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.
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