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Typo is the most honest thing in Hillary Clinton’s campaign announcement
Apr 13, 2015, 7:16 AM | Updated: Oct 14, 2024, 9:25 am

Hillary Clinton's announcement video was preceded by an email from her staff with a press release that included a typo.
Taken from Monday’s edition of The David Boze Show.
Hillary is in it, and she’s in it to lose it. I mean, in it to win it.
Hillary Clinton’s announcement video was preceded by an email from her staff with a press release that included a typo.
The typo indicated possibly the most honest thing in Clinton’s entire announcement: She’s fought children and families all her career.
Clinton’s announcement indicated she is going to be very focused on talking about something other than Hillary Clinton. That is the basis of her announcement.
The presidential candidate has a video displaying all the varieties of voters she hopes feel enamored toward her. She is sending a message via visuals, but there is nothing in the video about why she is running other than: “The American people need a champion, and I want to be that champion.”
So the reason you should be ready for Hillary is she wants you to be ready for Hillary.
Her announcement video was slickly produced with effective music and visuals. The video is primarily targeted towards women.
Clinton doesn’t show up until 1 minute and 34 seconds into the video. Fittingly enough, you can’t see that it is her; I say fittingly because she’s eager to make herself a mystery. Hillary Clinton doesn’t want to seem to be the politician you’ve known.
The video also displays the new symbol of her campaign, an “H” with an arrow through it.
The announcement video has a bizarre closing. If you break it down, there’s not a lot that makes logical sense.
She states, “I’m getting ready to do something, too, I’m running for president.”
Well, you’re not getting ready, you are ready. Now you’re running for president.
When she’s citing what the country needs, or that strong families are essential, it doesn’t connect to the previous sentence. It’s almost as though there was a focus group that captured the idea that we need economic growth and we need strong families and she thought, you know what, I’m just going to lump those two together; I’m not even going to link them.
Even the imagery: A laughing kid and smiling single people as the strength of the American family, which kind of defeats the point, to a certain extent.
Taken from Monday’s edition of The David Boze Show.