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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]
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In rhetoric, a rhetorical device, persuasive device, or...
- 1964 - Wikipedia
1964 ( MCMLXIV) was a leap year starting on Wednesday of the...
- Rhetorical device - Wikipedia
Apr 13, 2016 · On September 7, 1964, a 60-second TV ad changed American politics forever. A 3-year-old girl in a simple dress counted as she plucked daisy petals in a sun-dappled field. Her words were...
May 8, 2024 · Published: May 8, 2024. copy page link. Print Page. Library of Congress/screenshot. With fears of nuclear annihilation looming large, Lyndon B. Johnson’s campaign team went for the jugular during...
- Jesse Greenspan
On September 7, 1964, television advertising history was made during the broadcast of NBC’s Monday Night at The Movies. That’s when a new kind of TV ad was first aired that would forever change the art and practice of political advertising – and to a large degree, political campaigning as well.
Jul 1, 2008 · Perhaps the most infamous political ad of all time.
Goldwater. "Peace Little Girl (Daisy)" The most famous of all campaign commercials, known as the “Daisy Girl” ad, ran only once as a paid advertisement, during an NBC broadcast of Monday Night at the Movies on September 7, 1964.
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