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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:16,800 --> 00:00:19,989 A hundred years ago a new theory about human nature was put forth by Sigmund Freud. 2 00:00:21,211 --> 00:00:24,581 He had discovered he said, primitive, sexual and aggressive forces 3 00:00:24,791 --> 00:00:27,786 hidden deep inside the minds of all human beings. 4 00:00:28,739 --> 00:00:34,302 Forces which if not controlled, led individuals and societies to chaos and destruction. 5 00:00:36,738 --> 00:00:40,647 This series is about how those in power have used Freud's theories 6 00:00:41,040 --> 00:00:45,240 to try and control the dangerous crowd in an age of mass democracy. 7 00:00:49,052 --> 00:00:53,830 But the heart of the story is not just Sigmund Freud but other members of the Freud family. 8 00:00:59,804 --> 00:01:03,725 This episode is about Freud's American nephew, Edward Bernays. 9 00:01:04,678 --> 00:01:07,913 Bernays is almost completely unknown today but his influence 10 00:01:08,180 --> 00:01:11,806 on the 20th century was nearly as great as his uncles. 11 00:01:13,117 --> 00:01:16,398 Because Bernays was the first person to take Freud's idea 12 00:01:16,662 --> 00:01:20,290 about human beings and use them to manipulate the masses. 13 00:01:25,492 --> 00:01:30,105 He showed American corporations for the first time how to they could make people want 14 00:01:30,308 --> 00:01:35,138 things they didn't need by linking mass produced goods to their unconscious desires. 15 00:01:36,766 --> 00:01:41,600 Out of this would come a new political ideal of how to control the masses. 16 00:01:43,215 --> 00:01:49,148 By satisfying people's inner selfish desires one made them happy and thus docile. 17 00:01:49,855 --> 00:01:55,622 It was the start of the all-consuming self which has come to dominate our world today. 18 00:02:02,455 --> 00:02:04,329 Part One - Happiness Machines 19 00:02:13,934 --> 00:02:18,986 Freud's ideas about how the human mind works have now become an accepted part of society. 20 00:02:19,556 --> 00:02:21,060 As have psychoanalysts. 21 00:02:21,685 --> 00:02:25,994 Every year the psychotherapists' ball is held in a grand palace in Vienna. 22 00:02:28,935 --> 00:02:33,044 Dr. Alfred Fritz, President World Council for Psychotherapy This is the psychotherapy ball. 23 00:02:33,309 --> 00:02:37,058 Psychotherapists come, some advanced patients come, former patients come, 24 00:02:37,624 --> 00:02:45,373 and many other people - friends, but also people from the Viennese society 25 00:02:46,646 --> 00:02:50,357 who like to come to a nice, elegant, comfortable ball. 26 00:02:54,154 --> 00:02:55,672 But it was not always so. 27 00:02:58,287 --> 00:03:02,085 A hundred years ago Freud's ideas were hated by Viennese society. 28 00:03:02,874 --> 00:03:07,220 At that time Vienna was the center of a vast empire ruling central Europe. 29 00:03:09,210 --> 00:03:13,960 And to the powerful nobility of the Habsburg accord, Freud's ideas were not only embarrassing, 30 00:03:14,312 --> 00:03:17,927 but the very idea of examining and analyzing ones inner feelings 31 00:03:18,250 --> 00:03:21,036 was a threat to their absolute control. 32 00:03:24,814 --> 00:03:29,315 Countess Erzie Karolyi - Budapest: You see at that time these people had the power 33 00:03:29,595 --> 00:03:31,847 and of course you just weren't allowed to show your bloody feelings, I mean you just couldn't. 34 00:03:32,111 --> 00:03:35,314 You know if you were unhappy, can you imagine, 35 00:03:35,681 --> 00:03:40,189 for instance you sit somewhere in the country, in a castle, you are deeply unhappy, you are a woman; 36 00:03:40,472 --> 00:03:44,283 you couldn't go to your made and cry on her shoulders, you couldn't go into the village 37 00:03:44,488 --> 00:03:47,442 and complain about your feelings, 38 00:03:48,151 --> 00:03:53,352 it was like selling yourself to someone, you just couldn't. You know? 39 00:03:54,648 --> 00:04:02,597 Because they had to respect you. Now of course, Freud, he put that thought very much into question 40 00:04:03,533 --> 00:04:10,489 you see to examine yourself you would have to put other things into question - the society, 41 00:04:10,941 --> 00:04:15,754 everything that surrounds you and that was not a good thing at that time. 42 00:04:15,989 --> 00:04:23,490 - Why not? - Because your self-created empire to a certain extent would have fallen to bits 43 00:04:23,693 --> 00:04:25,429 much earlier already. 44 00:04:25,852 --> 00:04:29,412 But what frightened the rulers of the empire even more was Freud's idea 45 00:04:29,660 --> 00:04:31,412 that hidden inside all human beings 46 00:04:31,691 --> 00:04:34,070 were dangerous instinctual drives. 47 00:04:34,902 --> 00:04:37,678 Freud had devised a method he called psychoanalysis. 48 00:04:38,288 --> 00:04:42,568 By analyzing dreams and free association he had unearthed he said 49 00:04:42,568 --> 00:04:47,729 powerful sexual and aggressive forces which were the remnants of our animal past. 50 00:04:48,413 --> 00:04:52,071 Feelings we repressed because they were too dangerous. 51 00:04:52,836 --> 00:04:55,699 Dr. Earnest Jones - Colleague of Freud: Freud devised a method 52 00:04:55,935 --> 00:04:59,507 for exploring the hidden part of the mind which we nowadays call the unconscious 53 00:05:00,006 --> 00:05:04,548 this the part is totally unknown to our consciousness. 54 00:05:04,788 --> 00:05:10,760 That there exists a barrier in all our minds which prevents these 55 00:05:10,996 --> 00:05:16,245 hidden and unwelcome impulses from the unconscious from emerging. 56 00:05:22,276 --> 00:05:26,806 In 1914 the Austria-Hungarian Empire led Europe into war. 57 00:05:27,498 --> 00:05:32,090 As the horror mounted Freud saw it as terrible evidence of the truth of his findings. 58 00:05:33,277 --> 00:05:37,091 The saddest thing he wrote, is that, this is exactly the way we should have expected 59 00:05:37,436 --> 00:05:40,636 people to behave, from our knowledge of psychoanalysis. 60 00:05:42,214 --> 00:05:45,548 Governments had unleashed the primitive forces in human beings 61 00:05:45,840 --> 00:05:48,888 and no one seemed to know how to stop them. 62 00:05:53,713 --> 00:05:59,859 At that time, Freud's young nephew, Edward Bernays was working as a press agent in America. 63 00:06:00,204 --> 00:06:05,547 His main client was the world famous opera singer Caruso who was touring the United States. 64 00:06:12,050 --> 00:06:15,497 Bernays' parents had emigrated to America 20 years before, 65 00:06:15,699 --> 00:06:19,832 but he kept in touch with his Uncle who joined him for Holidays in the Alps. 66 00:06:21,003 --> 00:06:25,082 But Bernays was now about to return to Europe for a very different reason. 67 00:06:25,437 --> 00:06:28,908 On the night that Caruso opened in Toledo Ohio 68 00:06:29,141 --> 00:06:33,391 America announced that it was entering the war against Germany and Austria. 69 00:06:36,941 --> 00:06:41,438 As a part of the war effort, the US government set up a committee on public information 70 00:06:41,722 --> 00:06:45,439 and Bernays was employed to promote America's war aims in the press. 71 00:06:47,459 --> 00:06:51,505 The president Woodrow Wilson, had announced that the United States would fight 72 00:06:51,505 --> 00:06:53,629 not to restore the old empires 73 00:06:53,861 --> 00:06:56,627 but to bring democracy to all of Europe. 74 00:06:56,969 --> 00:07:02,553 Bernays proved extremely skillful at promoting this idea both at home and abroad 75 00:07:03,116 --> 00:07:08,816 and at the end of the war was asked to accompany the President to the Paris Peace Conference. 76 00:07:11,035 --> 00:07:15,120 Edward Bernays - 1991: Then to my surprise they asked me to go 77 00:07:15,348 --> 00:07:18,595 with Woodrow Wilson to the peace conference. 78 00:07:19,348 --> 00:07:29,504 And at the age of 26 I was in Paris for the entire time of the peace conference 79 00:07:30,912 --> 00:07:38,754 that was held in the suburb of Paris and we worked to make the world safe for democracy. 80 00:07:39,646 --> 00:07:41,850 That was the big slogan. 81 00:07:44,786 --> 00:07:49,490 Wilson's reception in Paris astounded Bernays and the other American propagandists. 82 00:07:50,444 --> 00:07:54,165 Their propaganda had portrayed Wilson as a liberator of the people. 83 00:07:54,848 --> 00:07:58,789 The man who would create a new world in which the individual would be free. 84 00:07:59,536 --> 00:08:01,790 They had made him a hero of the masses. 85 00:08:02,869 --> 00:08:05,447 And as he watched the crowd surge around Wilson, 86 00:08:05,977 --> 00:08:08,843 Bernays began to wonder whether it would be possible 87 00:08:08,843 --> 00:08:13,083 to do the same type of mass persuasion, but in peace time. 88 00:08:14,500 --> 00:08:19,242 Edward Bernays - 1991: When I came back to the United States, I decided 89 00:08:19,603 --> 00:08:26,399 that if you could use propaganda for war you could certainly use it for peace. 90 00:08:27,933 --> 00:08:33,870 And propaganda got to be a bad word because of the Germans using it. 91 00:08:34,658 --> 00:08:44,968 So what I did was try to find some other words so we found the word "Council on Public Relations". 92 00:08:47,563 --> 00:08:51,917 Bernays returned to New York and set up as a Public Relations Councilman 93 00:08:52,129 --> 00:08:54,093 in small office off Broadway. 94 00:08:54,571 --> 00:08:57,270 It was the first time the term had even been used. 95 00:08:58,825 --> 00:09:03,467 Since the end of the 19th century, America had become a mass industrial society 96 00:09:03,794 --> 00:09:06,717 with millions clustered together in the cities. 97 00:09:07,559 --> 00:09:11,479 Bernays was determined to find a way to manage and alter the way 98 00:09:11,716 --> 00:09:14,370 these new crowds thought and felt. 99 00:09:15,012 --> 00:09:19,122 To do this he turned to the writings of his Uncle Sigmund. 100 00:09:19,518 --> 00:09:23,668 While in Paris Bernays had sent his Uncle a gift of some Havana cigars. 101 00:09:24,297 --> 00:09:29,653 In return Freud had sent him a copy of his "General Introduction to Psychoanalysis". 102 00:09:30,392 --> 00:09:36,565 Bernays read it, and the picture of hidden irrational forces inside human beings, fascinated him. 103 00:09:37,294 --> 00:09:41,597 He wondered whether he might make money by manipulation of the unconscious. 104 00:09:43,047 --> 00:09:45,921 Pat Jackson - Public Relations Adviser and Colleague of Bernays: What Eddie got from Freud, was indeed this idea 105 00:09:46,316 --> 00:09:50,859 that there is a lot more going on in human decision making. 106 00:09:51,125 --> 00:09:55,175 Not only among individuals but even more importantly among groups 107 00:09:55,384 --> 00:09:59,924 that this idea that information drives behavior. 108 00:10:00,155 --> 00:10:04,845 So Eddie began to formulate this idea that you had to look at things that will play 109 00:10:05,067 --> 00:10:07,691 to people's irrational emotions. 110 00:10:07,925 --> 00:10:13,197 You see, that moved Eddie immediately into a different category from other people in his field 111 00:10:13,423 --> 00:10:16,397 and most government officials and managers of the day 112 00:10:16,397 --> 00:10:20,506 who thought if you just hit people with all this factual information 113 00:10:20,506 --> 00:10:22,821 they would look at that say go "of course" 114 00:10:23,070 --> 00:10:26,970 and Eddie knew that was not the way the world worked. 115 00:10:28,146 --> 00:10:31,739 Bernays set out to experiment with the minds of the popular classes. 116 00:10:32,224 --> 00:10:35,922 His most dramatic experiment was to persuade women to smoke. 117 00:10:36,833 --> 00:10:41,864 At that time there was a taboo against women smoking and one of his early clients George Hill, 118 00:10:42,136 --> 00:10:47,830 the President of the American Tobacco corporation asked Bernays to find a way of breaking it. 119 00:10:48,848 --> 00:10:51,238 Edward Bernays - 1991: He says we're losing half of our market. 120 00:10:51,644 --> 00:10:58,209 Because men have invoked a taboo against women smoking in public. 121 00:11:00,589 --> 00:11:04,582 Can you do anything about that? I said let me think about it. 122 00:11:05,388 --> 00:11:09,272 And then I said: If I may have permission to see a psychoanalyst 123 00:11:09,521 --> 00:11:13,927 to find out what cigarettes mean to women. 124 00:11:14,337 --> 00:11:19,429 He said: what'll it cost? So I called up Dr. Brille, 125 00:11:19,739 --> 00:11:26,762 A.A. Brille, who was the leading psychoanalyst in New York at that time. 126 00:11:27,133 --> 00:11:32,429 - How come you didn't call your uncle? Why didn't you call your uncle? - Cause he was in Vienna.. 127 00:11:33,390 --> 00:11:37,139 A.A. Brille was one of the first psychoanalysts in America. 128 00:11:37,412 --> 00:11:41,991 And for a large fee, he told Bernays that cigarettes were a symbol of the penis 129 00:11:42,227 --> 00:11:44,717 and of male sexual power. 130 00:11:45,101 --> 00:11:49,025 He told Bernays that if he could find a way to connect cigarettes 131 00:11:49,025 --> 00:11:51,836 with the idea of challenging male power 132 00:11:52,139 --> 00:11:56,743 then women would smoke, because then they would have their own penises. 133 00:12:00,277 --> 00:12:04,764 Every year New York held an Easter day parade to which thousands came. 134 00:12:05,078 --> 00:12:07,633 And Bernays decided to stage an event there . 135 00:12:08,556 --> 00:12:13,105 He persuaded a group of rich debutants to hide cigarettes under their clothes. 136 00:12:13,916 --> 00:12:17,557 Then, they should join the parade and at a given signal from him 137 00:12:17,904 --> 00:12:20,619 they were to light up the cigarettes dramatically. 138 00:12:21,230 --> 00:12:25,016 Bernays then informed the press that he had heard that a group of suffragettes 139 00:12:25,245 --> 00:12:29,997 were preparing to protest by lighting up what they called torches of freedom. 140 00:12:30,372 --> 00:12:32,515 Pat Jackson - Public Relations Adviser and Colleague of Bernays: He knew this would be an outcry, 141 00:12:32,515 --> 00:12:36,496 and he knew that all of the photographers would be there to capture this moment 142 00:12:36,709 --> 00:12:41,870 so he was ready with a phrase which was "torches of freedom". 143 00:12:42,433 --> 00:12:46,965 So here you have a symbol, women, young women, debutantes, 144 00:12:46,965 --> 00:12:51,808 smoking a cigarette in public with a phrase that means 145 00:12:52,143 --> 00:12:53,962 anybody who believes in this kind of equality 146 00:12:54,219 --> 00:12:58,145 pretty much has to support them in the ensuing debate about this, 147 00:12:58,145 --> 00:13:01,326 because... "torches of freedom". 148 00:13:02,350 --> 00:13:07,918 I mean, What's on all our American coins? it's liberty, she's holding up the torch, you see? 149 00:13:08,263 --> 00:13:13,881 and so all of this is there together, there's emotion, there's memory and there's a rational phrase, 150 00:13:14,474 --> 00:13:19,687 even knowing it's using a lot of emotional, it's a phrase that works in a rational sense... 151 00:13:20,077 --> 00:13:22,137 And all of this is together... 152 00:13:22,453 --> 00:13:27,358 And So the next day this was not just in all the New York papers 153 00:13:27,576 --> 00:13:30,301 it was across the United States and around the world. 154 00:13:30,563 --> 00:13:35,625 And from that point forward the sale of cigarettes to woman began to rise. 155 00:13:35,975 --> 00:13:40,788 He had made them socially acceptable with a single symbolic act. 156 00:13:42,436 --> 00:13:45,390 What Bernays had created was the idea that if a women smoked 157 00:13:45,625 --> 00:13:48,141 it made her more powerful and independent. 158 00:13:48,487 --> 00:13:51,191 An idea that still persists today. 159 00:13:58,809 --> 00:14:03,208 It made him realize that it was possible to persuade people to behave irrationally 160 00:14:03,459 --> 00:14:06,937 if you link products to their emotional desires and feelings. 161 00:14:07,925 --> 00:14:12,340 The idea that smoking actually made women freer, was completely irrational. 162 00:14:12,847 --> 00:14:15,538 But it made them feel more independent. 163 00:14:16,735 --> 00:14:20,828 It meant that irrelevant objects could become powerful emotional symbols 164 00:14:21,147 --> 00:14:24,390 of how you wanted to be seen by others. 165 00:14:25,718 --> 00:14:28,598 Peter Strauss - Employee of Bernays 1948-1952: Eddie Bernays saw the way 166 00:14:28,849 --> 00:14:32,157 to sell product was not to sell it to your intellect, 167 00:14:32,438 --> 00:14:35,251 that you ought to buy an automobile, 168 00:14:35,547 --> 00:14:39,595 but that you will feel better about it if you have this automobile. 169 00:14:39,877 --> 00:14:43,485 I think he originated that idea, that they weren't just purchasing something 170 00:14:43,724 --> 00:14:50,087 that they were engaging themselves emotionally or personally in that product or service. 171 00:14:50,360 --> 00:14:54,774 It's not that you think you need a new piece of clothing 172 00:14:55,055 --> 00:14:57,690 but you will feel better with the piece of clothing. 173 00:14:57,997 --> 00:15:00,566 That was his contribution in a very real sense. 174 00:15:00,815 --> 00:15:04,288 We see it all over the place today, but I think he originated the idea, 175 00:15:04,288 --> 00:15:07,007 the emotional connect to a product or service. 176 00:15:10,253 --> 00:15:13,813 What Bernays was doing fascinated America's corporations. 177 00:15:14,257 --> 00:15:19,163 They had come out of the war rich and powerful, but they had a growing worry. 178 00:15:19,723 --> 00:15:22,568 The system of mass production had flourished during the war 179 00:15:22,865 --> 00:15:26,370 and now millions of goods were pouring off production lines. 180 00:15:27,115 --> 00:15:29,958 that they were frightened of was the danger of overproduction, 181 00:15:30,663 --> 00:15:35,945 that there would come a point when people had enough goods and would simply stop buying. 182 00:15:37,380 --> 00:15:43,586 Up until that point, the majority of products were still sold to the masses on the basis of need. 183 00:15:44,666 --> 00:15:49,631 While the rich had long been used to luxury goods, for the millions of working class Americans 184 00:15:49,942 --> 00:15:53,009 most products were still advertised as necessities. 185 00:15:54,054 --> 00:16:00,844 Goods like shoes, stockings, even cars were promoted in functional terms, for their durability. 186 00:16:02,945 --> 00:16:08,636 The aim of the advertisements were simply to show people the products practical virtues, nothing more. 187 00:16:16,719 --> 00:16:21,636 What the corporations realized they had to do was transform the way the majority of Americans 188 00:16:21,853 --> 00:16:24,012 thought about products. 189 00:16:24,606 --> 00:16:30,792 One leading Wall Street banker, Paul Mazer of Lehman Brothers was clear about what was necessary. 190 00:16:31,539 --> 00:16:36,190 We must shift America, he wrote, from a needs, to a desires culture. 191 00:16:36,482 --> 00:16:42,855 People must be trained to desire, to want new things even before the old had been entirely consumed. 192 00:16:43,622 --> 00:16:46,168 We must shape a new mentality in America. 193 00:16:46,495 --> 00:16:50,196 Man's desires must overshadow his needs. 194 00:16:52,356 --> 00:16:54,197 Peter Solomon - Investment Banker - Lehman Brothers: Prior to that time 195 00:16:54,762 --> 00:16:56,541 there was no American consumer, there was the American worker. 196 00:16:56,856 --> 00:16:57,963 And there was the American owner. 197 00:16:57,963 --> 00:17:02,005 And they manufactured, and they saved and they ate what they had to 198 00:17:02,005 --> 00:17:04,325 and the people shopped for what they needed. 199 00:17:04,605 --> 00:17:09,618 And while the very rich may have bought things they didn't need, most people did not. 200 00:17:09,908 --> 00:17:16,294 And Mazer envisioned a break with that, where you would have things that you didn't actually need, 201 00:17:16,294 --> 00:17:20,317 but you wanted, as opposed to needed. 202 00:17:20,739 --> 00:17:24,171 And the man who would be at the center of changing that mentality for the corporations, 203 00:17:24,410 --> 00:17:26,123 was Edward Bernays. 204 00:17:26,325 --> 00:17:29,469 Stuart Ewen - Historian of Public Relations: Bernays really is the guy within the United States, 205 00:17:29,469 --> 00:17:31,043 more than anybody else, 206 00:17:31,325 --> 00:17:38,860 who sort of brings out to the table psychological theory as something that is an essential part of 207 00:17:39,078 --> 00:17:45,941 how, from the corporate side, of how we are going to appeal to the masses effectively 208 00:17:45,941 --> 00:17:50,910 and the whole sort of merchandising establishment and the sales establishment 209 00:17:51,189 --> 00:17:53,548 is ready for Sigmund Freud. 210 00:17:53,768 --> 00:17:58,286 I mean they are ready for understanding what motivates the human mind. 211 00:18:00,315 --> 00:18:06,985 And so there's this real openness to Bernays techniques being used to sell products to the masses. 212 00:18:07,990 --> 00:18:11,629 Beginning in the early 20's the New York banks funded the creation of chains of 213 00:18:11,629 --> 00:18:14,290 department stores across America. 214 00:18:14,552 --> 00:18:17,133 They were to be the outlets for the mass produced goods. 215 00:18:17,133 --> 00:18:20,664 And Bernays' job was to produce the new type of customer. 216 00:18:22,290 --> 00:18:27,244 Bernays began to create many of the techniques of mass consumer persuasion that we now live with. 217 00:18:28,183 --> 00:18:31,893 He was employed by William Randolph Hurst to promote his new women's magazines, 218 00:18:32,676 --> 00:18:36,130 and Bernays glamorized them by placing articles and advertisements 219 00:18:36,362 --> 00:18:39,083 that linked products made by others of his clients 220 00:18:39,301 --> 00:18:43,629 to famous film stars like Clara Bow, who was also his client. 221 00:18:44,943 --> 00:18:48,364 Bernays also began the practice of product placement in movies, 222 00:18:49,305 --> 00:18:51,607 and he dressed the stars at the films premieres 223 00:18:51,607 --> 00:18:55,397 with clothes and jewelry from other firms he represented. 224 00:18:56,432 --> 00:18:59,460 He was, he claimed, the first person to tell car companies 225 00:18:59,669 --> 00:19:02,763 they could sell cars as symbols of male sexuality. 226 00:19:03,772 --> 00:19:07,993 He employed psychologists to issue reports that said products were good for you 227 00:19:08,212 --> 00:19:11,428 and then pretended they were independent studies. 228 00:19:12,309 --> 00:19:14,711 He organized fashion shows in department stores 229 00:19:15,084 --> 00:19:18,467 and paid celebrities to repeat the new and essential message, 230 00:19:19,008 --> 00:19:24,182 you bought things not just for need but to express your inner sense of your self to others. 231 00:19:27,481 --> 00:19:29,763 Mrs. Stillman, 1920s Celebrity Aviator: There's a psychology of dress, 232 00:19:29,763 --> 00:19:31,260 have you ever thought about it? 233 00:19:31,463 --> 00:19:33,309 How it can express your character? 234 00:19:34,542 --> 00:19:38,359 You all have interesting characters but some of them are all hidden. 235 00:19:38,860 --> 00:19:44,433 I wonder why you all want to dress always the same, with the same hats and the same coats. 236 00:19:45,111 --> 00:19:48,967 I'm sure all of you are interesting and have wonderful things about you, 237 00:19:49,280 --> 00:19:54,824 but looking at you in the street you all look so much the same. 238 00:19:55,300 --> 00:19:58,987 And that's why I'm talking to you about the psychology of dress. 239 00:19:59,263 --> 00:20:02,810 Try and express yourselves better in your dress. 240 00:20:06,153 --> 00:20:09,541 Bring out certain things that you think are hidden. 241 00:20:10,326 --> 00:20:13,279 I wonder if you've thought about this angle of your personality. 242 00:20:15,219 --> 00:20:19,092 - I'd like to ask you some questions... - Why do you like short skirts? 243 00:20:19,343 --> 00:20:21,125 - Oh, because there's more to see... 244 00:20:21,405 --> 00:20:25,988 - More to see, eh? - What good does that do you? 245 00:20:26,577 --> 00:20:30,364 - It makes you more attractive. 246 00:20:30,657 --> 00:20:32,052 - oh, it does? 247 00:20:35,501 --> 00:20:40,934 In 1927 an American journalist wrote: A change has come over our democracy, 248 00:20:41,188 --> 00:20:43,405 it is called consumptionism. 249 00:20:43,953 --> 00:20:48,844 The American citizen's first importance to his country is now no longer that of citizen, 250 00:20:49,081 --> 00:20:51,569 but that of consumer. 251 00:20:53,178 --> 00:20:57,752 The growing wave of consumerism helped in turn to create a stock market boom. 252 00:20:58,190 --> 00:21:01,210 And yet again Edward Bernays became involved. 253 00:21:01,721 --> 00:21:05,506 Promoting the novel idea that ordinary people should buy shares, 254 00:21:05,830 --> 00:21:09,069 borrowing money from banks, that he also represented. 255 00:21:09,678 --> 00:21:12,433 And yet again, millions followed his advice. 256 00:21:13,506 --> 00:21:16,878 Peter Strauss - Employee of Bernays 1948-1952: He was uniquely knowledgeable about 257 00:21:16,878 --> 00:21:21,407 how people in large numbers are going to react to products and ideas, 258 00:21:23,597 --> 00:21:26,707 but in political terms if he were to go out 259 00:21:27,100 --> 00:21:30,519 I can't imagine he could get three people to stand and listen. 260 00:21:30,955 --> 00:21:35,567 He wasn't particularly articulate, he was kind of funny looking, and didn't have 261 00:21:35,818 --> 00:21:40,964 any sense of reaching out for people one on one. None at all. 262 00:21:41,394 --> 00:21:45,097 He didn't talk about, didn't think about people in groups of one, 263 00:21:45,412 --> 00:21:48,586 he thought about people in groups of thousands. 264 00:21:57,475 --> 00:22:01,584 Bernays soon became famous as the man who understood the mind of the crowd, 265 00:22:02,071 --> 00:22:05,284 and in 1924 the President contacted him. 266 00:22:06,383 --> 00:22:10,498 President Coolidge was a quiet taciturn man and had become a national joke. 267 00:22:11,494 --> 00:22:14,152 The press portrayed him as a dull humorless figure. 268 00:22:15,053 --> 00:22:19,054 Bernays' solution was to do exactly the same as he had done with products. 269 00:22:19,429 --> 00:22:22,823 He persuaded 34 famous film stars to visit the White House, 270 00:22:24,276 --> 00:22:28,229 and for the first time politics became involved with public relations. 271 00:22:30,163 --> 00:22:36,995 Bernays speaking in 1991: And I lined up these 34 people and I'd say what's your name, 272 00:22:37,939 --> 00:22:42,508 and he'd say Al Jolson, and I'd say Mr. President, Al Jolson. 273 00:22:43,219 --> 00:22:50,590 The next day every newspaper in the United States had a front page story: 274 00:22:51,531 --> 00:22:58,011 "President Coolidge Entertains Actors at White House". 275 00:22:58,826 --> 00:23:06,153 And the Times had a headline which said "President Nearly Laughed" 276 00:23:10,378 --> 00:23:12,376 and everybody was happy. 277 00:23:16,515 --> 00:23:22,419 But while Bernays became rich and powerful in America, in Vienna his uncle was facing disaster. 278 00:23:22,871 --> 00:23:27,141 Like much of Europe Vienna was suffering an economic crisis and massive inflation 279 00:23:27,388 --> 00:23:30,136 which wiped out all of Freud's' savings. 280 00:23:30,530 --> 00:23:33,690 Facing bankruptcy he wrote to his nephew for help. 281 00:23:34,545 --> 00:23:39,315 Bernays responded by arranging for Freud's works to be published for the first time in America, 282 00:23:40,108 --> 00:23:45,826 and began to send his uncle precious dollars which Freud kept secretly in a foreign bank account. 283 00:23:49,043 --> 00:23:50,755 Pat Jackson - Public Relations Adviser and Colleague of Bernays: He was Freud's "agent" 284 00:23:50,755 --> 00:23:52,714 if you will, to get his books published. 285 00:23:52,961 --> 00:23:56,460 Well of course, once the books were being published, Eddie couldn't help himself but to 286 00:23:56,872 --> 00:24:02,944 promote these books; see that everybody read them, make them controversial; 287 00:24:03,318 --> 00:24:06,544 emphasize the fact that "do you know what Freud says about sex?" 288 00:24:06,758 --> 00:24:09,911 and what he thinks cigarettes are a symbol of and so on and so forth... 289 00:24:10,133 --> 00:24:11,991 How do you suppose all those stories got out? 290 00:24:12,193 --> 00:24:15,742 Certainly the academics weren't spreading these around the country, Eddie Bernays was... 291 00:24:16,444 --> 00:24:23,068 Then when Freud became accepted, well then of course to go to a client and go 'well Uncle Siggy' 292 00:24:23,467 --> 00:24:25,244 see then that had some cache. 293 00:24:25,501 --> 00:24:32,527 But notice there, first Eddie created Uncle Siggy in the US, made him acceptable secondly, 294 00:24:32,760 --> 00:24:38,126 and thirdly then, capitalized on Uncle Siggy. Typical Bernays performance. 295 00:24:38,937 --> 00:24:42,946 Bernays also suggested Freud promote himself in the United States. 296 00:24:43,164 --> 00:24:48,010 He proposed his uncle write an article for Cosmopolitan, the magazine that Bernays represented, 297 00:24:48,343 --> 00:24:51,589 entitled 'A Woman's Mental Place in the Home'. 298 00:24:51,906 --> 00:24:55,384 Freud was furious. Such an idea he said was unthinkable, 299 00:24:55,627 --> 00:24:58,419 it was vulgar and anyway, he hated America. 300 00:25:00,886 --> 00:25:04,171 Freud was becoming increasingly pessimistic about human beings. 301 00:25:05,138 --> 00:25:08,576 In the mid 20s he retreated in the summers to the Alps, 302 00:25:08,917 --> 00:25:13,168 sometimes staying in an old hotel, the Pension Moritz in Berchtesgaden. 303 00:25:13,846 --> 00:25:15,200 It is now a ruin. 304 00:25:16,793 --> 00:25:19,185 Freud began to write about group behavior; 305 00:25:19,860 --> 00:25:23,433 about how easily the unconscious aggressive forces of human beings 306 00:25:23,719 --> 00:25:26,514 could be triggered when they were in crowds. 307 00:25:27,441 --> 00:25:31,546 Freud believed he had underestimated the aggressive instincts within human beings; 308 00:25:32,411 --> 00:25:35,723 they were far more dangerous than he had originally thought. 309 00:25:37,034 --> 00:25:43,172 Dr. Ernst Federn - Viennese Psychoanalyst: After World War-I, Freud was basically a pessimist. 310 00:25:43,573 --> 00:25:48,160 He felt that man is an impossible creature 311 00:25:49,375 --> 00:25:56,140 and a very sadistic and bad species 312 00:25:57,829 --> 00:26:01,785 and did not believe that man can be improved. 313 00:26:02,101 --> 00:26:04,863 Man is a ferocious animal, 314 00:26:05,127 --> 00:26:09,673 the most ferocious animal that exists. 315 00:26:10,265 --> 00:26:14,172 They enjoy torturing and killing 316 00:26:14,548 --> 00:26:17,048 and he didn't like man. 317 00:26:20,051 --> 00:26:23,675 The publication of Freud's works in America had an extraordinary effect 318 00:26:23,880 --> 00:26:26,850 on journalists and intellectuals in the 1920s. 319 00:26:27,142 --> 00:26:32,615 What fascinated and frightened them was the picture Freud painted of submerged dangerous forces 320 00:26:32,853 --> 00:26:36,162 lurking just under the surface of modern society. 321 00:26:36,676 --> 00:26:39,984 Forces that could erupt easily to produce the frenzied mob 322 00:26:40,196 --> 00:26:42,883 which had the power to destroy even governments. 323 00:26:43,143 --> 00:26:45,833 It was this they believed had happened in Russia. 324 00:26:47,267 --> 00:26:51,549 To many this meant that one of the guiding principles of mass democracy was wrong; 325 00:26:52,082 --> 00:26:56,699 the belief that human beings could be trusted to make decisions on a rational basis. 326 00:26:57,980 --> 00:27:00,893 The leading political writer, Walter Lippmann argued that 327 00:27:01,122 --> 00:27:05,614 if human beings were in reality driven by unconscious irrational forces 328 00:27:05,915 --> 00:27:08,226 then it was necessary to re-think democracy. 329 00:27:09,955 --> 00:27:14,663 What was needed was a new elite that could manage what he called the bewildered herd. 330 00:27:15,546 --> 00:27:19,173 This would be done through psychological techniques that would control 331 00:27:19,379 --> 00:27:21,714 the unconscious feelings of the masses. 332 00:27:23,767 --> 00:27:27,071 Stewart Ewen - Historian of Public Relations: And so here you have Walter Lippmann, probably the most influential 333 00:27:27,312 --> 00:27:30,102 political thinker in the United States, 334 00:27:30,318 --> 00:27:35,485 who is essentially saying the basic mechanism of the mass mind is unreason, 335 00:27:35,737 --> 00:27:38,392 is irrationality, is animality. 336 00:27:38,593 --> 00:27:42,958 He believes that the mob in the street, which is how he sees ordinary people, 337 00:27:43,359 --> 00:27:46,897 are people who are driven not by their minds but by their spinal chords. 338 00:27:47,286 --> 00:27:52,486 The notion of animal drives, unconscious and instinctual drives, 339 00:27:52,486 --> 00:27:55,189 lurking beneath the surface of civilization; 340 00:27:55,539 --> 00:27:59,006 and so they started looking towards psychological science 341 00:27:59,359 --> 00:28:05,257 as a way of understanding the mechanisms by which the popular mind works 342 00:28:06,297 --> 00:28:12,069 specifically with the goal of figuring out how to understand and how to apply 343 00:28:12,297 --> 00:28:16,081 those mechanisms to strategies for social control. 344 00:28:17,268 --> 00:28:20,210 Edward Bernays was fascinated by Lippmann's arguments 345 00:28:20,864 --> 00:28:24,086 and also saw a way to promote himself by using them. 346 00:28:26,085 --> 00:28:30,708 In the 1920s he began to write a series of books which argued that he had developed 347 00:28:30,708 --> 00:28:33,458 the very techniques that Lippmann was calling for. 348 00:28:34,335 --> 00:28:38,821 By stimulating people's inner desires and then sating them with consumer products 349 00:28:39,165 --> 00:28:43,489 he was creating a new way to manage the irrational force of the masses. 350 00:28:45,098 --> 00:28:47,492 He called it "The engineering of consent". 351 00:28:49,225 --> 00:28:53,093 Ann Bernays, Daughter of Edward Bernays: Democracy to my father was a wonderful concept, 352 00:28:53,411 --> 00:28:59,130 but I don't think he felt that all those publics out there had reliable judgment, 353 00:28:59,599 --> 00:29:07,061 and that they very easily might vote for the wrong man or want the wrong thing; 354 00:29:07,403 --> 00:29:10,352 so that they had to be guided from above. 355 00:29:11,609 --> 00:29:14,865 It's enlightened despotism in a sense. 356 00:29:16,492 --> 00:29:22,659 You appeal to their desires and unrecognized longings, that sort of thing. 357 00:29:24,519 --> 00:29:33,818 That you can tap into their deepest desires or their deepest fears and use that to your own purposes. 358 00:29:34,887 --> 00:29:39,675 And then in 1928 a President came to power, who agreed with Bernays. 359 00:29:40,822 --> 00:29:44,020 President Hoover was the first politician to articulate the idea 360 00:29:44,331 --> 00:29:48,021 that consumerism would become the central motor of American life. 361 00:29:49,209 --> 00:29:53,615 After his election he told a group of advertisers and public relations men: 362 00:29:54,379 --> 00:29:57,456 "You Have taken over the job of creating desire 363 00:29:58,208 --> 00:30:02,957 and have transformed people into constantly moving happiness machines. 364 00:30:03,732 --> 00:30:07,634 Machines which have become the key to economic progress." 365 00:30:10,144 --> 00:30:15,960 What was beginning to emerge in the 1920s was a new idea of how to run mass democracy. 366 00:30:17,129 --> 00:30:21,993 At it's heart was the consuming self which not only made the economy work 367 00:30:22,492 --> 00:30:26,857 but was also happy and docile and so created a stable society. 368 00:30:29,234 --> 00:30:33,326 Stewart Ewen - Historian of Public Relations: Both Bernays and Lippmann's concept of managing the masses 369 00:30:33,586 --> 00:30:39,359 takes the idea of democracy and turns it into a palliative, 370 00:30:39,899 --> 00:30:45,056 It turns it into giving people some kind of feel good medication 371 00:30:45,851 --> 00:30:49,459 that will respond to an immediate pain or immediate yearning 372 00:30:49,772 --> 00:30:53,774 but will not alter the objective circumstances one iota. 373 00:30:55,907 --> 00:31:01,678 The idea of democracy at it's heart was about changing the relations of power 374 00:31:01,911 --> 00:31:04,272 that had governed the world for so long; 375 00:31:04,487 --> 00:31:09,224 and Bernays' concept of democracy was one of maintaining the relations of power, 376 00:31:09,442 --> 00:31:14,808 even if it meant that one needed to stimulate the psychological lives of the public. 377 00:31:15,523 --> 00:31:18,585 And in fact in his mind that is what was necessary. 378 00:31:20,338 --> 00:31:23,663 That if you can keep stimulating the irrational self 379 00:31:24,436 --> 00:31:28,597 then leadership can go on doing what it wants to do. 380 00:31:30,378 --> 00:31:33,473 Bernays now became one of the central figures in a business elite 381 00:31:33,754 --> 00:31:37,692 that dominated American society and politics in the 1920s. 382 00:31:38,628 --> 00:31:44,318 He also became extremely rich and lived in a suite of rooms in one of New York's most expensive hotels 383 00:31:44,775 --> 00:31:46,785 where he gave frequent parties. 384 00:31:47,165 --> 00:31:50,508 Peter Strauss - Employee of Bernays 1948-1952: Oh my goodness, he had a home in the corner suite 385 00:31:51,067 --> 00:31:53,683 of the Sherry Netherland hotel 386 00:31:53,683 --> 00:31:55,163 and here's this wonderful suite with all these windows 387 00:31:55,163 --> 00:31:57,655 looking out on central park and across at the plaza, 388 00:31:57,655 --> 00:31:59,444 and on the square, 389 00:31:59,783 --> 00:32:03,006 and he would use this place to hold a soiree. 390 00:32:03,257 --> 00:32:06,414 The mayor would come, all the media leaders would come, 391 00:32:06,414 --> 00:32:09,662 the political leaders, the business leaders, the people in the arts; 392 00:32:09,662 --> 00:32:15,760 it was a who's who. People wanted to know Eddie Bernays because he himself 393 00:32:15,978 --> 00:32:21,843 became a sort of a famous man, a sort of magician that could make things happen. 394 00:32:21,843 --> 00:32:24,258 Ann Bernays, Daughter of Edward Bernays: He knows everybody he knows the mayor, 395 00:32:24,258 --> 00:32:30,117 and he knows the senator, and he calls politicians on the telephone as if he did get 396 00:32:30,376 --> 00:32:37,092 literally a high or bang out of doing what he did, 397 00:32:37,353 --> 00:32:41,448 and that's fine, but it can be a little hard on the people around you. 398 00:32:41,947 --> 00:32:45,510 Especially when you make other people feel stupid. 399 00:32:46,260 --> 00:32:49,326 The people who worked for him were stupid, the children were stupid, 400 00:32:49,656 --> 00:32:56,887 and if people did things in a way that he wouldn't have done them, they were stupid. 401 00:32:57,260 --> 00:33:01,042 It was a word that he used over and over: "don't be stupid". 402 00:33:02,095 --> 00:33:05,940 - And the masses? - They were stupid. 403 00:33:10,951 --> 00:33:14,841 But Bernays' power was about to be destroyed dramatically 404 00:33:15,075 --> 00:33:19,013 and by a type of human rationality that he could do nothing to control. 