ad watch

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ad watch, a term used to describe efforts by the media to report on and evaluate the veracity of political advertising. Although the media have long described advertising during political campaigns, Washington Post columnist David Broder is often credited with having shaped the rise of modern-day ad watches by urging fellow journalists to be more watchful of political advertising messages and by making coverage of advertising claims a standard feature of campaign news after the intensely negative nature of the 1988 U.S. presidential campaign. Ad watches often centre on televised ads, but they also evaluate all forms of political advertising with the aim of providing citizens some assistance in processing and evaluating the claims made.

Broder’s call following the 1988 presidential campaign resulted in more ad watches in the United States as journalists attempted to police dishonest or ethically suspect campaigning. News organizations and television stations subsequently increased their use of adwatch analyses, which further intensified as Internet use spread. Today political candidates, political parties, and third-party interest groups also engage in their own adwatch analysis through a variety of platforms.

Simply including suspect political ads in news reports is not sufficient for helping voters discern true or false messages. Academic researchers studying the content and effects of ad watches on voters find that specific reporting strategies are more likely to result in favourable effects. If visual aspects of television ads, for example, are included in ad watches, stopping or interrupting ads immediately following the misleading audio or visual claims through the use of on-screen graphics and voice-overs helps voters understand that specific features of the ad are questionable. Additionally, rather than showing ad bites or ads as full-screen or dominant images, researchers recommend placing ads in downsized labeled graphics to lessen the visual impact of the suspect ad.

Candidates have long recognized that there are benefits to having their ads covered as news items. When aired in their entirety within a news segment, political ads can potentially reach millions of voters. Lyndon B. Johnson’s “Daisy” campaign spot, which contains visual images of a young girl counting daisy petals followed by an atomic bomb explosion in order to elicit fears of nuclear war, aired only once as a paid political spot during the 1964 U.S. presidential campaign, but it was shown in its entirety by the major news networks in their campaign news coverage at the time as well as covered in print media. Furthermore, political ads covered within the context of a news story may be enhanced by the credible news environment. Examples of present-day political advertising shaping the news agenda are frequent, and campaigns often create ad messages with the intent to maximize the likelihood that their ads will be featured as news.

The use of distortions and outright false content in political advertisements predates the contemporary concept of ad watches. The “Eisenhower Answers America” ad campaign during the 1952 U.S. presidential campaign, for instance, featured manipulated audio and video content intended to give the impression that Eisenhower was responding to a range of citizen questions. Instead, Eisenhower provided staged answers to a variety of issues on his campaign agenda, and citizen actors later were drafted to ask questions that addressed Eisenhower’s previously filmed answers.

By modern standards, Eisenhower’s advertising strategy may not appear to be an egregious violation of ethical standards. However, technological developments since that time have provided campaigns with tools capable of more-deceptive and ethically suspect strategies. An example of deceptive techniques that pushed the technological boundaries of their time was uncovered in 1996 during a U.S. Senate race between John Warner, the incumbent, and his opponent Mark Warner. One of Senator Warner’s televised ads manipulated a 1994 photo that showed former Virginia governor Douglas Wilder and Virginia Sen. Charles Robb shaking hands while U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton was posed between the two. When the photo appeared in Senator Warner’s advertisement, Robb’s face was seamlessly replaced by the face of Mark Warner. Senator Warner’s campaign had manipulated the photo in an attempt to link his opponent with two unpopular political figures in Virginia. In that case, the manipulation was uncovered and widely reported in ad watches.

John C. Tedesco The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica