• The Movie Poster President — Why Campaigns Should Learn From Hollywood
    Jun 22 2026

    What if the most important lesson political campaigns could learn isn’t from another campaign?

    What if it’s from Hollywood?

    In this episode of the Face Forward Podcast, David O’Brien and Vaughan Emsley explore a provocative idea: that the movie poster—not the television ad—may be the most powerful model for modern political communication.

    The best movie posters don’t explain everything.

    They communicate meaning instantly.

    In a single image, they establish character, emotion, conflict, and expectation. They tell us what kind of story we’re about to experience.

    Politics increasingly works the same way.

    Voters spend only moments evaluating candidates. Before they absorb policy, they absorb symbols. Before they understand arguments, they form impressions.

    So what would happen if campaigns approached communication the way Hollywood builds anticipation for a blockbuster?

    From Jaws to Gladiator, from archetypes to typography, Vaughan reveals why the strongest campaigns behave less like policy platforms and more like unforgettable movie posters—simple, emotionally powerful, and impossible to confuse with anyone else.

    If you’re a candidate, consultant, strategist, designer, or communicator, this episode will change how you think about political branding, visual storytelling, and voter recognition.

    Because if your campaign cannot be understood in a single compelling image, there’s a good chance voters don’t fully understand what you represent.

    Face Forward is the podcast where we explore how candidates become the face of the change voters are already seeking—and how to do it deliberately.

    Connect with Scott Buckley and Vaughan Emsley through the Face Forward LinkedIn page.

    If you enjoyed this episode, please follow, share, and leave a review.


    © 2026 Face Forward. A Buckstarter Company. All Rights Reserved.


    #FaceForwardPodcast #PoliticalBranding #PoliticalStorytelling #CampaignStrategy #MoviePosterPresident #VisualCommunication #PoliticalDesign #BrandStrategy #PoliticalAdvertising #Leadership #Campaigns #VoterPsychology #CreativeStrategy #Politics

    Show More Show Less
    8 mins
  • The Archetype Advantage — Why Voters Decide Before You Speak
    Jun 16 2026

    Why do some candidates feel trustworthy before they’ve said a word?

    Why do others struggle to connect even when voters agree with their policies?

    In this episode of the Face Forward Podcast, David O’Brien and Vaughan Emsley explore one of the most powerful—and least understood—forces in politics: archetypes.

    Drawing on psychology, branding, advertising, and political history, they reveal how voters use emotional shortcuts to decide who a candidate is long before they evaluate issues, positions, or policy proposals.

    From Reagan to Thatcher, Obama to Trump, the most successful political leaders understood that voters rarely experience candidates as a collection of policies. They experience them as recognizable characters—builders, protectors, reformers, outsiders, and leaders.

    The question isn’t whether voters assign you an archetype.

    The question is whether you’re shaping it deliberately.

    If you’re a candidate, consultant, strategist, or communicator, this episode will change the way you think about trust, recognition, political branding, and leadership.

    Face Forward is the podcast where we explore how candidates become the face of the change voters are already seeking—and how to do it deliberately.

    Connect with Scott Buckley and Vaughan Emsley through the Face Forward LinkedIn page.

    If you enjoyed this episode, please follow, share, and leave a review.


    © 2026 Face Forward. A Buckstarter Company. All Rights Reserved.


    #FaceForwardPodcast #PoliticalBranding #PoliticalStorytelling #CampaignStrategy #Archetypes #Leadership #PoliticalPsychology #VoterBehavior #PoliticalCommunication #BrandStrategy #PublicLeadership #Campaigns #Politics

    Show More Show Less
    8 mins
  • Why Graham Platner Is Breaking the Rules of Political Gravity
    Jun 9 2026

    A political newcomer. A longtime incumbent. And a race that may reveal more about voter psychology than political ideology.

    In this episode of the Face Forward Podcast, David and Vaughan Emsley examine the surprising rise of Graham Platner in Maine’s U.S. Senate race and what it tells us about how candidates become the face of change voters are already seeking.

    Why are attacks against some candidates less effective than expected? Why do voters often respond more strongly to archetypes than arguments? And can a political outsider channel the same frustrations that powered Donald Trump—while pursuing entirely different goals?

    Using Maine’s closely watched Senate race as a case study, Vaughan explores the emotional forces shaping modern politics, the importance of authentic political branding, and why voters frequently decide who a candidate is long before they evaluate policy positions.

    Whether Graham Platner ultimately wins or loses, his campaign offers valuable lessons for anyone interested in leadership, storytelling, voter behavior, and the future of political communication.

    Face Forward is the podcast where we explore how candidates become the face of the change voters are seeking—and how to do it deliberately.

    To learn more about Face Forward, or to connect with Scott Buckley and Vaughan Emsley, visit and follow the Face Forward LinkedIn page.

    If you enjoyed this episode, please follow, share, and leave a review. It helps others discover the show and join the conversation.


    #FaceForwardPodcast #PoliticalBranding #PoliticalStorytelling #GrahamPlatner #MainePolitics #SusanCollins #PoliticalStrategy #Campaigns #Leadership #VoterPsychology #Archetypes #Elections #Politics


    © 2026 Face Forward. A Buckstarter Company. All Rights Reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • The Alan Siegel Interview: Why Simplicity Wins Elections
    Jun 2 2026

    In this episode of the Face Forward Podcast, Vaughan Emsley sits down with legendary branding pioneer Alan Siegel — the man who helped change how America communicates.


