Chewing Gum For The Eyes
Neil Lazarus
Lazarus@netvision.net.il
Lecture 10
Creating Propaganda through the Media 1
Organizing a Campaign - Creating Propaganda
Introduction
During this lecture course we have discussed propaganda and persuasion
. In today's lecture I intend to provide the first of two practical
guides to running an active educational campaign both for the
general public and within the community itself.
This lecture is an adaptation of an article entitled ORGANIZING
A HASBARA CAMPAIGN AGAINST ANTISEMITISM - that was written in
1992 together with Gila Ansell Brauner in Hasbara Digest No. 6
and produced by The Joint Authority For Jewish Zionist Education.
Target Population
Propaganda is directed, it is neither vague nor general. It is
important to decide who is your target audience. This will enable
you to define their interests, their perspectives and their concerns.
Your target audience maybe:
Activists: Students, community activists,
teachers, social workers, participants in youth organizations.
Broader Target:
- Wider public and media.
- What is My Agenda?
- Goal and Message.
Propaganda has purpose. It seeks to influence, to direct and activate.
Decide which educational message should be central to their campaign.
Starting the Campaign
The Steering Committee - for propaganda to be successful it needs
to be organized.
Find a nucleus of people who are really motivated to work on the
issue, preferably across the board at community level with the
agreement of their organizations (as relevant).
Before you start working with them, ensure your mandate by taking
the issue to the community decision making body. Once you are
on the agenda, lobby the organizations involved and come to the
meeting with written or other materials to back up your presentation.
At the first meeting of the Steering committee, ensure that everyone
understands why they are there and the general concept of a campaign
before proceeding to the printed agenda.
Campaign Focus.
The first object is to set your target populations, which we outline
here and describe in detail further along (see:outreach):
a. The General Public - institutions,
special interest targets (ethnic and rights groups), people in
the street;
b. The Media - press, radio, TV;
c. The Opinion Makers - friendship,
rotary, interfaith, local and national political figures etc.;
Campaign Planning.
Before you get tied down in the practicalities, brainstorm your
overall approach and all your ideas from the bizarre to the obvious.
Ask participants to prepare an assessment of resources for the
next meeting if time is short. You can use the following categories:
a. Educational materials
b. Human resources - voluntary and skilled
manpower, classified according to skills;
c. Allies - include Jewish organizations,
friendship organizations, ethnic and other interest groups, media
circles;
d.Physical resources - facilities, equipment,
professional services;
e. Finance - contributions sought from
participant organizations, discount possibilities,
donations or ethnic media budgets.
8.Return to your ideas.
Initially, reassess them and create subcategorizes, then slot
them into a progressive timetable which should correspond to the
needs of the various target populations and organizations you
hope will respond to your call (some of which are on the steering
committee).
Define areas of responsibility between the organizations - leaving
the media to the professionals.
Review the steering committee's timetable for its own meetings
and decide whether your campaign (excluding run-up work) is going
to last for a day, a week or a month (also dependent on budget).
Building an Infrastructure
9. Participating organization will
require their own campaign committee, so the next stage is to
approach them individually or in sub-categories (or return to
them), with the proposed campaign outline. Bear in mind that student
campuses are often a parallel, but separate, field of operation.
10. All participant organizations require
a sub-timetable and tie-in meetings as well as general back-up
and updating on what all the others are doing. This may slow down
the run-up timetable, but it pays off.
11. At this point, review the structure
media contacts.
The media will require calendars, background materials, up-dates,
regular communiqués or bulletins, write-ups, etc., since you cannot
expect ongoing live coverage or interviews all the time.
Campaign Outreach.
I The General Public
1.Infrastructure
Many Jewish groups in the community are capable of organizing
good programs for their non-Jewish counterparts: schools, clubs,
libraries, and scouts.
Use: presentations with audio-visual, a film, music; competitions
(painting, drama, essay); quizzes.
2.Special Interest Targets
These are organizations which can be approached at higher levels
(see: Opinion Makers) and for whom programs can be organized at
grass roots level.
Ethnic rights organizations could be approached within the coordinated
framework for joint presentations, encounters, etc., similar to
those described above. These should be preceded by informative
activities for their leaders.
3.In the Street
Media-wise, the person-in-the-street is one of your prime target
audiences, even if the educational impact is lower in proportion
to the investment. This is also an exciting proposition for Jewish
community groups who will learn and enjoy the experience. You
will need to plan these events for well into the educational time
frame, but prior to any major crowd event also targeted at the
media.
Some ideas - all of which require investment, local permission
etc.:
- street theater
- art and music in the streets or shopping mall
- billboard P.R.
- stickers and gimmicks
- PR stalls in shopping malls
- travel agency material
- sign-up campaigns
- food!!
II The Media
1. The Press
Ideas which can be utilized are:
- syndicated specialist articles
- events calendars
- press conferences
- paying for PR!!
