Still, it’s a walk from the West Wing to the Rose Garden, not necessarily down Michigan Avenue. So Rahm opens with a reminder that he’s a Chicagoan, born and bred: “Chicago is a great city with great people, and I want my children to feel as passionate about the city as I did growing up.” While he speaks on the voiceover, we see him meet and shake hands with people from all walks of life* from the streets to the subways to a diner. Rahm is styled casually, seen for the most part in a jacket but no tie (and when he is seen in a tie, it’s without a jacket).
It’s actually a great ad – simple, plainspoken, and with enough footage of Rahm pounding the pavement to show that this wasn’t just shot in one day (though clearly a lot of it was, unless he wears that navy jacket a lot). He’s also refreshingly candid, saying: “We’ve gotta decide whether we’re gonna continue to be a great city, or become a second-tier city. I think it’s time to make that choice, and to make the tough decisions that are necessary.” Political rhetoric usually errs on the side of “this is a great city! and does not suggest there is a real danger of slipping to — gasp! — second tier (this also smartly appeals to city status anxiety). I don’t live in Chicago so I don’t know how it will go over (if at all!), but it seems to be a good, down-to-earth first outing. Watch it below:
*No doubt there will be a few hand sanitizer jokes — I put my reference as an asterisk and not a parenthetical because that detail, an early anecdote in the Rahm-for-Chicago narrative, is actually entirely
**Via Jonathan Martin (@JMartPolitico) via Ben LaBolt (@BenLaBolt): “Our first TV spot: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EnEiBKJIvWI. On air tmmw.”