    Alan Siegel is one of the most influential figures in modern branding. Through his groundbreaking work at Siegel+Gale, he helped redefine corporate identity, simplify communication for millions of consumers, and launch the Plain English movement — transforming dense, inaccessible language into communication people could actually understand and trust.


    At a moment when political communication has become increasingly bloated, scripted, and interchangeable, Alan’s ideas may be more relevant than ever.


    Because voters today are drowning in words.


    Too many candidates speak in policy abstractions, consultant-tested jargon, and poll-driven talking points. The result? Voters often remember nothing — and feel even less.


    Alan explains why simplicity is not “dumbing down.”
    It is clarity. Precision. Confidence. Leadership.


    This conversation explores:
    • Why clear language creates trust
    • Why complexity often signals weakness, not intelligence
    • How memorable leaders communicate emotionally simple ideas
    • Why most political messaging fails instantly
    • The hidden relationship between branding, storytelling, and democracy
    • Why candidates who cannot explain themselves clearly rarely become the face of change


    From Reagan to Obama to today’s fractured media environment, this episode examines why simplicity has become one of the last true competitive advantages in politics.


    If you care about persuasion, leadership, branding, campaigns, or the future of political communication, this is an essential conversation.


    #FaceForward #AlanSiegel #PlainEnglish #PoliticalBranding #Storytelling #PoliticalCommunication #BrandStrategy #Leadership #CampaignStrategy #Communications #Politics #Podcast #Marketing #Trust #Narrative #PublicSpeaking #Advertising #EmotionalConnection #PoliticalPodcast #Simplicity


    © 2026 Buckstarter LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Face Forward™ is a trademark of Buckstarter LLC.

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • Why Political Language Fails — And How to Break Through
    May 26 2026

    Most political language doesn’t fail because it’s wrong.

    It fails because it doesn’t mean anything.

    “We’re fighting for you.”

    “Hardworking families.”

    “America is at a crossroads.”

    You’ve heard it all before.

    And that’s exactly the problem.

    Voters aren’t rejecting ideas.

    They’re tuning out language that feels recycled, abstract, or empty.

    In this episode, we break down why political language creates distance instead of connection—and what it takes to break through.

    Including:

    * Why voters only give you seconds of attention—and what that means

    * The role of simplicity, clarity, and reading level in real communication

    * Why “sounding like a politician” guarantees you disappear

    * The difference between language that communicates—and language that only sounds like it does

    * How leaders like FDR, Reagan, and Thatcher used simple, visual language to create meaning

    * And a practical framework for making ideas actually land

    At Face Forward, the principle is simple:

    Voters don’t respond to volume.

    They respond to meaning—quickly understood.

    And meaning requires something most campaigns avoid:

    Clarity.


    If people don’t understand you instantly—
    you don’t exist.


    #PoliticalBranding #Leadership #CampaignStrategy #Storytelling #Communication #FaceForward


    © 2026 Buckstarter LLC. All rights reserved.

    Face Forward Political Branding Podcast.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • Before TikTok: How FDR Became the Original Face of Change
    May 18 2026

    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

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins
  • Do Movements Need a Face? (Yes. Here’s Why.)
    May 12 2026

    Most campaigns think the job is messaging.

    Say it clearer.

    Say it louder.

    Say it more often.

    But that’s not how people decide.

    Human beings are wired for recognition, not language. We process faces instantly—long before we process ideas.

    That’s why the movements that scale…

    the ones people remember…

    almost always become associated with a person.

    A face.

    In this episode, we break down:

    * Why ideas don’t spread on their own

    * The neuroscience behind facial recognition and decision-making

    * Why one person can represent millions—but the reverse rarely works

    * What happens when a campaign has energy, but no face

    * And the one question every campaign should be asking

    At Face Forward, this is the core idea:

    Candidates don’t just deliver the message.

    They are the message.

    And if the face doesn’t carry the meaning—

    no amount of messaging will fix it.


    If a voter saw your candidate’s face—would they know what they stand for?


    © 2026 Buckstarter LLC. All rights reserved.

    Face Forward is a Buckstarter company.


    #PoliticalBranding #Leadership #CampaignStrategy #Storytelling #PublicLeadership #FaceForward

    Show More Show Less
    6 mins
  • Why Voters Love Some Candidates — And Why That Wins Elections
    May 5 2026

    Most political campaigns compete on issues.

    Some compete on messaging.

    Very few compete on something far more powerful.

    Love.

    In this episode, we explore a question most campaigns never ask:

    Can a political candidate actually be loved?

    And if they can… does that change everything?

    Because when voters feel something deeper than agreement — when they feel recognition, connection, even devotion — the rules of politics begin to shift.

    Attacks lose their force.

    Contradictions are forgiven.

    Support becomes resilient.

    And in some cases, it becomes decisive.

    Drawing on examples from both politics and brand-building, we examine why some leaders inspire lasting loyalty while most remain interchangeable.

    Because most candidates are known for what they say.

    But the ones who break through are known for what they represent.

    In this conversation, we explore:

    • Why most candidates are perceived as interchangeable

    • How emotional alignment creates loyalty that outlasts logic

    • The difference between being supported and being believed in

    • And what it takes to move from recognition to devotion

    This is not about popularity.

    It’s about meaning.

    Because in the end:

    The candidates who win are not always the most qualified.

    They are the ones voters feel most connected to.


    © 2026 Buckstarter LLC. All rights reserved. Face Forward is a trademark of Buckstarter LLC.

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins