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<h1>Nos on Campaign Literature</h1>
<p>9-1-02 The best print I saw this year (outside of our own work of course),
was Eric Schneiderman's 8-page tabloid for his State Senate campaign. </p>

<p>He also had a really awful flyer and a broken website. On the plus side, his
truly outstanding campaign organization worked to woo us into his camp with
repeated -- but NOT annoying -- phone calls. </p>

<p>9-4-02 Robert Toricelli's TV ads are terrific. So good, in fact, that I
thought they were done by Frank Baraff. </p>

<p>9-10-02 It's the night of the NY primary, but I haven't heard the results yet
-- except that Cynthia Doty thought she'd come in second. Here are some
thoughts: </p>

<ul>
  <li>The Working Families Party sent out a very attractive mailer. Looked like Phil Schacter's
    work.</li>
  <li>Danny O'Donnell's print was very good -- looked like Houston's work.</li>
  <li>Danny's GOTV effort was first-rate. I doubt that there was a favorable
    voter in the district that they didn't get to the polls.</li>
  <li>Schneiderman's print also looked like it was done by Houston. The&nbsp;
    poster was great but, for the most part, I think Danny got the better work.</li>
  <li>I'm seeing much more 4-color process lit than I ever saw in the past:
    Linares, Doty, Goodman, Strauss; as well as the O'Donnell and Schneiderman
    posters.</li>
  <li>Postering was way up this year. Our block was festooned with posters from
    at least five candidates.</li>
  <li>Schneiderman and O'Donnell also had almost-lifesize pictures of themselves
    printed on 1/8&quot; white corrugated plastic and arranged as self-standing
    sandwich boards.</li>
  <li>Strauss put out much more lit than I expected -- I think he did six
    mailings. But the content was weak and I imagine that they weren't too
    effective.</li>
  <li>Three pieces of Goodman lit arrived in the mail on the day before the
    Primary. Conventional wisdom says that is . . . suboptimal. If, however, he
    wins the Primary, it was a stroke of genius.</li>
</ul>
<h4>9-11-02</h4>
<h4>Here are Frank Baraff's thoughts on the use of 4 color process:</h4>
<blockquote>
  <p><font size="2">Now that everybody and his brother are starting to use it,
  it begins to lose<br>
  some of its impact in this way:<br>
  <br>
  In local races, where 6-8 mailings are the norm, doing full color probably<br>
  means being able to afford two less mailings. As you and I know, powerful<br>
  message, clearly and repetitively stated, trumps weak message with glitzy<br>
  graphics.<br>
  <br>
  Although I am using a lot of 4 color myself these days, I always make sure<br>
  that the client can truly afford it before going down that road. That<br>
  analysis weakens my portfolio but strengthens my clients.<br>
  <br>
  Of course, when you get into the big numbers of state-wide campaigns, the<br>
  cost differential is much less, and it is likely that changing printing<br>
  technology will continue to reduce the cost differential for smaller runs as<br>
  well.</font></p>
</blockquote>
<h4>Primary results from the <a href="http://cynthiadoty.org/">Cynthia Doty</a>
website:</h4>
<table cellSpacing="1" cellPadding="1" width="100%" border="0">
  <tbody>
    <tr bgColor="#000000">
      <td align="middle" colSpan="3"><strong class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff">N.Y.
        State 69th Assembly District</strong></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="gray">
      <td align="left"><span class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff">Candidate</span></td>
      <td align="middle"><span class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff">Votes</span></td>
      <td align="middle"><span class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff">Percent</span></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Daniel J. O'Donnell&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">4,952</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>33.59%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Cynthia L. Doty&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">2,557</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>17.34%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Joyce S. Johnson&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">2,386</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>16.18%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Ari Goodman&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">1,702</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>11.55%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Louis M. Nunez&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">1,536</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>10.42%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Steve F. Strauss&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">864</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>5.86%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Michael E. Brown&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">481</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>3.26%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="white">
      <td class="medium"><b>Francisco A. Spies&nbsp;</b></td>
      <td class="medium" align="right">265</td>
      <td class="medium" align="right"><b>1.80%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="gray">
      <td class="medium"><span class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff"><b>Total
        Votes&nbsp;</b></span></td>
      <td class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff" align="right" <span><b>14,743</b></td>
      <td class="large" style="COLOR: #ffffff" align="right" <span><b>100%</b></td>
    </tr>
    <tr bgColor="#efebef">
      <td colSpan="4"><table align="center">
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td vAlign="top" align="middle"><span class="large">Precincts
                Reporting - <b>108</b> out of <b>108</b> - <b>100%</b></span><br>
                <br>
              </td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table></td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

