ParkRidge47: Not an R, and Not Bill Hillsman
By Micah L. Sifry, 03/21/2007 - 1:44pm

It's become a parlor game for the chattering class: Who is ParkRidge47? TechPresident blogger David All has a great post up on his personal site that, at least for me, pretty definitively closes the door on the author being a mischief-making Republican. He tracked down an email exchange between ParkRidge47 and a person who had tried to post a video response on YouTube and had it rejected, and the language PR47 uses makes clear that this person is no friend of the GOP. Well, I have a different theory, which is that it's a professional--the language in our email exchange, and the proficiency of the technical work, makes it unlikely this is a kid. So, which professional?

Last night, I was IMing with a friend of mine, Chris Nolan, the proprietor of a great stand-alone journalism site called Spot-On, and we were trading guesses. She had a brainstorm: It had to be Bill Hillsman, the noted ad-maker from Minnesota. Her reasoning: It has his style, he's no fan of Hillary Clinton's, and who else would have ready access to a good copy of the original 1984 video? On top of that, I realized later, Hillsman had done the ads for the Ned Lamont campaign, where a supporter had done a crude mashup of the 1984 ad to attack Lieberman.

So I gave Bill a call this morning. He's down in Florida, at the Minnesota Twins spring training. Are you ParkRidge47 I asked? He said no, adding, "Hillary Clinton is from Park Ridge, right? Is this about that Hillary video? I haven't seen it but I've heard about it. We didn't do it." I asked him to watch the video and give me his impressions. Here's what he wrote:

We did something similar to this for Wellstone in '96-- an inoculation ad that showed Paul being attacked by monsters, space aliens, giant insects, etc.-- and then put Rudy Boschwitz in a Ming the Merciless pose and put Newt Gingrich's head in place of the mighty and all-powerful Oz. But we didn't do this.

I don't think this is professionally done, but it is well-done. Technically, it's very simple: just get a clean copy of the Apple "1984" ad (maybe the best single ad of all time, used to introduce the Macintosh) and substitute Hillary's footage for the footage of the fascist. (Whoever did this extended the original footage with more footage from Hillary-- it runs 5 or 6 seconds longer than the original :60 spot). What makes me think it's not professionally done is how simple it was to do this, and the typography across the screen of Hillary about continuing the conversation isn't particularly artful.

On the other hand, this had to be done by someone who was pretty familiar with the "1984" ad and who would have recognized how perfectly what Hillary said would fit into this. Also, the typography at the end is an absoute clone of the typeface used in the original, which was popular in the '80s. So the person either just aped it, or knew how much that face is associated with Apple. Finally, it was done by someone who is familiar with ad campaigns-- Apple's "Think Different" was a campaign from the late 1990s that had nothing to do with the 1984 spot.

It is a very shrewd attack piece, though, politically speaking. The subtext points up what I have been saying for a year now-- that Hillary has big problems with her base of liberal women (note that the hero in the 1984 spot is a woman, which was key to its success at the time). And if you are for Obama, it really hits at her weak spot-- coming across as a cold automaton even when she thinks she is being friendly and sincere (Al Gore disease).

As you probably know, Park Ridge is a Chicago suburb (near where I grew up) and Hillary went to high school there at Maine East, I believe. Chicago has a big ad community and this easily could have come from someone there.

That's all I know about it. I saw it for the first time just a few minutes ago.

What do you think? Is ParkRidge47 a pro? Is s/he working for a campaign? Or is this the work of a civilian?

Interesting insight...

Just to clarify, the anti-Hillary "1984" ad used the updated version of the 1984 spot created in 2004.

And I can only find one version of that on YouTube - at least through an organic search. It was uploaded by YouTube user eons:


Here's the description of that spot in the description of YouTube:

"Apples 1984 which aired at half-time of the Super Bowl, directed by Ridley Scott, this is the remake version made in 2004, added the ipod to it."

I'm not sure what the technical word is, but you'll note that this spot has some noise distortion at the beginning of the spot - which the anti-Hillary spot does not have.

In other words, I don't think ParkRidge47 simply ripped the flash file from YouTube which would be a likely tactic. Instead, they got their hands on the original.

________________________________________
David All
The David All Group
http://davidallgroup.com
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Apple ad

Correct, versions of that commercial are available on P2P networks in many formats, so its quite likely they didn't do a youtube rip.

Interestingly, the updated version of the ad (with the iPod) was produced by Apple - http://www.macminute.com/2004/01/06/1984

High Quality Copies of Updated "1984" Apple Ad Readily Available

FYI, Apple made high quality versions of the updated "1984" spot readily available for download on their site. They rotoscoped the iPod onto the runner's waist for the special anniversary edition Steve Jobs unveiled during one of his keynotes.

HuffPo has the scoop

story here

Well, today I can end the guessing. Last night, we sent out a challenge to the HuffPost team asking them to hit the phones and contact all their sources. As a result, we have learned the video was the work of Philip de Vellis, who was the Internet communications director for Sherrod Brown's 2006 Senate campaign, and who now works at Blue State Digital, a company created by members of Howard Dean's Internet Team.

And possibly more interesting...

Blue State Digital's statement.

Statement from Thomas Gensemer, Managing Director, Blue State Digital

This afternoon, an employee at our firm, Phillip de Vellis, received a call from Arianna Huffington of "The Huffington Post" regarding the "1984" video currently circulating online. Initially, de Vellis refused to respond to her requests. He has since acknowledged to Blue State Digital that he was the creator of the video.

Pursuant to company policy regarding outside political work or commentary on behalf of our clients or otherwise, Mr. de Vellis has been terminated from Blue State Digital effective immediately.

Blue State Digital is under contract with the Obama Campaign for technology pursuits including software development and hosting. Additionally, one of our founding partners is on leave from the company to work directly for the campaign at headquarters.

However, Blue State Digital is not currently engaged in any relationship with the Obama Campaign for creative or non-technical services.

Mr. de Vellis created this video on his own time. It was done without the knowledge of management, and was in no way tied to his work at the firm or our formal engagement [on technology pursuits] with the Obama campaign.

I have spoken with David Plouffe, Sen. Obama's campaign manager, to inform him of this action and am appreciative of his understanding and ongoing support of our work.

We wish Mr. de Vellis well in his future endeavors.



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