March 1, 2008

"Why are the letters 'NIG' on the child's pajamas?"

Asks a commenter — "Tom" — on my post about the new Hillary Clinton commercial, the one that shows several children sleeping and then Clinton taking a national security phone call in the middle of the night. You can see the commercial at the link, and the pajamas in question are on display during seconds 11 and 12. On pausing, staring, and thinking, I believe these are pajamas that say "good night" all over them, but the letters "NIG" are set apart by a fold in the fabric.





Is the campaign responsible for sending out a subliminal message to stimulate racist thoughts in the unsuspecting viewer? It is either deliberate or terribly incompetent. There is no other writing on screen until the very end of the commercial, and if letters appear in any place in a commercial, they should be carefully selected letters. Certainly, each image is artfully composed and shot and intended to deliver an emotional impact. Could this be a mere lapse?

In 2000, there was a much-discussed commercial for George W. Bush that displayed the letters "RATS":
The announcer starts by lauding George W. Bush's proposal for dealing with prescription drugs, and criticizes the plan being offered by Vice President Al Gore. Fragments of the phrase ''bureaucrats decide'' -- deriding Mr. Gore's proposal -- then dance around the screen.

Then, if the viewer watches very closely, something else happens. The word ''rats,'' a fragment of the word ''bureaucrats,'' pops up in one frame. And though the image lasts only one-thirtieth of a second, it is in huge white capital letters, larger than any other word on the commercial.

The advertisement then declares, ''The Gore prescription plan: bureaucrats decide.''

But as one might be expect in a tightly contested presidential race, the Democrats have given the 30-second advertisement more than a quick glance.

After being alerted by an eagle-eyed Democrat in Seattle, aides to Mr. Gore examined the advertisement frame by frame, spotted the suspicious word and gave a copy of a slowed-down version to The New York Times.

Those aides said they had no comment and preferred that the advertisement, which has appeared in 33 markets nationwide since August, speak for itself.

Alex Castellanos, who produced the commercial for the Republican National Committee, insisted that the use of the word was ''purely accidental,'' saying, ''We don't play ball that way. I'm not that clever.''

Asked when he had first noticed the word in the commercial, Mr. Castellanos said, ''That's all I want to say.''

But several Republican and Democratic advertising consultants who were told of the commercial, as well as many independent academics, said they were startled that such a word would appear and said it appeared to be a subliminal attempt to discredit Mr. Gore.

Mr. Bush's chief media consultant, Mark McKinnon, said he had not noticed the word ''rats'' when he reviewed the advertisement before it was broadcast. Most people probably have not noticed either, although some people who watched a tape of the commercial at normal speed today -- albeit very carefully -- said it was visible.

After being told of the word, Mr. McKinnon said the commercial should be corrected because it ''certainly might give reporters or anybody else who looked at it'' a reason to stir up attention.

But after taking another look at the advertisement, he amended his comment.

'' 'Rats' is not a message,'' Mr. McKinnon said. '' 'Bad plan' or 'seniors lose' might be. But 'rats?' We're just not that clever. I just watched it five times in a row. Hard as I looked, couldn't see 'rats.' ''

Almost every advertising professional interviewed said that given the technology by which commercials are assembled frame by frame, it was virtually impossible for a producer not to know the word was there.

''There is no way that anything Alex Castellanos does is an accident,'' said Greg Stevens, a veteran Republican advertising consultant here.
The intense scrutiny of the "RATS" ad heightens the assumption that presidential candidates these days pay close attention to any incidental lettering that appears in their ads. "RATS" as part of the word "bureaucrats" in an ad criticizing Gore's prescription plan is nothing compared to "NIG" isolated on a sleeping child's shoulder in an ad intended to create doubts about a black man's ability to take an urgent phone call at 3 a.m., an ad authorized by a candidate who has already heard accusations that her campaign is slipping racial material into its attacks on her opponent.

This is either a revolting outrage or shocking incompetence.

IN THE COMMENTS: Some controversy, of course. I know this is hard to take. But let me front page this one, from Mortimer Brezny, who is responding to a commenter who said: "[F]or subliminal messaging to be effective, I think it has to be intelligible. In this case, you really have to fill in the dots (reconstruct the right-half of the G) to make it so. If it had said NIC, would there be an issue, because you could imagine C => G?"
Oh, that is incorrect. The way the mind makes closure is by filling in the blanks. You don't need to see an entire face to envision what the other half of it looks like. That is not a conscious activity of the brain, it is neurological, like seeing the color red.

Certainly, Ann is correct that you activate associational networks in the brain. NIG is quite obviously in the same area of the brain as NIGGER, just as both words are nearby in the dictionary. And the commercial is about Obama. Associating those two neural pathways (Obama, Nig__) at the same time may create the subliminal message Ann is talking about. In that case the real fear being exploited here is "Do you really want a nigger in the White House?"

This is not bunk. Drew Westen has done a good amount of empirical work on it. And political hacks use such research in crafting their ads.

You may disagree with Ann's conclusion. But her analysis explains why the commercial -- incoherently -- focuses on kids in bed. No one is scared that terrorists will break into their home late at night and harm their children. The threat depicted does not correspond to the threat described by the narrator. But the threat depicted does prey on fears of criminals breaking into your home. And it is a persistent stereotype that black people are the source of crime. Indeed, being tough on crime has been a GOP code word for being tough on blacks. Longtime Republican strategist Lee Atwater himself admitted that.

"So if, with our subconscious, we actually notice these 2.5 letters, and our subconscious assumes that this is a G and not a C, then this forms a fragment of a racial slur, which some of us might subconsciously pick up on, and associate, naturally, with Obama."

Yes. The mind does this everyday, as when you see a sign behind Obama's head that reads "CHANG". You don't think Obama has chosen a Chinese running mate. You think Obama's head is obscuring the E because you have seen a "CHANGE" sign before. It does not require conscious thought and it takes less than a second to process.

It's funny that Ann often dithers around for fun to mass appeal, but when she writes a post that clearly demonstrates she's a genius, the claws come out.
Feel free to observe the claws out on many other websites, where personal attacks on me take the place of any serious effort to engage on the merits. For example, the usually serious blogger Kevin Drum calls me harebrained and a glue sniffer. The vicious attack on the messenger bespeaks fear of the message and lack of a substantive argument against it.

NOTE: I've added a link to the video in the first paragraph of the post and two screen captures from the video, taken at 0:11. The first capture is the full screen, with no digital editing. The second capture is a closeup of the lettering, and I've turned up the contrast, saturation, and sharpness. There's no question that there are letters on the pajamas. The letters N and I are very clear. The third letter, G, appears only partially, but it is definitely a G. You can see the center line slightly, and the other letters in the area make it likely that the words "good night" appear as a pattern on the pajamas.

MORE IN THE COMMENTS: Pastafarian wrote:
You must be kidding, right? The G is partially obscured, on the side of the screen and slightly out of focus, written sideways, and present for a second or so; I wouldn't even have guessed that it was a G, had I not been told. I would have assumed a C, had I even noticed this.
Amba aptly responds:
That's exactly how a subliminal-advertising genius would do it. With deniability, with doubt, right on the edge of intelligibility. If it was even a little more obvious, it wouldn't work. This way, anyone who brings it up can be called paranoid and crazy; it can be reflected back on the hypersensitive Obama campaign. We'll never know for sure if it's real, but one way to check would be to find out who made the ad and check out some of that person's other work.
By the way, the sleeping child appears to be black. Mere coincidence?

MORE: In this new post.

AND: If you've mocked me for this post, read this and then send me your apology.

321 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 321 of 321
Mortimer Brezny said...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_closure

SEK said...

That's the most thorough Wikipedia entry I've ever read, Mortimer. For the sake of the class, I reproduce it here in its entirety:

The term cognitive closure refers to "a desire for definite knowledge on some issue and the eschewal of confusion and ambiguity."(Webster2007).

Webster, Donna M.; Arie W. Kruglanski (2007). "Cognitive and Social Consequences of the Need for Cognitive Closure". European Review of Social Psychology 18: 133-173.


I'm convinced!

Original Mike said...

You may disagree with Ann's conclusion. But her analysis explains why the commercial -- incoherently -- focuses on kids in bed. No one is scared that terrorists will break into their home late at night and harm their children. The threat depicted does not correspond to the threat described by the narrator. But the threat depicted does prey on fears of criminals breaking into your home. And it is a persistent stereotype that black people are the source of crime.

Oh good grief! Children safely tucked in bed is a common metaphor for peace. And what will break this peace? Try a nuclear weapon exploding over the city. A common fear while I was growing up and something that would result in a 3 AM call to the President.

Some people see gender and race connotations everywhere ("feminism points if you didn't think about women yaking on the phone"). Doesn't mean they exisit anywhere but inside their heads. I agree with DBQ: Is the kind of bullcrap we are going to have to put up with if Obama acutally is elected President? Every eeensy teeensy nuance of every itty bitty thing scrutinized by the thought police? I am beginning to look forward to this race with dread.

Mortimer Brezny said...

So, in other words, this whole exercise wasn't an exercise in evenhanded media criticism,

Hmm. It seems like she changed her position and got off the fence after looking at the video again and seeing that the little kid was black.

Mortimer Brezny said...

Try a nuclear weapon exploding over the city.

Hmm. Then it would have looked lke Tancredo's ad. If that was her intent, then this WAS a shockingly incompetent ad.

Trooper York said...

Ha, Ha. I figured it out. Blogger will only take about 201 or so comments. Then you have to go on the post section as though you were going to comment to read the rest. That sucks. We need 300 or 400 comments on these the important issuses of the day. Like the spelling on pj's and who is going to win American Idol. This can not stand!!!!!!!!

Erik Wallen said...

"I think Pastafarian has it right here -- for subliminal messaging to be effective, I think it has to be intelligible. In this case, you really have to fill in the dots (reconstruct the right-half of the G) to make it so. If it had said NIC, would there be an issue, because you could imagine C => G?"

Your brain will fill in missing parts of letters, it does this all the time. Even if there was any question about whether it is a C or a G, your brain gets a hint because the entire G is sitting out above the word.

Mortimer Brezny said...

Scott Eric Kaufmann (SEK),

While your "debunking" of my post is rather thin, it is well composed. I gather that is because you are graduate English student who earned his Bachelor's at Lousiana State University.

It is amazing that someone who wants a doctorate in English makes such errors in reading comprehension. You take a critic's interpretation of one of my posts as a definitive account; you read-out the word "associational network" from more than one of my posts; and you take an illuminating analogy literally, which, while sophisticated -- in the sense that its sophistry, is fallacious.

They say that we hate that which mirrors us. That may explain why on your blog posts -- none about neuroscience, but all about literary matters -- you disparage Foucault as an academic fraud and bemoan literalism as a mode of interpretation.

I know you have yet to earn your doctorate in Literary Theory, but despite the paucity of the wikipedia link I provided, cognitive closure has nothing to do with symmetry. I know it is hard when you are student to believe that every person's statements don't fit into your recently adopted conceptual frames, but I am not Rene Descartes, and neither Ann nor I have claimed to be dualists.

Your brain will fill in missing parts of letters, it does this all the time. Even if there was any question about whether it is a C or a G, your brain gets a hint because the entire G is sitting out above the word.

Yes. It is called cognitive closure. I noted this upstream.

Peter Hoh said...

Whoa. I spend the day at work and miss out on a big controversy. That'll teach me.

Mortimer Brezny said...

Too bad. I wish Ann would front page my refutation of Scott Eric Kaufman, that lying bastard. He didn't even cite to the wikipedia link I provided, he linked to a link embedded within it, to get a definition of cognitive closure that did not include the specific language involing irrationally resolving ambiguity.

titustandue said...

I have never been so horny in my entire life after reading all of these comments.

If the posters would mind complying with my requests of posting faster, being more vulgar, perhaps shedding some tears, be more outraged I would appreciate it.

I think I will come to a happy ending if I receive my requests from my fellow republicans.

I'm waiting and reading....

Original Mike said...

Hmm. Then it would have looked lke Tancredo's ad.

Says who? That's exactly the image it brought to my mind. It's a commom image for people of a certain age. Who are you to say you know what the ad's creator had in her mind? That's the problem with this whole stupid thesis (and I think somefeller's right, Ann's "two possibilites" is a ruse); just 'cause you thought of something when you saw the ad doesn't mean it's what the creator intended.

AmPowerBlog said...

Well, I had my disagreements, but I didn't call you a hare-brained glue-sniffer!

American Power

JackDRipper said...

Mortimer Brezny said...The way to destroy a reinscription tactic is to expose it to daylight so that its targets may choose consciously to reject it.

There is no "reinscription tactic" in this political ad. There is no attempt to use the letters NIG to trigger the nigger word in the subconscious of racist White devils.

My ZIO = Zionist interpretation is just as plausible despite being ridiculous.

Your willingness to go along with this is a racist interpretation on your part that again plays to a deep seated form of racist anti-White animus that exists among many blacks and their White liberal enablers.

While I don't doubt that your racist bias is genuine I am not convinced that Ann Althouse is being completely honest about her speculations on this issue.

Mortimer Brezny said...

just 'cause you thought of something when you saw the ad doesn't mean it's what the creator intended.

I didn't think of anything when I saw this ad, other than that Hillary was inexplicably wearing glasses. Oh, and the ad sucked.

But I most certainly did not think nuclear explosion. Nothing in the ad suggested nuclear attack. I think they made a point of not suggesting any particular crisis, to avoid being called fear-mongerers. Which didn't work. Oh, well.

JackDRipper said...

Mortimer Brezny said...The way to destroy a reinscription tactic is to expose it to daylight so that its targets may choose consciously to reject it.

There is no "reinscription tactic" in this political ad. There is no attempt to use the letters NIG to trigger the nigger word in the subconscious of racist White devils.

My ZIO = Zionist interpretation is just as plausible despite being ridiculous.

You willingness to go along with this is a racist interpretation on your part that again plays to a deep seated form of racist anti-White animus that exists among many blacks and their White liberal enablers.