405 00:33:20,047 --> 00:33:24,733 At the end of October 1929 Bernays organized a huge national event to celebrate 406 00:33:24,733 --> 00:33:28,451 the 50th anniversary of the invention of the light bulb. 407 00:33:28,795 --> 00:33:33,658 President Hoover, the leaders of major corporations and bankers like John D Rockefeller 408 00:33:33,861 --> 00:33:38,295 were all summoned by Bernays to celebrate the power of American business. 409 00:33:39,287 --> 00:33:43,890 But even as they gathered news came through that shares on the New York stock exchange 410 00:33:43,890 --> 00:33:46,796 were beginning to fall catastrophically. 411 00:33:50,665 --> 00:33:54,748 Throughout the 1920s speculators had borrowed billions of dollars. 412 00:33:54,748 --> 00:34:00,586 The banks had promoted the idea that this was a new era where market crashes were a thing of the past. 413 00:34:01,294 --> 00:34:06,965 But they were wrong. What was about to happen was the biggest stock market crash in history. 414 00:34:07,449 --> 00:34:12,262 Investors had panicked and begun to sell in a blind relentless fury that no reassurance 415 00:34:12,262 --> 00:34:15,749 by bankers or politicians could halt. 416 00:34:19,127 --> 00:34:23,951 And on the 29th of October 1929, the market collapsed. 417 00:34:31,978 --> 00:34:34,564 The effect of the crash on the American economy was disastrous. 418 00:34:35,354 --> 00:34:38,777 Faced with recession and unemployment, millions of American workers 419 00:34:38,777 --> 00:34:41,545 stopped buying goods they didn't need. 420 00:34:41,545 --> 00:34:45,690 The consumer boom that Bernays had done so much to engineer, disappeared. 421 00:34:46,067 --> 00:34:49,952 And he and the profession of public relations fell from favor. 422 00:34:50,324 --> 00:34:53,454 Bernays' brief moment of power seemed to be over. 423 00:35:02,922 --> 00:35:06,342 The effect of the Wall Street crash on Europe was also catastrophic. 424 00:35:06,945 --> 00:35:11,145 It intensified the growing economic and political crisis in the new democracies. 425 00:35:12,156 --> 00:35:15,081 In both Germany and Austria, there were violent street battles 426 00:35:15,289 --> 00:35:18,351 between the armed wings of different political parties. 427 00:35:22,548 --> 00:35:28,694 Against this backdrop Freud who was suffering from cancer of the jaw retreated yet again to the alps. 428 00:35:30,629 --> 00:35:33,797 He wrote a book called "Civilization and it's Discontents". 429 00:35:35,235 --> 00:35:40,353 It was a powerful attack on the idea that civilization was an expression of human progress. 430 00:35:42,092 --> 00:35:46,843 Instead Freud argued, civilization had been constructed to control 431 00:35:47,153 --> 00:35:50,497 the dangerous animal forces inside human beings. 432 00:35:52,122 --> 00:35:55,855 What was implicit in Freud's argument was that the ideal of individual freedom 433 00:35:56,146 --> 00:35:59,355 which was at the heart of democracy was impossible. 434 00:36:00,058 --> 00:36:05,032 Human beings could never be allowed to truly express themselves because it was too dangerous. 435 00:36:06,156 --> 00:36:10,874 They must always be controlled and thus always be discontent. 436 00:36:15,856 --> 00:36:19,771 Dr. Ernst Federn - Viennese Psychoanalyst: Man doesn't want to be civilized 437 00:36:20,532 --> 00:36:26,045 and civilization brings discontent but is necessarily to survival 438 00:36:28,710 --> 00:36:35,357 so he must be discontent because this would be the only way to keep you within your limits. 439 00:36:36,434 --> 00:36:42,708 - What did Freud think about the idea of the equality of man? - He didn't believe in it. 440 00:36:44,713 --> 00:36:52,775 We had 32 parties and Hitler said: "before those parties don't vanish there is no Germany". 441 00:36:53,274 --> 00:37:03,236 That's true, you can't have 32 parties so they said this one person will put an end to this comedy. 442 00:37:04,510 --> 00:37:06,934 Freud was not alone in his pessimism. 443 00:37:07,151 --> 00:37:12,432 Politicians like Adolf Hitler emerged from a growing despair in the 1920s about democracy. 444 00:37:13,185 --> 00:37:18,138 The Nazis were convinced that democracy was dangerous because it unleashed a selfish individualism 445 00:37:18,529 --> 00:37:20,874 but didn't have the means to control it. 446 00:37:22,029 --> 00:37:26,549 Hitler's party - "The National Socialists" stood in elections promising in their propaganda 447 00:37:26,809 --> 00:37:31,364 they would abandon democracy because of the chaos and unemployment it led to. 448 00:37:33,625 --> 00:37:36,468 "The democratic parties are promising a heaven on earth!" 449 00:37:43,176 --> 00:37:48,397 "38 parties - over 6 million unemployed" 450 00:37:51,772 --> 00:37:55,636 In March 1933, the National Socialists were elected to power in Germany 451 00:37:56,054 --> 00:38:00,870 and they set out to create a society that would control human beings in a different way. 452 00:38:02,648 --> 00:38:05,337 One of their first acts was to take control of business. 453 00:38:05,979 --> 00:38:09,203 The planning of production would in the future be done by the state. 454 00:38:09,558 --> 00:38:13,557 The free market was too unstable as the crash in America had proven. 455 00:38:14,902 --> 00:38:17,575 Workers leisure time was also planned by the state 456 00:38:17,830 --> 00:38:20,495 through a new organization called "strength through joy". 457 00:38:21,356 --> 00:38:24,232 One of it's mottos was: "Service, not self!". 458 00:38:30,412 --> 00:38:34,837 But the Nazi's did not see this as return to an old form autocratic control. 459 00:38:35,555 --> 00:38:37,804 It was a new alternative to democracy, 460 00:38:38,056 --> 00:38:41,619 in which the feelings and desires of the masses would still be central, 461 00:38:42,639 --> 00:38:46,555 but they would be channeled in such a way as to bind the nation together. 462 00:38:47,420 --> 00:38:51,874 The chief exponent of this was Joseph Goebbels, the Minister of Propaganda. 463 00:38:53,420 --> 00:38:59,874 It may be a good thing to hold power based on guns 464 00:39:00,420 --> 00:39:03,874 It is far better though if you win the heart of the nation 465 00:39:04,420 --> 00:39:06,874 and keep it's affection ! 466 00:39:09,248 --> 00:39:13,844 Goebbels organized huge rallies whose function he said was to forge the mind of the nation 467 00:39:14,170 --> 00:39:17,625 into a unity of thinking, feeling and desire. 468 00:39:18,426 --> 00:39:20,864 One of his inspirations, he told an American journalist 469 00:39:21,065 --> 00:39:24,577 was the writings of Freud's nephew, Edward Bernays. 470 00:39:26,518 --> 00:39:29,719 In his work on crowd psychology, Freud had described how 471 00:39:29,968 --> 00:39:35,095 the frightening irrationality inside human beings could emerge in such groups. 472 00:39:35,302 --> 00:39:39,624 The deep what he called 'libidinal' forces of desire were given up to the leader 473 00:39:40,269 --> 00:39:44,275 while the aggressive instincts are unleashed on those outside the group. 474 00:39:44,960 --> 00:39:49,656 Freud wrote this as a warning, but the Nazis were deliberately encouraging these forces 475 00:39:50,035 --> 00:39:53,407 because they believed they could master and control them. 476 00:39:57,336 --> 00:40:03,537 Dr Leoppold Lowenthal - Freudian Psychoanalyst at a rally in Vienna in 2000: Freud was saying that masses 477 00:40:03,783 --> 00:40:07,899 are bound by libidinal forces. 478 00:40:08,661 --> 00:40:17,253 They love each other and delegate their ideas and feelings through the "jack on top". 479 00:40:17,870 --> 00:40:20,880 What are libidinal forces? 480 00:40:21,150 --> 00:40:23,130 Well, forces of love. 481 00:40:25,646 --> 00:40:31,628 Not hate? No,.. hate?... Hate is delegated on the others, outside. 482 00:40:44,646 --> 00:40:46,628 The mob... 483 00:40:56,342 --> 00:41:01,916 I could see from afar, looking up between the trees 484 00:41:01,916 --> 00:41:07,099 how there were hundreds of thousands of people when they passed Hitler 485 00:41:07,352 --> 00:41:17,528 they were speaking completely delirious and they began to shout, this cries will never get out of my ears... 486 00:41:17,812 --> 00:41:28,228 "Heil! Sieg Heil!" (Hail! Hail Victory!)