While watching the first presidential debate of the 2012
election, I decided it would be interesting to visually analyze both Mitt
Romney and Barack Obama while they debated. Clearly the subject matter is more
important than the visual cues, in this case, but humans are extremely social
beings and we rely a lot, especially in American culture, on the media and all the
visual aspects associated. Plus, I’m sure both Obama and Romney have been
extensively trained on public speaking, so analyzing their visual cues might
lend a deeper insight on their political campaigns and future ideals.
I remember reading different psychology texts about James
Borg, famed for his abilities to “read” people purely off the physical signals
they unconsciously sent out while communicating, that concluded humans, while
communicating, rely on physical cues at an astonishing 93% and verbal cues for
the remaining 7% to understand what someone is saying or feeling. That ratio
doesn’t change because of a television set, as long as viewers can see both
Obama and Romney’s upper bodies while they talk, viewers will still rely mainly
on physical cues to better understand each politician. They might watch for
hand signals, eyebrow twitching, mouth movement, eye orientation, overall
calmness or anxiety from body twitching, and the list goes on. All this to say,
we never really think twice about any of these things, but they are vital
components to our overall judgment of both of the politian’s character.
This concept of delivery is really the focal point, in terms
of rhetoric, that I’m aiming on both Obama and Romney. Obviously, the way in
which a politian debates should not be the sole reasoning behind any vote, but
in today’s society a sizeable fraction of American voters could be swayed by a
convincing debate.
Mitt Romney from the start was the aggressor; from 9:40 to
12:37 (in the video below) Romney launches his opening attacks on Obama. Which
is understandable, it’s a debate. What I found intriguing was that for the
duration of Romney’s opening debate he focused on looking at Obama, and never
really looked at the moderator or the camera until he was eventually cutoff.
Almost as a father lectures their children after they’ve gotten in trouble.
Like a lion stalking its prey, Romney never breaks eye
contact with Obama. Admittedly, it does help drive home Romney’s points, and to
this extent it gives Romney a strong platform to build the rest of his
arguments off of. He comes off as
driven, intelligent, and more important he works at showing Americans that he’s
serious. In regards to Aristotle’s concept of delivery, this fits right into
the idea of establishing ethos and appealing through pathos.
Both Obama and Romney display how different kinds of hand
gestures can help demonstrate different points. From about 0:20 till around
5:30 in the above video both Romney and Obama use a plethora of different hand
gestures:
-0:44 – Romney points his finger while describing debt being
passed down generations (interestingly he points right at Obama).
-0:56 – Romney uses three fingers to illustrate the
different ways to cut a deficit, he follows that up with using quite a few
different hand gestures to explain his theory. No matter what Romney was explaining,
right or wrong, it would be hard to differ with him because his hand gestures
are so convincing.
-3:54 – Obama discusses a deficit reduction plan and uses
his hands to figuratively show a 4 trillion dollar sum of money, which makes the
number a little more conceivable to viewers. Then he follows up with laying out
his website that depicts his deficit reduction plan by making gestures that
point out the simplicity of his site and its easy accessibility.
For the majority of the debate, Romney seemed to be more
energetic with his hand gestures, which translated into more energetic ideas.
I’m almost positive he planned on presenting himself as energetic, because
Obama, who seemed more laid back, did not seem as lively when describing his
ideas. This may not seem important, but if it sways just one voter than it was
worth the politian’s effort.
Similar to the first video, Romney’s glare persists. The
vast majority of Romney’s allotted time was spent looking right at Obama, as if
the election had become personal to Romney, and Obama was his sworn enemy.
Throughout the third video (above) while Obama uses his
allotted time to speak, he chose to “speak” to the audience/moderator, he only
glimpsed at Romney when he referred to him. Similar to the first two videos,
when Romney spoke he focused on Obama. A growing trend became clear, whenever
Romney spoke to Obama, Obama inevitably looked down at his podium. Examples in
first video – 9:46, 15:16, 15:31, 23:21 second video – 6:03, 6:48, 11:33, 12:38
third -- 4:24, 6:25 forth – 6:20, 6:50, 10:45, 13:00 fifth – 1:37, 9:27.