While I don't doubt that your racist bias is genuine I am not convinced that Ann Althouse is being completely honest about her speculations on this issue.

titustandue said...

More posts, more vulgarity, more outrage. I am hornier than I have ever been.

Faster, faster


Thank you republicans, thank you.

section9 said...

I'm late to this hideously silly thread that Anne started.

Has anyone made a "Knights who say "Ni" joke, yet?

God, but this was stupid. I'm on Hillary's side, here. And I was on Castellano's side in 2000. The whole Rat's thing was stirred up by the Gore people to create a false issue for the media.

It was complete bullshit from beginning to end. I know people on the inside. The subliminal suggestion crap was peddled by Gore's people to an extremely gullible New York Times reporter, who kicked the meme off. The rest was history for about a week and a half of reporting time.

It was complete crap, like most of what Al Gore trafficked in.

Mortimer Brezny said...

Your willingness to go along with this is a racist interpretation on your part that again plays to a deep seated form of racist anti-White animus that exists among many blacks and their White liberal enablers.

Whoa! I just pointed out that Ann's analysis is valid and plausibly sound. I didn't say it was True! Implicit bias is real and has been empirically confirmed. Scientists like Westen take it into account in doing their work; that's not racism, it's just science. I haven't said anything on this thread that can even remotely be construed as anti-white, anti-black, anti-Zionist, or even anti-Hillary! Though I am totally against Scott Eric Kaufman, who is a piece of shit.

SEK said...

Mortimer,

Fascinating use of Google, there. You found the identity I didn't try to hide. So, yes, I'm that SEK. How is this relevant? You wrote:

The way the mind makes closure is by filling in the blanks. You don't need to see an entire face to envision what the other half of it looks like.

Your analogy doesn't work, as I pointed out, because the two processes activate different areas of the brain, and those two areas function differently. Your comparison is predicated on the brain "filling in the blanks" in a word like it does the other half of a face. That is incorrect. The fusiform face area can recreate the other half of a human face because it assumes bilateral symmetry. The same cannot be said of words.

you read-out the word "associational network" from more than one of my posts

I didn't "read-out" the word "associational network." I didn't address it because you don't treat the concept seriously. What kind of associational networks are you talking about here? How are they activated? How do they function? What you've written is the equivalent of a person saying "stuff falls because of physical forces," without indicating 1) what they are or 2) how they work.

and you take an illuminating analogy literally, which, while sophisticated -- in the sense that its sophistry, is fallacious.

Your analogy isn't illuminating -- though it's mighty humble of you to contend otherwise -- in fact, it's obfuscating, inasmuch as it relies on the very folk-theory cognitive theorists have spent decades trying to dispel. The brain doesn't store words in alphabetical order, and there's absolutely no reason to think similar letter sequences are stored "in the same part of the brain." They're not. In fact, I can prove to you that identical letter sequences aren't stored in the same part of the brain. If you scanned someone's brain while they read the following sentences, the bolded letters would light up completely different areas of the brain:

Did you seal the envelope?

Look at the seal play with the ball!


Same exact letters, entirely different parts of the brain, since the first s-e-a-l would be processed as a verb, the second as a noun.

As for the rest of your sad little ad hominem, I don't see how it's relevant to the conversation. Nor is it even particularly thorough. I've written about neuroscience, neurolinguistics and psychology/psychiatry at some length. But there's no reason to continue in this line. Address the argument, not the person, alright?

Original Mike said...

But I most certainly did not think nuclear explosion. Nothing in the ad suggested nuclear attack.

Which is my point; different people think of different things.

I think they made a point of not suggesting any particular crisis, to avoid being called fear-mongerers. Which didn't work. Oh, well

Upthread you said we were meant to think of black criminals breaking into the house, and that's what I'm calling bullshit on.

SEK said...

Mortimer:

You're right, I didn't include all the text of the exact page you linked to. I can, if you'd like, but it's even less informative than the other. It's a disambiguation page, not even an actual entry:

Cognitive Closure can refer to:

* Cognitive closure (psychology), a term describing the human desire to eliminate ambiguity and arrive at definite conclusions (sometimes irrationally).

* Cognitive closure (philosophy), the idea that only certain things are even in principle understandable by beings like us. Used particularly to argue for the insolubility of certain problems in philosophy of mind.

Mortimer Brezny said...

The brain doesn't store words in alphabetical order

I didn't contend that. Again, that's (actually) not why I used the dictionary analogy. The point was just that nig and nigger would be on the same page. That's figurative.

I've written about neuroscience, neurolinguistics and psychology/psychiatry at some length

It doesn't show.

Your comparison is predicated on the brain "filling in the blanks" in a word like it does the other half of a face.

No, it isn't a comparison. That statement was a response to a comment by someone else. My point was about closure generally, not about an explicit comparison between different areas of the brain that you are trying to (inconsistently) read into my comments by (incoherently) ignoring parts of them.

Your analogy doesn't work, as I pointed out, because the two processes activate different areas of the brain, and those two areas function differently.

Except I didn't compare facial recognition and words. If anything, I compared facial recognition and seeing in color, in the sentence that you chop off of your misquotation of the paragraph of mine you quote. I was explaining the concept of closure, and which process, rooted in which part of the brain corresponding to which example, was irrelevant.

Same exact letters, entirely different parts of the brain, since the first s-e-a-l would be processed as a verb, the second as a noun.

Again, this is just irrelevant to my comments. Both nig and nigger are nouns. For you to think this statement is on-point, you must be misreading my posts....as I have consistently claimed is the case.

It is not an ad hominem to note that it is ironic that a graduate English student has problems reading a text without distorting it. If you cannot even succeed in your chosen field of endeavor, why, Scott Eric Kaufman, should we believe you are an expert in a field in which you have no formal training?

Unknown said...

How about Good NIGht?

titustandue said...

Alright, dindin, drinks and then dancing.

Let's estimate the final tally???

I say 305

Unknown said...

I still don't see it on the pj's. But I suppose the thrust of this assertion is that I, a white person and therefore inherently racist, will subliminally pick up on it and therefore vote against Obama.

I still think he is cute but not fit for president. There you go.

Mortimer Brezny said...

I still think he is cute but not fit for president.

But you can't be racist if you think he's cute.

SEK said...

Again, that's (actually) not why I used the dictionary analogy. The point was just that nig and nigger would be on the same page.

...in the what or where? The brain? The same page in the brain? You can say you're talking figuratively, but you're talking figuratively about physical processes with known mechanisms. I'm not sure why there's any need to be figurative, especially when doing so distorts the actual processes.

My point was about closure generally, not about an explicit comparison between different areas of the brain that you are trying to (inconsistently) read into my comments by (incoherently) ignoring parts of them.

Only there's no such thing as closure generally. Or, at the very least, there's no consensus as to when or even if such a process occurs. The disambiguation page you linked to provides no citations. The very brief entry to which it points refers to Webster and a single article, published last year, in a social psychology journal. (Note: Not a neuroscientific one, which seems to me an important distinction.)

I was explaining the concept of closure, and which process, rooted in which part of the brain corresponding to which example, was irrelevant.

