By Doyne Phillips, Managing Editor for Southern Writers Magazine
As the Reading Clerk of the Arkansas State Senate I
witnessed the couple now known as the Clintons enter the Governor’s Mansion in
Arkansas. At the time Hillary was Hillary Rodham. It was much later after the
youngest Governor in history lost his re-election bid and became the youngest
Ex-Governor in history that Hillary became Hillary Clinton.
This name change along with a new daughter brought the
Clintons to a place of family in the eyes of Arkansans. Now Hillary and Bill
are grandparents and Hillary is again running for office. The story is the same
but different. Very similar but is it by design. The truth is if the story is
successful why not continue with it similarities but with a little change here
and there.
Actually this is nothing new. It has been done in literature, movies
and songs. Why not politics?
Finding that winning formula and putting your twist on
it works. Singer songwriter Garth Brooks spoke of his great love for the song Mrs.
Robinson. Brooks wanted his own Mrs. Robinson so he wrote That Summer which is
about a young man enticed by an older woman while working on her farm one
summer. Singer songwriter Paul Janeway of St Paul and The Broken Bones did the
same. Janeway was asked by David Letterman about his song Call Me. Janeway said
he had always liked Wilson Pickett’s “634-5789” and wanted a song with a phone
number in it. So he wrote Call Me.
The same is true for literature. Themes of love,
hatred, overcoming hardship and the like are repeated. The repetition is so
evident today that when you go online and buy a book, CD or movie it is
immediately noted. You are then offered similar items when you are told, if you
bought or liked this, you would probably like this. Marketing has now
recognized and is using the very thing authors, songwriters and movie makers
have known for years.
The truth is some can tell the same story but better.
Some can sing the same song but better. The same is true for movies. Some can
make the same movie but better. Who is to say you couldn’t do the same. Think
of your favorite story and how you may make it better. What could you do to
bring it up to date? Using the theme but making it modern, digital and relative
to today. It is possible and if it has a great theme will be done.
The question is who will do it? Or even a better
question may be, “Who better than you?” You
may be the one to write the next theme concerning “Hillary Clinton Returns”.
No comments:
Post a Comment