...and here I got confirmation how those irrational forces, 487 00:41:28,446 --> 00:41:35,343 uncontrollable forces in Germany, in the Germans, had erupted, were brought out 488 00:41:35,681 --> 00:41:47,226 were running wild where the party was marching, marching on." 489 00:41:45,681 --> 00:41:51,226 Fuehrer (Leader's) command we will follow! 490 00:41:56,681 --> 00:41:58,226 Crowds and their behavior 491 00:42:00,447 --> 00:42:04,669 And in America too democracy was under threat from the force of the angry mob. 492 00:42:06,574 --> 00:42:09,409 The effect of the stock market crash had been disastrous. 493 00:42:09,995 --> 00:42:14,981 There was growing violence as an angry population took out there frustration on the corporations 494 00:42:15,201 --> 00:42:17,637 who were seen to have caused this disaster. 495 00:42:19,355 --> 00:42:24,850 Then in 1932 a new President was elected who was also going to use the power of the state 496 00:42:25,076 --> 00:42:27,483 to control the free market. 497 00:42:27,858 --> 00:42:32,090 But his aim, was not to destroy democracy, but to strengthen it. 498 00:42:32,314 --> 00:42:36,568 And to do this he was going to develop a new way of dealing with the masses. 499 00:42:38,000 --> 00:42:41,857 President Roosevelt's in his inauguration speech: "I am prepared under my constitutional duty 500 00:42:42,074 --> 00:42:47,818 to recommend the measures that a stricken nation in the midst of stricken world, may require. 501 00:42:48,222 --> 00:42:52,237 But, in the event that the national emergency is still critical 502 00:42:52,642 --> 00:42:58,017 I shall not evade the clear course of duty that will then confront me. 503 00:42:58,578 --> 00:43:01,925 I shall ask the congress for the one remaining instrument 504 00:43:02,364 --> 00:43:07,552 to meet the crisis - broad executive power." 505 00:43:13,021 --> 00:43:15,804 It was the start of what would become known as "The New Deal". 506 00:43:16,769 --> 00:43:20,327 Roosevelt assembled a group of young technocrats and planners in Washington. 507 00:43:21,356 --> 00:43:26,996 He told them that their job was to plan and run giant new industrial projects for the good of the nation. 508 00:43:28,325 --> 00:43:31,489 Roosevelt was convinced the stock market crash had shown 509 00:43:31,824 --> 00:43:36,122 that "laissez faire"-capitalism could no longer run modern industrial economies. 510 00:43:36,592 --> 00:43:38,802 This has become the job of government. 511 00:43:40,030 --> 00:43:45,185 Big business was horrified but The New Deal had attracted the admiration of the Nazis, 512 00:43:45,519 --> 00:43:47,810 especially Joseph Goebbels. 513 00:43:50,234 --> 00:43:56,905 Joseph Goebbels: "I am very interested in social developments in America. 514 00:43:57,144 --> 00:44:03,311 I believe that President Roosevelt has chosen the right path. 515 00:44:03,652 --> 00:44:08,770 We are dealing with the greatest social problems ever known. 516 00:44:08,972 --> 00:44:18,599 Millions of unemployed must get their jobs back and this cannot be left to private initiative. 517 00:44:23,618 --> 00:44:28,368 It's the government that must tackle the problem." 518 00:44:31,107 --> 00:44:35,437 But although Roosevelt like the Nazis was trying to organize society in a different way, 519 00:44:36,221 --> 00:44:39,995 unlike the Nazis he believed that human beings were rational 520 00:44:40,211 --> 00:44:43,272 and could be trusted to take an active part in government. 521 00:44:44,753 --> 00:44:48,586 Roosevelt believed it was possible to explain his policies to ordinary Americans 522 00:44:48,586 --> 00:44:51,050 and to take into account their opinions. 523 00:44:51,878 --> 00:44:57,462 To do this he was helped by the new ideas of an American social scientist called George Gallup. 524 00:44:59,211 --> 00:45:03,813 "Favorite reading of new deal Washington - the survey of US public opinion. 525 00:45:04,066 --> 00:45:08,784 From offices at Princeton New Jersey a famed statistician, Dr. George Gallup tells Washington 526 00:45:09,004 --> 00:45:11,877 from week to week, what the nation is thinking. 527 00:45:13,333 --> 00:45:18,584 And in New York Fortune Magazines analyst Elmo Roper compiles for publication a continuous record 528 00:45:18,584 --> 00:45:22,715 of the nation's approval or disapproval of how the country is being run." 529 00:45:23,614 --> 00:45:28,913 Gallup and Roper rejected Bernays' view that human beings were at the mercy of unconscious forces 530 00:45:29,161 --> 00:45:31,976 and so needed to be controlled. 531 00:45:32,215 --> 00:45:35,414 Their system of opinion polling was based on the idea that people 532 00:45:35,754 --> 00:45:38,661 could be trusted to know what they wanted. 533 00:45:39,025 --> 00:45:43,277 They argued that one could measure and predict the opinions and behavior of the public 534 00:45:43,497 --> 00:45:48,260 if one asked strictly factual questions and avoided manipulating their emotions. 535 00:45:51,497 --> 00:45:55,260 Well, how about this one? Do you think Franklin D. Roosevelt's new deal 536 00:45:55,797 --> 00:45:57,260 has been bad for the nation in general? 537 00:45:58,797 --> 00:46:01,760 No, that question is loaded.. It automatically suggests an answer.. 538 00:46:02,297 --> 00:46:08,260 Well, how 'bout this? Is your present feeling towards president Roosevelt, one of general approval, 539 00:46:09,297 --> 00:46:11,260 or general disapproval? 540 00:46:12,297 --> 00:46:14,260 That's better!... 541 00:46:15,321 --> 00:46:20,041 George Gallup Jr. - Son of George Gallup: Prior to scientific polling the view of many people 542 00:46:20,322 --> 00:46:23,697 was that you couldn't trust public opinion, that it was irrational; 543 00:46:24,384 --> 00:46:28,449 that it was ill-informed, that it was chaotic, unruly and so forth; 544 00:46:28,759 --> 00:46:31,510 and so that opinion should be dismissed. 545 00:46:31,758 --> 00:46:38,700 But with scientific polling I think it established very clearly that people are rational, 546 00:46:39,012 --> 00:46:40,888 that they do make good decisions, 547 00:46:41,097 --> 00:46:45,762 and this offers democracy a chance to be truly informed by the public 548 00:46:46,034 --> 00:46:49,948 giving everybody a voice in the way the country is run. 549 00:46:50,467 --> 00:46:54,071 I know my father wouldn't necessarily say that the voice of the public is the voice of God, 550 00:46:54,292 --> 00:47:00,308 but he did feel very much that the voice of the people is a rational voice and should be heard. 551 00:47:02,073 --> 00:47:06,786 What Roosevelt was doing was forging a new connection between the masses and politicians. 552 00:47:07,638 --> 00:47:12,077 No longer were they irrational consumers who were managed by sating their desires, 553 00:47:12,284 --> 00:47:16,983 instead, they were sensible citizens who could take part in the governing of the country. 554 00:47:17,754 --> 00:47:23,578 In 1936 Roosevelt stood for re-election. He promised further control over big business. 555 00:47:23,861 --> 00:47:26,828 To the corporations it was the beginning of a dictatorship. 556 00:47:31,617 --> 00:47:35,484 Big business leader speaking in an interview: "Roosevelt interferes with private enterprise 557 00:47:35,991 --> 00:47:39,171 and he's running the country into debt for generations to come. 558 00:47:39,171 --> 00:47:42,742 The way to get recovery is to let business alone." 559 00:47:43,048 --> 00:47:45,569 But Roosevelt was triumphantly re-elected. 560 00:47:45,748 --> 00:47:50,369 "It looks , my friends, like a real land-slide, this time.. 561 00:47:51,348 --> 00:47:58,569 So, please let me thank you again, and tell you that I hope to see you all very soon, 562 00:47:59,448 --> 00:48:01,069 and wish you an affectionate good night! 563 00:48:02,536 --> 00:48:08,017 Faced with this, business now decided to fight back, to regain power in America. 