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  1. 18 de jun. de 1984 · Television and the Presidency: Directed by Roger Ailes. With Robert Bradsell, Barry Goldwater, E.G. Marshall, Richard Nixon. A program that documents the increasing role of television's influence on Presidential elections since 1952.

    • Secondary Sources
    • Primary Sources
    • Discussion Questions
    • Research Activity: The 1960 Television Debates
    Kathryn Cramer Brownell, “The Making of the Celebrity Presidency,” in Recapturing the Oval Office: New Historical Approaches to the American Presidency, ed. Brian Balogh and Bruce J. Schulman. (Ith...
    Susan J. Douglas, “Presidents and the Media,” in Recapturing the Oval Office: New Historical Approaches to the American Presidency, ed. Brian Balogh and Bruce J. Schulman. (Ithaca: Cornell Universi...

    Thoughts and Ideas Re: Citizens TV, August 28, 1956, Folder, Talent, Box 7, Young & Rubicam, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library. Media Strategy Outline, Folder, Media Campaign: Wisconsin Primary, 1/21/60–4/5/60, Box 38, Political, Pre-Administration, Robert F. Kennedy Papers, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library. Memorandum for Mr. Garment, ...

    How did “new media” shape communication strategies from Eisenhower to Nixon?  How do these political advertisements evolve over time?
    What lessons about media successes and failures do the members of Nixon’s media team learn from studying Eisenhower and Kennedy’s campaigns?
    Kathryn Cramer Brownell argues that Kennedy, and then Nixon, each used a “slick, high-octane machine” to transform himself into a celebrity to win the White House. How, specifically, does this “Hol...
    How does the “age of showbiz politics” that Brownell describes during the 1960s compare to McKinley’s experience with mass circulated newspapers, which Susan Douglas discusses, or Theodore Roosevel...

    The 1960 television debates dominate the memory of the 1960 election. Images of a pale Nixon with a sweaty brow are frequently contrasted with Kennedy’s tan and ease before the camera and contemporary media accounts of the event frequently describe it as a night when television revolutionized American politics. And yet, historians contend that this...

  2. U.S. PRESIDENCY AND TELEVISION. Ten dates, some momentous, some merely curious, tell the story of presidential television. In its own way, each date sheds light on the complex relationship between the U.S. presidency and the American television industry.

  3. 18 de jun. de 1984 · The two-hour documentary, fascinating on its own terms, however, will be shown on WOR-TV, Channel 9, at 9 tonight. For the most part, the documentary treats television as a tool, an instrument,...

  4. A Longer Election Cycle. 5: The Dominance of Media Consultants in Presidential Campaigns. In the early days of mass media, TV, newspapers and radio were used as tools by presidential campaigns. The candidates needed to appeal to the public, so they would use the media to do it.

  5. 24 de mar. de 1992 · Television and the presidency: How the news affects our perceptions. Contents. Introduction. Elements of television news. Visual news. Narrative news. Authoratative news. Implications. The president as media manipulator. The weakening of democracy. Conclusions. Works cited. Postscripts. 24 March 1992. Introduction.

  6. 4 de oct. de 2022 · The television and the President. On this day in 1947, Harry Truman delivered the first televised presidential speech. Communications expert David Eisenhower looks at the history of politics and media and the significance of this moment 75 years later. The first televised presidential speech was given by Harry Truman on Oct.5, 1947.