In the interest of staying true to Michelle Obama’s now famous words; for their final large scale GOTV ads, as the Trump campaign went low with an ad that focused on Hillary’s faults more than Donald’s strong suits, the Clinton campaign went higher than Katy Perry’s falsetto.
The ad is set to the uplifting hit song “Roar” by Katy Perry. Perry has been campaigning for Hillary since November of 2015, and even dressed up as an eerily accurate Hillary Clinton for Halloween.
The ad begins with an appeal to voters to get to the polling booths. The words “I’m voting for…” appear over the faces of different Americans in different parts of the country who are voting “for respect”, “for courage”, “for equality”, “for community,” etc.
More faces of diverse Americans flash across the screen with more reasons why they vote. A Hispanic woman is voting “for higher wages”, a mother holding her child is voting “for this baby”, young children carrying backpacks into class and older students staring up at the sky are voting “for our future”. Amidst the clips of mothers picking up their children, an old clip of a young Clinton picking up a stack of books, from her time as a young lawyer fresh out of Wellesley.
Suddenly, to the uplifting and inspiring chorus of Roar, the ad turns to clips of Hillary, her rallies, and the people attending them and supporting her. It ends on a video of her smiling at a large crowd with the words “I’m voting for a President” emblazoned across the screen.
The ad is set to air from Saturday until election day in eleven key battleground states: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
The ad is set to the uplifting hit song “Roar” by Katy Perry. Perry has been campaigning for Hillary since November of 2015, and even dressed up as an eerily accurate Hillary Clinton for Halloween.
The ad begins with an appeal to voters to get to the polling booths. The words “I’m voting for…” appear over the faces of different Americans in different parts of the country who are voting “for respect”, “for courage”, “for equality”, “for community,” etc.
More faces of diverse Americans flash across the screen with more reasons why they vote. A Hispanic woman is voting “for higher wages”, a mother holding her child is voting “for this baby”, young children carrying backpacks into class and older students staring up at the sky are voting “for our future”. Amidst the clips of mothers picking up their children, an old clip of a young Clinton picking up a stack of books, from her time as a young lawyer fresh out of Wellesley.
Suddenly, to the uplifting and inspiring chorus of Roar, the ad turns to clips of Hillary, her rallies, and the people attending them and supporting her. It ends on a video of her smiling at a large crowd with the words “I’m voting for a President” emblazoned across the screen.
The ad is set to air from Saturday until election day in eleven key battleground states: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.