"They Don't Work for You," a gun-control campaign from Brooklyn design shop Guts & Glory, is
intended to stir the emotions of the faithful and give them simple,
direct and proactive ways to respond. The website gets under your skin
using deceptively simple, exceptionally skillful Web design and the
frequently overlooked (yet often quite powerful) tactic of repetition.
First,
we see images of the six educators killed in December's Newtown, Conn.,
school shooting, and the headline "These teachers sacrificed their
lives for the children they worked for." That's followed by pictures of the 45 U.S. senators whose
recent votes killed the proposal to extend background checks on firearm
sales. "These senators voted against protecting the children they work
for," the copy says. As users scroll down, successive screens show
individual lawmakers alongside images of kids who died from gun violence
(and who, according to Guts & Glory, might not have perished if
stricter firearms laws had been in place). Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.)
appears first, paired with 6-year-old Newtown victim Charlotte Bacon.
Text reads, "Sen. Alexander doesn't work for kids like Charlotte," and
urges visitors to ask him why via phone, email and social media. This
basic template is then repeated 44 times, plugging in a different
legislator and slain child.
Repetition
is, of course, a basic tenet of advertising, political speeches and
religious sermons, because it reinforces and amplifies the message,
lending extra power to an argument or proposition and firmly fixing
ideas in the audience's heads. It's a proven motivator. The more times
you're told "Do it," "Do it," "Do it," the more likely you are to take
action, especially if you already agree with the premise. The repetition
here is particularly effective. The faithful grow angrier—and
presumably more primed to contact senators to make their feelings
known—with each passing screen.
With
folks now on edge, NRA chief Wayne LaPierre appears solo near the end,
along with the message, "These senators don’t work for you. They work
for the NRA, who works for the gun industry, whose sole purpose is to
sell more guns." One more scroll yields a hashtag: #AskThemWhy. Of
course, doing so is tantamount to asking a loaded question, but that's
exactly what the site's creators have in mind—and lawmakers might want
to have some compelling answers ready.


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