Closure must occur in some part of the brain, and therefore must be a process restrained and enabled by some material means. Unless you want to forward a non-physiological theory of mind, you're just trying to bolster folk-wisdom with a Wikipedia disambiguation page. In the annals of the Internet, that might qualify as some new argumentative low.

It is not an ad hominem to note that it is ironic that a graduate English student has problems reading a text without distorting it. If you cannot even succeed in your chosen field of endeavor, why, Scott Eric Kaufman, should we believe you are an expert in a field in which you have no formal training?

You realize I could respond to this by saying, "It's ironic that Mortimer attempts to refute the claim that he's made an ad hominem argument with an ad hominem argument, isn't it?" But I won't. Instead, I'll say that "ad hominem" refers to arguments against the person, their qualities or characteristics, instead of the substance of their argument. And you've done it here again.

Mortimer Brezny said...

Or, at the very least, there's no consensus as to when or even if such a process occurs.

Well, given that you aren't a cognitive scientist, it doesn't speak well of you, as a graduate English student, that you're pontificating like an expert with respect to issues on which even experts in the field consider controversial. It calls into question the credibility of your argument, though not necessarily the credibility of you.

If you want to get into philosophy of the mind, which it appears you do, and I do not mean to insult you by inferring that may be related to your desire to earn a doctorate in Literary Theory, I would note that the mind and the brain are neither mutually exclusive nor fully co-extensive, so far as experts in the field can tell. It is not true, as you seem to assert, that every mental process can be pinpointed to a material process of the brain in a "mind is just what the brain does"/manifold fashion. That is why there is no consensus. Unless you have more knowledge of the brain than the field of cognitive science currently contains, your criticism of my position is no more than your opinion of where the field might go.

The rank assertion of Scott Eric Kaufman would seem to be of even less value than an encyclopedia citation of the lowest value.

I'm not sure why there's any need to be figurative

I was explaining a generalized concept, not trying to prove that I am a graduate English student who moonlights as an expert in cognitive science on blogs.

Have a good night.

Smilin' Jack said...

Oh good grief. Reading this in conjunction with the "crafty Obama" post just below, I have to say that if I really thought any of the candidates or their staffs were capable of the level of Mephistophelian Machiavellianism alleged here, I'd vote for them in a heartbeat. That's exactly the kind of president we need. Just imagine the damage we could do to Al Quaeda with subliminal messages of "Mohammad sucks!" on Voice of America.

The Vault Dweller said...

Mort

The point of my post was that it was unfair to call the ad a "revolting outrage or a shocking incompetence." I tried to support this by showing that there was no evidence suggesting there was an intent to manipulate the subconscious of viewers of this ad, nor was there a responsibility for the producers of the ad to believe that the inclusion of the letters NIG would create a reasonable possibility of a negative subconscious association.

The underlying reason for both of these points is that hypotheses involving how an image can manipulate the subconscious in a way which can manifest itself in what would normally be considered conscious decisions were not proved, nor could they be proved and thus are unreliable. This is not to say that it is not possible that manipulations like these can occur just that it is impossible to know whether or not the rationalizations we attribute to why they occur are correct.

You made the point that it is an error to ask people whether or not their opinion changed after watching the ad, and I generally agree. Knowing a possible effect the ad would have on the likelihood of a population group to vote for or against a candidate can only be reliably measured by noting any perturberance in the poll outcome.

Presumably the safest way to test this would be to have a huge control group (like say 100,000) and an equally huge variable group, and then expose both of them to the ad, but the control group would see the ad where the letters are photoshopped away. Then there would be a poll of both groups before exposure to the ad and then after.

Lets say that the results of the poll come back as you may have expected and that the variable group shows a statistically significant variation against Barack verus the control group. This is evidence that the seemingly innocuous NIG influenced voters to subconsciously associate that with Nigger and then further associate that with Barack Obama, and finally associate that with a sense of unreliability?

Possibly, but it could also support the hypothesis that NIG subconsciously calls into mind the word Night, which people tend to associate with a peaceful night sleep, which they then associate that feeling with Hillary Clinton and this causes the variable group to vote for her rather than against Barack.

Or perhaps the control group subconsciously detects that the photoshopped ad is somehow out of place, or wrong, which they then associate with Hillary causing them to vote against her.

Or maybe in the variable group the letters NIG, are subconsciously interpreted as NIC which is then interpreted as Nice which they then associate with Hillary and vote for her.

All these different hypotheses which would generally be supported by the same set of data suggests the idea of subconscious manipulation by conscious actions is unreliable. It is impossible to know whether the subconscious interprets images and data the same way the conscious mind does.

Thus it is unfair to impute malicious intentions absent direct evidence of intent. And it is also unfair to impute some degree of negligence in failing to remove the letters NIG from an add because the only thing supporting the idea that it can negatively affect Barack is unverifiable conjecture

Original Mike said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Mortimer Brezny said...

Thus it is unfair to impute malicious intentions absent direct evidence of intent. And it is also unfair to impute some degree of negligence in failing to remove the letters NIG from an ad because the only thing supporting the idea that it can negatively affect Barack is unverifiable conjecture

I think your reconstructed argument is fair enough and I think you presented it admirably and thoroughly, though I would note a fair criticism of your conclusion is that identifying blameworthy parties would be particularly difficult under your implicit standard because verifying bad faith would be nearly impossible and always highly contestable, which doesn't bode well for democracy if we believe democratic deliberation should be free of such filthy tactics. Thanks for the interesting read.

coldH2O said...

Your salary, Ann, is a waste of my & other Wisco taxpayer's money. Ni, back to the wine bottle or box, Ni, I say.

michilines said...

Hasn't your state already voted, Ann? I guess your weekend stab at having an influence is directed at someone, no?

Let me assure you, and I speak as someone in a state that matters come next week, your popularity aside, nobody cares.

They are not only voting for the top job, but also local positions. This is something you never get (your mini me is here).

I'm tired of the rumors and gossip that superficial people like you promote.

If you have no real argument, and you don't, no matter how hard you try, you will only get gossip. But that's what is up with this little post, right?

Smilin' Jack said...

And BTW FWIW, "nig" is not a fragment of a racial slur, it is a racial slur all by itself. I remember it was used in my childhood as short for "nigger" (or alternatively "nignog"--Ann should get some interesting links if these comments are Googled.)

michilines said...

smilin' jack, did you get a thrill while typing that comment?

Please tell.

Mortimer Brezny said...

Upthread you said we were meant to think of black criminals breaking into the house

Hmm. No. I answered this when I rejected Balfegor's "supposed to imagine" phrasing.

Mr. Forward said...

It's 9 PM. I want you kids to stop arguing, brush your teeth, and put on your pajamas...not those pajamas, dammit.

amba said...

hdhouse: "Nig Exporters" with a swastika?? That's just bewildering.

The only thing I can think of is that it's Asian, and the name is the Chinese name sometimes spelled "NG" and the swastika is an Asian design motif that doesn't have the connotations for them it does for us. But what a creepy coincidence.

