Worth Clicking: Blasts from the past wound Romney




February 17, 2012


2012 Ad War: Santorum Fights Mud With Humor

This is part of our guest series from Inkwell Strategies analyzing the 2012 campaign ad war.

Rick Santorum's new ad is a breath of fresh air in an already drawn out primary season.

In a nominating contest filled to the brim with negative advertising, Santorum's "Rombo" ad is an unexpected sojourn into the comedic. The video features a Romney look-alike firing mud from a machine gun at a cardboard cut-out of a smiling Santorum in a welcome respite from the usual political season fair.



Santorum's move is clever.  As the primary season drags on, voter fatigue may be setting in, which gives the former Pennsylvania Senator an opening to break through with a non-traditional sales pitch.  And as any fourth grader will tell you, the best way to combat a schoolyard bully is with humor.

Hitting Romney hard for his perceived "mud-slinging," the ad begins with a grimacing Romney stand-in entering a warehouse, gun in hand. In the background, the 1812 Overture plays as a deep-voiced, Hollywood movie trailer-esque narrator begins: "Mitt Romney's negative attack machine is back on full throttle."

The Romney lookalike then makes his way through an empty building, firing upon the cardboard cut-out. The ad goes on to accuse Romney of spending millions "brutally attacking fellow Republicans." As he finally gets the Santorum replica in his crosshairs, his mud-gun jams. Frustrated, he pounds on the barrel and mud splatters onto his shirt. "In the end," the narrator intones, "Mitt Romney's ugly attacks are going to backfire."

Still, the ad isn't a home run.  Santorum makes a curious choice by portraying himself as a cardboard-cutout. Depicting the candidate as a rigid, smiling facsimile begs to be lampooned.  And Santorum is betting that Republican voters already know enough about him to produce an ad without a positive message.  With limited resources, that's a risk.

Time will tell whether Santorum's comedic pitch, like Mitt Romney's mud-gun, will backfire.










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