Face Forward: The Political Branding Podcast
Most campaigns think the job is messaging. Say it clearer. Say it louder. Say it more often. FDR understood something different. In the middle of the Great Depression, he didn’t just communicate change— he made people feel it. If you saw his face, you knew what it meant. In this episode, we break down how Franklin Delano Roosevelt became the original face of change—decades before modern media, social platforms, or political consultants. Including: * Why confidence—not policy—was his first priority * How visible action created belief (even before results did) * The role of simple, values-driven language in building trust * Why metaphor made complex ideas instantly understandable * How the fireside chats created a level of connection most campaigns still can’t replicate * And why trying to please everyone is the fastest way to disappear At his peak, millions of Americans felt something extraordinary: Not just that they supported Roosevelt— but that he understood them. That’s not messaging. That’s recognition. If people saw your candidate’s face— would they feel what it stands for? © 2026 Buckstarter LLC. All rights reserved. Face Forward is a Buckstarter company. #PoliticalBranding #Leadership #CampaignStrategy #Storytelling #FDR #FaceForward
20 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Face Forward: The Political Branding Podcast community!