Compared to Romney, who barely ever looked down, Obama appeared to be either
disgusted by Romney’s face, uninterested, bored, or just inferior. Neither of
which are desirable traits, especially for a possible future president.
Videos four and five, shown above respectively, continue the trend of Obama
looking down and Romney looking Obama square in the face. I’ve learned through
interviewing that when a person looks down it generally means the person is not
very confident. While on the other hand Romney almost never looks down, and
when he is speaking he seems to be always looking right at Obama. Paired with
that, Romney’s energetic hand gestures, and authoritative voice presents a
politian who appears to be in the presidential race for the betterment of the
American people, which is ideal for any presidential candidate.
These aspects of delivery are playing huge, unseen, roles in
our current presidential election. The majority of voters will vote along
political lines, no matter how any presidential debate goes. But, to those
swing voters; these debates could be the deciding factor. Even in modern-day 2012,
ideas and concepts derived from Aristotle’s time period on rhetoric can be
applied today.
On a side note, if the roles were reversed, and Obama was
the strong energetic candidate that kept looking Romney square in the eyes, and
Romney always looked down and seemed uninterested, but they said the exact same
things as the original debate, would the general consensus of the “winner” have
shifted in Obama’s favor? And if hypothetically it would, than the true power
of rhetoric could be seen, because then purely based on visual appearances, any
well trained debater could win a large variety of debates.
A trend that I am seeing reflecting on my essay and reading yours and Kenny's posts is the idea of how visual imagery plays such a vital role in forming an idea of who someone is. For that reason, I'd like to say that I think you have very strong evidence here, but I'm going to say that you could probably make a bolder claim about what the potential implications of this sort of "we wear ourselves on our shirtsleeves" ideal that America has. It's kinda weird to note that although in America we like pretty people, Presidents(minus this election, I suppose, what which Romney's unflinching hair) that being handsome is not a particularly inherent theme to American presidents. You might also think about how the tone of voice affects this, and how previous sources of media such as radio might have made a difference during past debates. Also you might want to proof this again.
ReplyDeleteI am wondering about the camera interplay. I understand why that it is dismissed "That ratio doesn’t change because of a television set, as long as viewers can see both Obama and Romney’s upper bodies while they talk," but the viewing audience is limited to what the camera sees. Intentionally or not, both speakers are not seen side-by-side the whole time. There are cuts-to one or the other.
ReplyDeleteI do agree that Obama's apparent focus on reservation was a mistake, to me it shows the error in expecting the audience to value "cool-heads". Great catches of the hand gestures, I hadn't been consciously paying attention to them.
I love how you described Romney as a father lecturing his children. In terms of this race, and what we have discussed in class on the candidates different values that is a perfect description.
ReplyDeleteAfter re watching these clips of the debate, it makes me wonder what influence the confidence factor has on the uneducated voter. At the end of your piece, you make a comment on what would have happened if the roles were reversed. If a person were to strictly watch this debate and base their vote on who looked more confident and presidential then obviously Romney would have won. The difference though is whether or not people actually listened to the issues, and read up on the fact checker afterwards. Both candidates made some serious errors in their truths, but in rhetorical terms how does the audience react and formulate their opinion without prior knowledge and influence?
This is seriously really cool! We both had very similar topics, but you went about it in a completely different way. Which is interesting, because it just shows how much of this there really is to cover.
ReplyDeleteI like how you walked us through the process. It's kind of like we could see you mind working through it all - also really cool.
Being that body language is the majority of human communication, I feel like it can change with different views. As in the debates last night, I'm sure they got a completely different view of the candidates that we did because they could see the whole picture. We only saw what the camera wanted us to. I guess I'm just wondering now if we can fully asses these videos for body language if we can't see if the whole picture?
nice job matt. you did a great in-depth analysis and it was actually fun to read. you pointed a lot of things i didn't even notice, but they actually make a difference. the visual resources in your paper were pertinent to get your point across and the youtube videos really helped.
ReplyDelete