuide to U S Elections Sage 2009 ISBN 978 1 60426 536 1 Altschuler Bruce E 1990 LBJ and the Polls University of Florida Press ISBN 978 0 8130 1894 2 OL 1876555M Bates Stephen Diamond Edwin 1992 The Spot The Rise of Political Advertising on Television MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 54065 0 Bump Allison 2014 Peace Love and Nuclear Explosions Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies University of Iowa Archived from the original on August 11 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Christiansen Paul 2018 Daisies for Peace 1964 Orchestrating Public Opinion How Music Persuades in Television Political Ads for US Presidential Campaigns 1952 2016 Amsterdam University Press pp 56 62 ISBN 978 90 485 3167 7 JSTOR j ctv8pzcv5 8 Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Retrieved August 10 2021 Dallek Robert 2004 Lyndon B Johnson Portrait of a President Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515920 2 LCCN 2003011360 OL 26362769M Donaldson Gary 2003 Liberalism s Last Hurrah The Presidential Campaign of 1964 M E Sharpe ISBN 978 0 7656 1119 2 LCCN 2002029207 OL 3562380M Hess Stephen 1980 Does Foreign Policy Really Matter The Wilson Quarterly Vol 4 no 1 pp 96 112 JSTOR 40255755 Jost John T Stern Chadly Rule Nicholas O Sterling Joanna 2017 The Politics of Fear Is There an Ideological Asymmetry In Existential Motivation PDF Social Cognition Guilford Press 35 4 327 doi 10 1521 soco 2017 35 4 324 S2CID 53582796 Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2021 Retrieved August 17 2021 Kavanagh Dennis 1995 Election Campaigning The New Marketing of Politics Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19811 6 LCCN 94048275 OL 1121507M Kearns Doris 1976 Lyndon Johnson s Political Personality Political Science Quarterly Academy of Political Science 91 3 385 409 doi 10 2307 2148933 JSTOR 2148933 Kroll Jerome Pouncey Claire 2016 The Ethics of APA s Goldwater Rule Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law 44 2 226 235 ISSN 1093 6793 PMID 27236179 Lerner Mitchell 1995 Vietnam and the 1964 Election A Defense of Lyndon Johnson Presidential Studies Quarterly Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies 25 4 751 766 JSTOR 27551510 Marshall P David 1997 Celebrity and Power Fame in Contemporary Culture University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 2725 7 LCCN 96031522 OL 993025M Newman Bruce I 1999 Handbook of Political Marketing SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0 7619 1109 8 LCCN 99006226 OL 16949539M Mann Robert 2011 Daisy Petals and Mushroom Clouds LBJ Barry Goldwater and the Ad That Changed American Politics Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 4293 6 Taylor Charles 1992 Sources of the Self The Making of the Modern Identity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 42949 8 Twitchell James 2000 Twenty Ads That Shook the World Crown Publishing Group pp 154 161 ISBN 978 0 609 60563 9 LCCN 99042477 OL 7585663M Further reading editLariscy Ruth Ann Weaver Tinkham Spencer F 1999 The Sleeper Effect and Negative Political Advertising Journal of Advertising 28 4 13 30 doi 10 1080 00913367 1999 10673593 JSTOR 4189122 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daisy advertisement Transcript of Peace Little Girl 1964 Democratic Campaign Spot via Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum The 1964 Daisy Girl Advertisement C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daisy advertisement amp oldid 1206357859, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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