<h4>Curtis Arluck responds:</h4>

<p><font size="2" face="arial,helvetica">I pretty much agree with your campaign
lit. analysis. I didn't see that many of Schneiderman's mailers, as I don' t
live in the district any more (sniff). But the newspaper was truly great; in
fact it was my source material for the Bway Dems blurb, which is why I kept
over-writing.<br>
<br>
I didn't like Danny's literature as much as you did; I think his campaign staff
wasn't that crazy about it, either. But the mailers were better than the street
pieces. These suffered because Danny was far and away the hardest working
candidate (Ari was probably second; Cynthia and Joyce lagged behind), and he
also had the most volunteers; he needed better stuff, with his name and photo
more obvious, to hand out on the street. The big question was about his RFK
piece: brilliant or folly? Most people loved it, especially women; some hated
it, either for technical reasons (too much white space; a lame tag line) or
because it reinforced their negative personal feelings about him.<br>
<br>
Cynthia's last piece was great; Doug Gordun thought it was the best piece of the
campaign. I rather intensely disliked the woman piece; it was dishonest (we're
&quot;represented&quot; by Denny Farrell, but not by Hillary, Virginia or
Gale?), she had no women's movement supporters, and that was not at all what her
career was about. I definitely met women on the street who responded to it,&nbsp;
but a lot of people were turned off by it, and I had a 100% success rate in
blowing its logic out of the water. I liked her poster a lot more than Danny's,
though the blowup of it in the storefront looked ghastly. In general, I don't
like posters, but I guess you have to do them if your opponent does them, and
they have a similar effect on your more manic supporters as taking your dog out
for a walk.<br>
<br>
Joyce's stuff I thought was pretty good -- it got its message out to its target
audience without offending the non-target audience. I much prefer Steve to Ari,
but I have to say that both of their stuff was dreck; Ari's more obnoxious,
Steve's more self-indulgent. Most voters I spoke to <i>hated </i>Ari's stuff,
and the &quot;good man&quot; slogan was justly ridiculed. And he was phone
banking throughout Rosh Hashanah -- what a hypocrite. Steve's was just silly. I,
like most people, threw his later mailings out without opening them.<br>
<br>
The net effect of Steve and Ari's useless barrage -- what, 15 mailings between
them? -- was to really muck everybody else up at the end. This hurt Danny the
least, because he had the most other stuff going for him. Cynthia's excellent
final piece was lost in the shuffle, as was Bob Ginsberg's and to a lesser
extent the club pieces. We got tremendous praise for our piece, and our club
members loved it, but I got the impression that many fewer voters saw it,
because they were so swamped. (Also, perhaps, too many people thought it was
just for the statewide candidates and didn't open it up.) The result was that
our local officials' percentages dropped. Bob went from 70-30 to 65-35; Lynn
from 72-28 to 52-36-12. Two years ago our lowest delegate beat their highest by
1700 votes, this year it was less than 500, with the &quot;head&quot; of the
ticket, Nu�ez, only getting 10% of the vote. Some of this is attributable to
the fact that CFD didn't do much, but most, I believe, is that the club pieces
got lost in the spam.
</font> </p>

<h4>Ralph Andrew's comments:</h4>

<blockquote>
  <h5>Schneiderman</h5>
  <ul>
    <li><font size="2">His
  tabloid was indeed good--but it wasn't appropriate for subways and handouts .
  . . and no one ever told them that! &nbsp;</font></li>
  </ul>
  <ul>
    <li><font size="2">The
  �there�s a lot at stake� bit sent a double message.</font></li>
    <li><font size="2">
 
  The
  New York Times has made &quot;THEIR&quot; choice? Seen on his bus shelter ads.</font></li>
    <li>
      <font size="2">
      Houston
  did the best pieces of literature for both Schneiderman and O�Donnell.&nbsp;
      </font>&nbsp;&nbsp;<o:p>
  
  </ul>
  
  <h5>
 
Goodman</h5>
  <font size="2">
  The message in the
  literature (by
  Levinson of the Advance Group) STUNK�according to critics<o:p></o:p>.</font>
 
<h5 >Phone
banking</h5>
<p><font size="2">I
was a lot more impressed by the phone calls in State Senate race that had
substance (like Gotbaum for Linares
 or&nbsp;Leichter for Eric) than I was by the calls from an actress touting her
role in &quot;Sex and the City.&quot;</font>
</p>
<h5 >Working
Families</h5>
<p><font size="2">Am
still annoyed at them for taking liberal Dems out of the Democratic Party and
then thinking they should be able to control the Democratic primaries.</font>
</p>
<h5 >Postering</h5>
<p ><font size="2">I
saw posters for nine candidates--including Gerard Powell, who was thrown off the
ballot!&nbsp; I think postering was the ONLY
campaigning that Michael Brown did.<o:p>
 </font>
 
<h5 >Strauss<o:p>
</o:p>
  </h5>
<p ><font size="2">I
got calls from NON-political types asking: what is this Strauss nonsense with
�fish, etc.�? A worse campaign without a message I can't imagine. What a way
to piss away $90,000 of your own money!</font><o:p>
</p>
<h5 >Timing</h5>
<p ><font size="2">Goodman
was not the ONLY candidate off on timing with his last minute barrage. Cynthia
Doty's &quot;senior&quot; piece should have gone out in mid-August when the
old-timers were sitting at home waiting for the mail--not in the last two days
amidst the clutter of eight candidates.&nbsp; </font><o:p>
</p>
<h5 >On
Cynthia Doty<</h5>
<p ><font size="2">I
regret that we were unable to make Cynthia the housing candidate, though clearly
she could never break out after O'Donnell's NYT endorsement. Her campaign organization
only took off in the last few weeks before the primary. All in all, she ran well
and has a lot to be proud of.</font></p>

</blockquote>
 
<h4>Nos 10-11-02</h4>
<p><font size="2">I was looking over some lit from last year's mayoral election.
I had remembered Mark Green imploding -- but I forgot that Bloomberg had also
used some pretty strong negative mailings against Mark.</font></p>
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Anon7 - 2021