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The biggest sins of spin

How our failure to understand propaganda is handing power to extremists.

July 2, 2009 10:50
Urgent message: Jonathan Gabay

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

2 min read

When it comes to political spin, the Israelis have a lot to learn from the Palestinians.

This is the view of marketing expert Jonathan Gabay, who has spent 30 years in advertising and whose new book, Soul Traders, looks at the impact of propaganda on popular culture.

The trouble with Israel’s approach, he says, is that it has not mastered the crucial art of putting across a simple, emotive message. By sending out images of bloodied bomb victims and wailing children to the world’s media, “the Palestinians give a very strong message in a powerful way that gets into the news. Israel gives the complex view. For the intelligentsia it’s great, but who the hell has got the time?”

Gabay uses his marketing work with an Indian charity for homeless people as an example. “If I wrote a headline: ‘Please give money to save 100,000 people from dying,’ I would get in quite a few people,” he explains. “But if I wrote a headline saying: ‘You could save this one child from dying,’ I would get more people. People can’t deal with anything too complex. The Palestinians are very good at this.”