As for the premise of this post:

In this day and age, I cannot imagine a group of people sitting down and baldly planning this. They couldn't look themselves in the eye, never mind deniability. What I can imagine is them hiring some subliminal-advertising wizard and saying "Make people uncomfortable." He/she could have done it deliberately but never said a word about it to a soul, while everyone else either didn't notice it, noticed but wondered if they were crazy, or noticed and decided to keep quiet.

amba said...

The G is partially obscured, on the side of the screen and slightly out of focus, written sideways, and present for a second or so; I wouldn't even have guessed that it was a G, had I not been told.

That's exactly how a subliminal-advertising genius would do it. With deniability, with doubt, right on the edge of intelligibility. If it was even a little more obvious, it wouldn't work. This way, anyone who brings it up can be called paranoid and crazy; it can be reflected back on the hypersensitive Obama campaign. We'll never know for sure if it's real, but one way to check would be to find out who made the ad and check out some of that person's other work.

amba said...

Of course, it's possible that it could be seen to say, "GOOD NIG." In which case, it helplessly reminds me of Charlotte's Web and "SOME PIG."

Mitch Merry said...

THIS IS EXCELLENT NEWS!! FOR HILLARY!!!

Anonymous said...

If this is supposed to be a subliminal effect rather than a painstaking freeze-frame analysis, then graphically the N reads as a Z.

This is clearly a reference to "Zig" as in "take off every Zig"

Original Mike said...

Hmm. No. I answered this when I rejected Balfegor's "supposed to imagine" phrasing.

That answer was gobbley gook. But this:

But the threat depicted does prey on fears of criminals breaking into your home. And it is a persistent stereotype that black people are the source of crime.

couldn't be more clear.

Nick said...

the image of an adorable, sleeping black child, carefully labelled "NIG" to prevent confusion, is cunningly chosen by the Clinton campaign: what could SEEM less fearful than a cute, sleeping child? surely such an image cannot be chosen to play on racist anxieties. but wait! the true racist knows all too well that EVEN WHEN SLEEPING and years from puberty young black children are ALREADY PLOTTING to ravish white women and abduct them from their beds--the VERY BEDS that are depicted in this insidious commerical that so cleverly appeals to racist fantasies....as soon as this this commercial concludes, this young black child will no doubt go from bed to bed, committing the most HORRIFIC CRIMES upon the INNOCENT PERSONS of those other adorable racially diverse children depicted in the commercial. how DARE the Clinton campaign so cynically invoke the figure of the cute black rapist child? for SHAME, Clinton campaign--for SHAME!

Anonymous said...

Seriously. You're joking, right? I don't plan on voting for her, but this is beyond stupid. Talk about desperation to find ANYthing for the Obama coddlers to whine about. Does this man have ANY gonads, whatsoever? He gets softball treatment from the media and conspiracy theorists like this to whine for him.

Unknown said...

The best definition of "racist" that I've heard: inserting the issue of race in a situation where it has no place. By that definition, the brouhaha over kiddie PJ's that say "goodnight" on them is racist; as, I suppose, is this post reporting on it.

Unknown said...

Is this a joke? This is a joke, right? I'm sorry, Ann, you're nuts.

Unknown said...

Ann,

With this post I lost any respect I used to have to you. I am sure you don't care, and you can write this off as another "lefty" commentator, but I used to respect you. I used to even comment here some time ago and engage in, what I thought, interesting discussions with some of your right-wing commentators. But after this post,
I am sorry, I do not respect you. I am sad to write this.

Peter V. Bella said...

From the comments at Kevin Drum:

Althouse certainly the kind of person intended to be a member of "Citizens United Not Timid". Why not ask her?

I think he was thinking of ceeing you next Tuesday. Ot he called you a...

In Re Trooper; we just blew up.

alan said...

I would go further. The child in question is shown just when the voice-over asks whom we would want in the White House when that crucial phone call comes through. I think he's meant to represent Obama.

Who would we want in the WH? A sleeping (lazy) black (good nig) child (inexperienced)? Or Hillary Clinton?

Anonymous said...

"NiGERO"

That's what my lizard brain saw when I looked at that commercial full-sized on a 19" computer screen.  I saved it from YouTube and watched it repeatedly.  I tried to forget about the image and imagine I was looking at it with fresh eyes.  I'm sorry, but it was pretty blatant to me.  The letters from the word "good" above begin to look like "ero" in this context, at least to my brain, conditioned as it was in the days of blatant racism in this country.

First of all, the image is visible for nearly three seconds.  It starts at second 10 and fades at the end of second 13.  This is hardly some single frame flash measured in milliseconds.  This image sinks in.

We are friends with a mixed-race couple who have a couple of kids, one of whom looks (or at least used to look) quite a bit like the child in the commercial.  If I were truly paranoid, I'd say Hillary's campaign is at once infantalizing a possibly bi-racial kid by showing him depending on the National Parent Hillary for protection, and at the same time fear-mongering about blacks, as dissected ad nauseum upthread.  Looks like a double-whammy to me:  Here's little Obama asleep in his wittew beddy-bye needing a grown-up to protect him; but at the same time you gotta watch out for those pickaninnies.

I think Alan has just beat me to it with this interpretation.

In any event, I agree with Althouse.  This is either incredibly foul or unbelievably stupid.  I know a lot of people won't see it that way, including my wife, but my kids picked up on it instantly.  I showed them the commercial after dinner and asked what they saw.  My youngest piped up immediately, "That kid had the N-word on his pajamas."  They then had a lot of fun making up variants, thankfully all non-racist.  Not trying to congratulate ourselves too much, but my kids have NEVER heard the N-word in this house outside of watching "Roots," "Glory," and possibly a few other movies, but they know what it represents.  FWIW, they have also NEVER said it themselves to my hearing.

In his most recent comment in a thread about shoe shopping, Sir Archy called the Presidential candidates, "Wretches."  It thought that was a cute faux-18th century rhetorical flourish, but in reality going too far.
I'm now beginning to think he's on to something.

brad said...

Wow. So Ann has reduced herself to race-baiting for internet attention? What a sad old lady.

Mr Furious said...

This is nuts. There is a simple explanation for why this is not subliminal racist messaging—THIS IS STOCK FOOTAGE! Hillary didn't shoot this, this is footage purchased from a stock photo/video source and assembled into an ad.

How do I know this? Because it's what agencies do. It is cost- and time-prohibitive to cast, set-up and shoot stuff like that. It's why Obama's response video uses the SAME footage at the beginning—they both bought it.

Anonymous said...

Of course it's stock footage. We all know that. It's just that the producers of this commercial should have looked at it with the eyes of my 11-year-old.

This is stock footage that in this context has a message. Perhaps it would have another message in another setting. but THIS ad is intended to contrast (white) Hillary with (black) Obama.

The overt message of the ad is NOT about race at all, of course. But the visual symbolism sure seems to be.

If my 11-year-old can immediately get what's going on, why can't those of you who keep saying there's nothing to be seen here?

David Batlle said...

>>>What I see is a really disgusting attempt by Obama and his supporters (including you I guess) to make every potential negative comment about Obama or his policies off limits because it is racist, either purposely or acidentally.

Ya think? As a Republican, all I can say is welcome to our world! LOL. Now you know how it feels to be at the receiving end of the Liberal race obsession.