- regular press handouts on events
- syndicating personal stories (with photos)
- reporting (don't rely on it!)
The more unusual the material, the greater the impact: publicize
or advertise in the press that you are seeking interviewees with
interesting stories well ahead of time.
a.Articles and communiqués can be prepared
ahead of time for syndication: use regular freelance journalists
or specialists for the press with a large circulation which may
be interested in a good piece of journalism on a topical or specialist
issue.
b.Local Israeli correspondents and the
Embassy press attache as well as community leaders can be most
helpful in advising how to organize these or even more complicated
operations - such as a symposium of local or national journalists
which would be open to the general public and attract the other
media, too.
2. Radio
You must be prepared for live reporting of any of your events,
particularly by local radio stations, so make sure your activity,
specially your first one, is well organized and worth their interest.
a. Many of the above press ideas can
be adapted for use on radio, such as:
- interview programs on events or for opinion:
- sports and activity reports.
3. Television
Television is the most popular - and the most expensive - medium,
so it should be used efficiently. It is not worth wasting efforts
on bring TV cameras to every activity, but keep the news desks
up-to-date with everything you do so that they do turn up for
the major events.
a. If you cannot pay for prime time
you will need to adapt ideas in this section to provide something
newsworthy or unusual for your national, local or cable station.
b. Use programs that already exist -
you will need to find negotiators to help you as TV channels schedules
far in advance.
- theater, music, history, etc.
- films (see "cinema" below);
- top quality documentary programs such as "Heritage", "Pillar
of Fire" (shortened version in English in 7 parts).
"By the Waters of Babylone" ("Al Naharot Tevel"), a series
about different Jewish communities produced by Israel
TV in cooperation with the WZO Hasbara Department.
4. Cinema
Cinema showings of films of Jewish or Israeli, are a way of attracting
not only a Jewish but also a general audience.
a. At all showings you
should have "permanent" exhibition about Israel in the foyers
- this can be used for other events as well.
b. Organize a Jewish Israeli
film festival if you have the financial backing
c. At universities, films
should be followed by panel discussions, with specialist speakers.
d. Resource Centers have
lists of films and agents; they also have 16mm projects (only
cinemas use 35mm), and these are better than video or "barco"
video screens for large audiences because of the image quality
and the darkened hall.
5. Institutions
Preparation and direct contact with the mass media is a field
mainly for specialists, but there remain many activities in which
people of all ages and from all backgrounds can be the mainstay.
The target audience will be non-Jewish schools, clubs, libraries,
scouts, sports and women's organizations, Parent-Teacher Associations
and so forth.
The task forces will come from Jewish counterpart organizations
and the campaign can be coordinated to reach thousands of young
people and adults in each town.
a. Young people could take
a general presentation about Israel to their counterpart organization
or a non-Jewish school for a curricular or extra-curricular program.
b. Adults could organize
their own outreach programs, including through their unions, and
each teacher from a Jewish school could visit one non-Jewish school
to speak to its staff prior to the children's programs.
6. Street Events
Some require a large outlay - others require police permission
and must comply with local bylaws. If money is the problem, maybe
you can obtain backing from local groups.
a. All events can be accompanied
by the releasing of 40 doves or 40 balloons with dove designs
and prizes for the finders.
b. Serious events include
demos and public speakers, accompanied by local figures.
c. Fun events include:
- * Jewish street theater;
* guest artists and artists in theaters or outside;
* multi-cultural street dancing.
d. PR can include:
- * billboards on major highways;
* slide ads in cinemas (cheap where available);
* badge sales, stickers; simulated stamps.
Press here for pro Israel posters
e. Shopping events:
- * PR stalls;
* street theater.
f. Information and content
campaigning:
- * mall events with stands for the whole week to include distribution
and sign-up campaigns using some of the above ideas and coordinated
with shops and local radio.
Influential Opinion-Makers
- * journalists and people in the media generally;
* rabbis and lay leaders;
* political activists including those in local and national
government;
* academics and scientists;
* Rotary, friendship and interfaith organizations;
* environmentalists and other interest groups;
* international institutions.
For some of these figures, it will be necessary to develop
specialist contacts, while for others money, good planning,
advertisement and effective operation will be needed.
a. Events could be organized
for people who have participated at some stage in a specialist
conference in Israel, via a professional or interest organization.
b. Open Day activities
could precede demonstrations and act as a springboard for beginning
a campaign to have resolutions passed in local councils and university
campuses congratulating Israel on her 45th anniversary of Independence:
Open Day in the community for young politicals (different parties
at different times!) followed by a symposium;
Open Day for Rotary and friendship organizations - maybe with
a dinner and guest speaker to follow. Open Days should include
a film.
Propaganda is about persuasion . Utilizing the methods provided
today it will be possible for you to impact your potential audience.
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Created: 29/04/99 Updated:
16/05/99
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