Revenant said...

"In any case, the percentage of Americans who are horrified by the use of the word "nigger" significantly exceeds the tiny percentage of Americans who actually refer to blacks that way."

Hmm. But this is playing in Texas and Ohio.

Your point being? I assume you aren't stupid enough to think that people who like the word "nigger" outnumber those who hate it in Texas and Ohio.

The Vault Dweller said...

Theo

When you saw "NiGERO" in the ad, was this before or after you were aware of the imbroglio surrounding the inclusion of NiG?

The first time I saw the ad I did not notice anything conceivably inappropriate. Heck, when I first saw the ad I thought it was for McCain until I saw Hillary Clinton at the end.

However when I looked at the ad again, this time looking for NiG I saw it on the first review. If you were looking for something bad when you saw it maybe that is why you saw something bad?

Also, you mentioned that your children saw the N-word when you asked them about the ad. Assuming that you asked your children after you had found the word "NiGERO", don't you think that it is possible that your children were reading you to some extent? Kids are smarter than we give them credit for. They are pretty quick to pick up on facial and emotional cues. Perhaps they sensed that you saw something wrong with the ad when you asked them what they saw in the ad, and then tried to find that wrong thing in order to give the "correct" answer.

I just don't see the malicious intent or the incompetence that other people are seeing in the production of this ad. I find it hard to believe that most people when viewing this ad would immediately pick out some sort of hidden slur.

Righteous Bubba said...

Ann Althouse crazy, sun will rise tomorrow.

LoafingOaf said...

Those of you who think it's an accident: I'm sorry, but I think you are naive.

Althouse, what is it you're saying I'm naive about? Because I don't think the people who made Hillary's ad sat around in a brainstorming sessions and said to one another: "You know what would really make this ad work? Obama's a nigger, so if we use subliminal messages to remind people he's a nigger it'll be great! But how do we do that? We'll try and make the little kid in bed look like a black kid and also find some pajamas with the words 'good night' on them. Then we'll carefully include a shot where you see the letters N and I and almost a G. Then everyone will think, subconsciously, Obama is a nigger and I gotta vote for Hillary to protect my family from the niggers!"

Am I naive to think this did not actually occur at the brainstorming session amongst the makers of this ad? And wouldn't I be naive to not realize bloggers sometimes like to post attention-getting posts on the weekends to generate hits? I realize you're patting yourself on the back over this, and updating your post with comments that are calling you a "genius," but I think it's a bunch of bullsh*t.

Moon Rattled said...

Eric Muller said...

Ann, I'm not suggesting that you kill the thread and post because I "wish it would go away." I'm suggesting it because I admire your work and your blog, and don't think this worthy of you or it.


Oh come on now, Eric, it's not as if this is the first time Ann's been irrational. At what point will you decide she's not worthy?

Anonymous said...

Ms. Althouse,

I dislike Mrs. Clinton's socialist policies with a passion, but this is plain silly.

The theory that Clinton and Company intentionally injected half a racial slur on a kid's pajamas is undermined by the fact that, were it exposed to the public, Obama's support from blacks would only be strengthened.

One ought to spend time exposing Clinton's plans for America, not hyperanalyzing one of her ads.

Anonymous said...

Assuming that we can all agree this is just about the dumbest thing ever written on the internet, let us pause to reflect.

Can you imagine the response someone would get if they suggested this in a campaign strategy meeting? How would they have pitched it? What upside could they claim in moving forward with such an offensive, stupid and, by its very nature, ineffective plan?

The entire netroot community might want to sit down, take a breath and read “The Boy Who Cried Wolf.” You only get so many chances to scream “racism!” (As a McCain supporter, of course, I encourage you to continue wasting them on things like this.)

-Ben

Anonymous said...

you are pretty dense Ms. Althouse. You say people should pay close attention to some advertisement or otherwise we don't deserve democracy. No, we should pay close attention to where the candidates stand on the issues. Seriously how much free time do you have to analyze this ad? Get a life.

Ralph L said...

No one mentioned that it looks like little black figures are arrayed inside the "N".

Ralph L said...

Can you imagine the response someone would get if they suggested this in a campaign strategy meeting?
Can you imagine the response if this were a McCain ad in October? I suspect few of the commenters above would dismiss it as coincidence.

Jazzylady said...

I was going to leave a nasty comment but you aren't even worth it.

blake said...

If the count on the front is right, this will be post 201.

Anyone else suspect the "I'm a longtime reader, first-time commenter and I have to say I'm appalled!" type-messages? Maxine used to fake those all the time.

This is classic Althousiana.

The idea that this would work, IMO, is bunk (as others have pointed out), but the question is whether Hillary's campaign would believe it might. That's less bunk.

Put there deliberately? Most likely not. Because the "rats" thing was a manufactured outrage and at some level the Clinton campaign probably still feels they can't be the target of manufactured outrages.

Careless? Well, if the story spreads beyond this blog, QED.

Unreasonably careless? Eh. It probably was hastily thrown together stock footage. Surely by now, the competence of Hilary's "inevitable" campaign is fairly called into question.

Any campaign should now realize that--in a world of YouTubes and DVRs--everything will eventually receive frame-by-frame scrutiny from unfriendlies. You'd best put on the hat of an unfriendly and do it first.

blake said...

Ha! Never mind.

Missed 68 other posts.

This is 270. Posted at a time when all good little Ni--oh, I'll just stop there.

Revenant said...

Ann, I think you've had an attack of the sillies here. Why on Earth would Hillary label a black kid with a "NIG"? This isn't 1950s Alabama. Even in a southern state like Texas, the n-word doesn't play.

Anonymous said...

Questions:

Does Ann believe that all of Hillary's black campaign staff agreed to call Obama a nigger in a TV ad, or does she think they're silently complicit because they fear Clinton will have them lynched?

Aren't those six-pointed stars inside the letter Z? This would seem to confirm the "ZOG" hypothesis.

The pajama letters read vertically as "z - n" which could be seen as "Z over N." The top G is also folded over to resemble a 6. Is the Clinton campaign using subliminal algebra?

3D said...

Feel free to observe the claws out on many other websites, where personal attacks on me take the place of any serious effort to engage on the merits. For example, the usually serious blogger Kevin Drum calls me harebrained and a glue sniffer. The vicious attack on the messenger bespeaks fear of the message and lack of a substantive argument against it.

No, Ann. Pointing out that someone is making a nitwit argument does not validate the nitwitty argument. Nice try though.

Also, he did not call you a "glue-sniffer". He titled his post, "BAD WEEK TO STOP SNIFFING GLUE", which is an Airplane! reference, it means your post was so dumb that this would have been a good time for him to sniff some glue. Still an insult but a lot milder IMO.

justin case said...

I haven't read all the comments, so apologies if this is redundant. What is called subliminal here is what cognitive psychologists call priming; which depends upon the relationships between concepts. For people with a strong relationship between Obama and nigger, hearing his name could make one more likely to perceive the missing component of the last letter as a G. However, the priming in the other direction, between reading the ambiguous NI- or G would not do much to activate Obama. Regardless of intent, about which the facts are few, this sort of thing isn't going to change things. At worst, it would bring out things that are latent.

Unknown said...

You people are so silly. Obama is not a nigger. He is a Muslim, i.e. an Arab. I know this, because his middle name is Hussein. Thus, the proper term is SAND nigger. Geez.

Otto Man said...

"You are aware, of course, that the images of the family are stock footage and were not shot specifically for this ad?"

You have proof of the accuracy of your assertion, yes?


The fact that the Obama ad had the exact same footage?

Do you think they went back in and re-shot the exact same scenes with the same setting, actors, crew, etc.? Or do you think they asked the Hillary campaign for rights to their footage for the rebuttal ad?

Or maybe, just maybe, they bought the same set of stock film.

Unknown said...

At least the 9/11 conspiracy theories presented evidence to support their claims. Evidence that doesn't really prove their point, but at least they had evidence.

This should be easy to prove. Dozens of people must have been involved in creating this ad. Surely not all of them are racist, and at least one of them could come forward to say that Hilary Clinton is a racist and diabolically planned to brainwash all of America.

But somehow I have a feeling that won't happen. Because the claims are false.

Ohiogrannie said...

Ann, how did you and everyone else miss the fact that at 3 seconds into the commercial there is a sleeping blonde girl who has STARS on her jammies and a STRIPES on her pillow case. Subliminal? Naaaaaaahhhhhhhhhh.

Ohiogrannie said...

Ann, how did you and everyone else miss the fact that at 3 seconds into the commercial there is a sleeping blonde girl who has STARS on her jammies and a STRIPES on her pillow case. Subliminal? Naaaaaaahhhhhhhhhh.

CJColucci said...

Maybe I'm missing something here, but I thought Obama's blackness was already well known. Those inclined to view him as a "nigger," and draw certain inferences from that, already have all the information and incentive they need to do so. Do they really need any sly hints from Hillary? And what does she gain by dropping them?

Unknown said...

Ann-

Nowhere in your post do engage the substance of the the advertisement. Really, if someone was going to get upset about this ad, why not start by engaging the overt message? The ad is asserting that among two candidates with similar levels of foreign policy experience, it's actually dangerous to have Obama answering the phone, rather than Clinton. We know that the ad is sending that message; why not attack that message, instead of "subliminal racism"?

Nobody should call someone "harebrained", but what you're doing looks crazy. Can't you see that?

Tom Kopacz said...

It's not sinister, it's just terribly incompetent. That seems to be the level the HRC campaign has been working at for some time.

Mitch Merry said...

terrible incompetence is EXCELLENT NEWS!! FOR HILLARY!!!

!!!HILLMENTUM™!!!!

Skewered Left bicyclist addict said...

Next you'll be telling us that Gov. Mike Huckabee's supposed "floating cross" TV commercial was deliberate.

The Exalted said...

good lord

jammies with a word that includes the letters "nig"...que horror!

good catch ann, without resorting to such tricks, nobody would remember that obama is black!

vanderleun said...

A commenter at my page (who is not, I presume among the banned here) put it all quite concisely:

"Do you think the ad agency storyboarded this ad?

Do you think they 'Blocked out' each frame in black and white sketches then taped the pajamas to the kid and bed and lit the scene carefully for those three frames so that the partial "NIG" of "NIGHT" would be partially visible?

"I'm not getting enought of the "NIG" here guys! Tape it down and tell the damned kid not to breath!"

"Goddamnit! I'm not getting any of the "NIG" now! Tell the kid to stop squirming! I'll give her something to cry about!"

Or do you think they hired an outstanding Hollywood CGI studio to perform the effect? Did they make the kid wear 'green screen' pajamas so they could add the effect in later?

And then swore them all to double-secret secrecy? Is this a LIHOP or MIHOP conspiracy? I'll bet the studio was the same damned Illuminati one in the basement of Denver International Airport that faked the moon landings and covered up for the demolition of WTC 7! Fire doesn't melt steel and kids pajamas DO NOT have N-I-G on them!

Do you know what the inverse of "Occam's Razor" is?

It's Smacco's Butterknife.

GOOD NIGHT!"


Pretty much sums the who debacle up. On the other hand the benefit here -- as all can see -- is a burst of increased attention. A pity that it has cost so much in reputation, a much more durable good.

PickerAP said...

I find this column pretty pathetic. What a tortured stretch to come to this conclusion. You've been monitoring so much right wing garbage that you're starting to think like them.

Anonymous said...

"As far as Obama running for president goes, race has always been his strong suit, indeed the alpha and omega of him. You, Ann, even basically admitted as much yourself when you said that you were voting for him because of his potential in healing all the racial wounds of the country. Take away his blackness and he isn't there anymore"

Take away his race and you would have a junionr senator from Illinois, with less reason to be the nominee than Chris Dodd or Joe Biden.

He'd be nowhere.

brett said...

This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, and it is idiotic to post about it, much less analyze it in such detail. Jesus Tapdancing Christ. This is why so many people avoid this website. What utter drivel.

Jeff Faria said...

Althouse has really descended into the asinine here. "NIG" is a bar in Wisconsin. "Nig" are the first 3 letters in Nigeria. "NIG" is short for the National Institute of Genetics. "NIG" is the National INdustrial Group. Et cetera.

As far as the crap about "subliminal advertising", if you actually knew anything about marketing (my business) you know only a fool tries to do something as convoluted as this truly laughable post suggests. Because when you do something as open-ended as this, with 3 letters that could mean any number of things, you lose control of your message. Suddenly it can mean anything, and suddenly you are open to all kinds of charges.

There is also no research in this post. It's sheer speculation. It assumes that pajamas especially made with 3 letters were created for this ad. How absurd. Isn't it more likely they say "GoodNIGht Moon" or some such? Of course it is. Instead, this ass writes a post to get a cheap Instalink and whore for attention.

A cursory look at other sites shows that this post is being laughed at both on the left and the right. But Althouse doesn't care. Apparently ANY attention is good attention where she is concerned.

God, it's just foul being anywhere near this site now. The problem is, Reynolds links to her without warning you where you are going, so you follow a link and there you are, knee deep in this woman's preening garbage heap.

jurassicpork said...

You know, Ann, I am utterly flabbergasted that my usually well thought-out posts, if I'm lucky, get into double digits in comments while a conspiratorial Republican douchebag like you gets 300 comments for matrixing yet another conspiracy theory.

This is even better than you saying a year and a half ago that Jose Padilla was goggled so he couldn't send al Qaida messages by blinking in code.

blake said...

The jealousy is palpable!

VMC said...

You've barely scratched the surface, Ann. Hillary Clinton's obviously trying to control our thoughts through the use of subliminal pajamas. It all ties right in with the dangers of fluoridation and the rise of the Bilderbergs. Glad we got you on this one, Ann!!

Billy Joe said...

Ann,

I just noticed my navel hairs, if looked at from the right angle, spell 'gen', which must mean 'genius'.

When will we get to see you have another completely random meltdown?

vanderleun said...

You know, since I'm subscribed to the comments here I seem to be seeing a lot more remarks showing up in my mail than are shown in the comment thread.

Have these comments been closed without notice?

In a way, this comment is a test of that.

vanderleun said...

Nope. Guess not. Just a browser issue. Onward.

vanderleun said...

There are so many thing that could be done with GOOD NIGHT.

Some appropriate.

There's the classic George Burns line, "Say good night Gracie" to which Gracie says, "Good Night Gracie."

Then there's the poem, GOOD NIGHT MOON, in which we have long since past the point of

"And a little old lady
Whispering hush."

John Howard said...

"You are aware, of course, that the images of the family are stock footage and were not shot specifically for this ad?"

But why choose to show that clip at the point in the script when the viewer is told that "your vote will decide who answers that call", and we see a sleeping black child with not only the 2.5 letters but also the fourth "G" upside down, which causes the brain to process possible words like playing Boggle.

It stays on this NIGG child as the narration asks "whether it's someone" and the shot changes to a white girl just as the script gets to "who already knows the worlds leaders, etc". It never offers the "or" to correspond with the "whether", because the shot of the sleeping NIGG-wearing black child was the first choice. The image gets inserted into the narration by our brain, so that the narration ends up being "whether it's [a lazy sleeping nigger], or someone who already knows [a white girl, and then the awake and alert adult woman (why is she up and watching over the children at 3AM?).

Unknown said...

Just adding my two cents, this is an awful article. The demonization of Hillary continues, she will do ANYTHING, including subliminal messages. The advertising team was kicking themselves over not having a quick shot of the bathroom with a tube of darkie toothpaste on the sink. Oh wait, the ROOM was dark!! Oh, those racist Clintons. I really hope Obama wins Ohio and Texas so Hillary will drop out and those who demonize her will move on with their lives.

Unknown said...

I don't see a "G". All I see is "NIC". Perhaps the child is making a sad, quiet plea for a cigarette. "Mommy, may I have a cigarette? Mmmm, good NIC, mommy."

Seriously, would the Clinton campaign actually spend the time and effort to purchase multiple sets of children's pajamas and then experiment with posing that child so that they could display the first 3 letters of the word "NIGHT" in an effort to make a racial slur? If Clinton wanted to make issue of Obama's race then I think that they would do so a little bit more effectively. This whole argument is ridiculous.

salvage said...

Yes, it was an attempt to insight racism against Blacks to win Hillary the nomination.

Or something.

I hope that the Althouse genes are being preserved so that when they perfect cloning we can have a whole army of people as smart as you.

I think there is some sneaky blinking going on in the ad too.

Smitty Werbenmanjensen said...

The pajamas say "Good night." You can see part of the word "good" above.

Yes. Unfortunately, Ann Althouse thinks "night" is spelled "nite."

Calton said...

Those of you who think it's an accident: I'm sorry, but I think you are naive. Those of you who think it's an accident and not even a problem: You are dangerously naive.

That's okay: the reality-based people think you're a flogger of ridiculously convoluted smear jobs. If you actually believe this bizarre notion, then you're merely a dangerous whack-job.

Mr.Murder said...

"Good Nig, and Good Luck."

-Edward R. Mortimer

The Black Cat said...

You are certifiably insane.

themediacircus said...

I'm surprised nobody understands where this shot came from. This is stock photography - a shot that was purchased from a company like Getty Images (and obviously, that's how Obama's campaign was able to use the same shots in their response ad). When you buy one of these shots you don't get a whole lot of choices, so you can't say, "Gee, I like that shot, but can you give me one just like it where the fabric is folded a little differently, or how about one where the pajamas say 'H-I-L" instead of 'N-I-G'?"

French said...

MORTIMER BREZNY:

Nig is not a fragment of nigger. It is no different from nigger, and it is still in common usage in the Midwest and the South.

The ad is running in Texas and Ohio.


Of course the fact that the ad is running in Texas and Ohio is proof positive of this farce... To be honest, though, I'm not surprised that somebody from Brooklyn/Madison would heartily believe this.

I'm a native Texan and work with oilfield roughnecks, who are surprisingly eneterprising when it comes to slurs. I have never once heard "nig" as a form of "nigger". Never; it's just not natural -"nigger, "nigra" or "coon" kinda rolls off the tongue - "nig" begs a closing vowel and is just too damn short, ugly and awkward for the slight lilt that we tend have in our speech. Try to talking in a Southern accent and try each of the alternatuves above. One clearly does not fit.

This to my mind is no different than the 9/11 conspiracies. Too far a reach, too hard to keep quiet and too much risk for too little reward. Hey, but thanks for believing that it would be an effective tactic to use on us ignorant savages down here in the South in 2008.

vanderleun said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
vanderleun said...

Sorry. For some reason I have to post in order to see the thread.

vanderleun said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
katherine said...

Even the N is heightened by the pattern...which makes it very noticeable. There are no such things as coincidences.

Johnny Rhetoric said...

In my mind, the biggest controversy raised by the advertisement should be the fact that ABC Senior Political Correspondent George Stephanopoulos was able to air the ad (free of charge to the Clinton Campaign) 11 different times during his appearances on "This Week," "Nightline," "Good Morning America" and "ABC World News" in the three days before the Texas and Ohio primaries.

Yet, during all this recent camera time, Mr. Stephadisingenuous managed to fail, abjectly, to note that he "was a senior political adviser to the 1992 U.S. presidential campaign of Bill Clinton and later became Clinton's communications director."

This is the type of "say anything, do anything" to win ethic I would expect only from a Clinton -- or a Clinton protege.

Anonymous said...

Find the stock feed and see if this thing has legs !

Anonymous said...

While we're on the subject, how about the subliminal but unmistakable message in the name "Althouse," which is only two letters away from "outhouse." Obviously, this is Ann's way of subliminally telling us just what her words are worth. I couldn't agree more.

Wonderboy said...

there are lots and lots of comments, and they are pretty tl;dr, so i don't know if someone's mentioned it. if they have, then consider this an affirmation of that comment.

the footage of the child sleeping was shot several years before the ad itself. therefore it was public domain, which allowed hillary's campaign advertising specialists to use it. so unless they specifically shopped around for a video clip of a girl with "nig" on her pajayjays sleeping, it's probably an accident.

vanderleun said...

And now a bit of back story on this ad.

Remember that "NIG" in the Pajamas Ad? Here's the Real Story. @ AMERICAN DIGEST

darknugget said...

My pajamas say Guinness on them. Which means I don't believe in "Nessy"

Unknown said...

To all the people trying to put this aside and say that Ann is "crazy" and that she should take this post down, who are you voting for? just curious.

guy said...

it is because of people like you that hate filled organisations are able to carry on the way they do. it is things that people like you do like writing this article that really make people that are actually trying to make a difference in todays modern racism issue look like complete dickheads.

Anonymous said...

While you wouldn't expect the Clinton campaign to have the child wearing Objama Pajamas, you can order your very own Ojamas at Ojamas Sleepwear.

Donavon said...

As far as I understand it, the video of children sleeping is taken from ten year old stock footage. They interviewed one of the children in the video a few months ago, who is now 19, and was voting for Obama rather than Clinton. Go figure.

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