564 00:48:08,737 --> 00:48:12,802 At the heart of the battle would be Edward Bernays and the profession he had invented, 565 00:48:13,137 --> 00:48:15,486 public relations. 566 00:48:16,943 --> 00:48:19,539 Stewart Ewen - Historian of Public Relations: Following that lecture, 567 00:48:19,539 --> 00:48:25,269 business people start to get together and start to carry on discussions, 568 00:48:25,269 --> 00:48:30,565 primarily in private and they start talking to each other about the need to sort of carry on 569 00:48:30,802 --> 00:48:34,677 ideological warfare against the New Deal. 570 00:48:35,011 --> 00:48:41,115 And to sort of reassert the sort of connectedness between the idea of democracy on the one hand 571 00:48:41,325 --> 00:48:44,566 and the idea of privately owned business on the other. 572 00:48:44,928 --> 00:48:48,993 And so, under the umbrella of an organization that still exists 573 00:48:48,993 --> 00:48:52,270 which is called The National Association of Manufacturers 574 00:48:52,617 --> 00:48:57,568 and whose membership included all of the major corporations of the United States 575 00:48:58,301 --> 00:49:05,022 a campaign is launched explicitly designed to create emotional attachments 576 00:49:05,248 --> 00:49:08,067 between the public and big business; 577 00:49:08,480 --> 00:49:12,961 it's Bernays' techniques being used on a grand scale. I mean totally. 578 00:49:13,480 --> 00:49:16,961 A film story of the "General Motors Parade of Progress" 579 00:49:32,275 --> 00:49:36,293 The campaign set out to show dramatically that it was business not politicians 580 00:49:36,293 --> 00:49:38,461 who have created modern America. 581 00:49:44,180 --> 00:49:48,022 Bernays was an advisor to General Motors but he was no longer alone. 582 00:49:48,620 --> 00:49:50,620 The industry he had founded now flourished 583 00:49:50,838 --> 00:49:55,182 as hundreds of public relations advisors organized a vast campaign. 584 00:49:55,832 --> 00:49:59,650 They not only used advertisements and billboards but managed to insinuate their message 585 00:49:59,650 --> 00:50:02,671 into the editorial pages of the newspapers. 586 00:50:05,422 --> 00:50:07,339 It became a bitter fight. 587 00:50:07,587 --> 00:50:12,199 In response to the campaign the government made films to warn about the unscrupulous manipulation 588 00:50:12,199 --> 00:50:15,013 of the press by big business 589 00:50:15,231 --> 00:50:19,527 and the central villain was the new figure of the public relations man. 590 00:50:22,029 --> 00:50:25,559 "They try to achieve their ends by working entirely behind the scenes 591 00:50:25,762 --> 00:50:28,279 corrupting and deceiving the public. 592 00:50:28,626 --> 00:50:33,279 The aims of such groups may be either good or bad so far as the public interest is concerned, 593 00:50:33,604 --> 00:50:38,186 but their methods are a grave danger to democratic institutions." 594 00:50:39,121 --> 00:50:43,905 The films also showed how the responsible citizens could monitor the press themselves. 595 00:50:44,614 --> 00:50:49,184 They could create a chart that analyzed the reporting for signs of hidden bias. 596 00:50:51,371 --> 00:50:57,656 But such earnest instruction was to be no match for the powerful imagination of Edward Bernays. 597 00:51:00,987 --> 00:51:05,188 He was about to help create a vision of the utopia that free market capitalism 598 00:51:05,545 --> 00:51:09,000 would build in America if it was unleashed. 599 00:51:18,211 --> 00:51:24,428 In 1939 New York hosted the World's Fair. Edward Bernays was a central adviser. 600 00:51:25,014 --> 00:51:30,519 He insisted that the theme be the link between democracy and American business. 601 00:51:36,833 --> 00:51:42,865 At the heart of the fair was a giant white dome that Bernays named "Democra-City" 602 00:51:45,678 --> 00:51:49,621 and the central exhibit was a vast working model of America's future 603 00:51:49,910 --> 00:51:52,939 constructed by the General Motors corporation. 604 00:51:53,940 --> 00:51:56,567 Ann Bernays - Daughter of Edward Bernays: To my father, the World's Fair, 605 00:51:56,770 --> 00:52:00,404 was an opportunity to keep the status quo. 606 00:52:00,511 --> 00:52:07,521 That is, capitalism in a democracy, democracy and capitalism and that marriage. 607 00:52:13,290 --> 00:52:18,890 He did that by manipulating people and getting them to think that 608 00:52:19,390 --> 00:52:23,546 you couldn't have real democracy in anything but a capitalist society 609 00:52:24,682 --> 00:52:31,088 which was capable of doing anything; of creating these wonderful highways, 610 00:52:31,421 --> 00:52:36,339 of making moving pictures inside everybody's house, 611 00:52:37,807 --> 00:52:42,072 of telephones that didn't need chords, of sleek roadsters. 612 00:52:44,233 --> 00:52:49,665 It was consumerist but at the same time you inferred that 613 00:52:50,141 --> 00:52:53,628 in a funny way that democracy and capitalism went together. 614 00:52:55,201 --> 00:53:00,093 The World's Fair was an extraordinary success and captured America's imagination. 615 00:53:00,812 --> 00:53:04,266 The vision it portrayed was of a new form of democracy 616 00:53:04,639 --> 00:53:11,044 in which business responded to people's innermost desires in a way politicians could never do. 617 00:53:12,469 --> 00:53:16,818 But it was a form of democracy that depended on treating people not as active citizens, 618 00:53:17,124 --> 00:53:22,533 like Roosevelt did, but as passive consumers. Because this Bernays believed, 619 00:53:22,826 --> 00:53:26,390 was the key to control in a mass democracy. 620 00:53:27,296 --> 00:53:29,577 Stewart Ewen - Historian of Public Relations: It's not that the people are in charge 621 00:53:29,890 --> 00:53:33,390 but that the people's desires are in charge. 622 00:53:33,632 --> 00:53:39,142 The people are not in charge, the people exercise no decision making power within this environment. 623 00:53:39,574 --> 00:53:45,431 So democracy is reduced from something which assumes an active citizenry 624 00:53:45,805 --> 00:53:49,085 to the idea of the public as passive consumers 625 00:53:52,780 --> 00:53:56,604 driven primarily by instinctual or unconscious desires 626 00:53:56,994 --> 00:54:02,014 and that if you can in fact trigger those needs and desires, you can get what you want from them. 627 00:54:05,054 --> 00:54:10,775 But this struggle between the two views of human beings as to whether they were rational or irrational 628 00:54:11,181 --> 00:54:14,671 was about to be dramatically affected by events in Europe. 629 00:54:15,429 --> 00:54:19,148 Events that would also change the fortunes of the Freud family. 630 00:54:22,557 --> 00:54:28,171 In March 1938 the Nazis annexed Austria. It was called the Anschluss. 631 00:54:28,432 --> 00:54:32,338 Hitler arrived in Vienna to an extraordinary outpouring of mass adulation 632 00:54:33,062 --> 00:54:37,856 but even as he drove through the city behind the scenes the Nazis were systematically whipping up 633 00:54:38,182 --> 00:54:43,685 and unleashing the hatred of the crowd against the enemies of the new greater Germany. 634 00:54:45,485 --> 00:54:48,683 Marcel Faust - Resident of Vienna 1930's: The Anschluss was a kind of an explosion 635 00:54:48,902 --> 00:54:52,121 of terrible hatred of against enemies, so called enemies 636 00:54:52,468 --> 00:54:58,527 or whatever they considered as enemies, against the Jews totally 637 00:54:59,503 --> 00:55:06,650 and also against a lot of Austrians who opposed the Nazis in Austria. 638 00:55:07,742 --> 00:55:11,754 They said it's legitimate now, you can do what you want, so they did it... 639 00:55:12,155 --> 00:55:15,889 Stealing and robbing and killing, I can't stay there a while; 640 00:55:15,986 --> 00:55:25,332 human depravity was always near to normal behavior, it can change very quickly... 641 00:55:34,636 --> 00:55:40,083 As the violence and assassinations raged in Vienna, Freud decided he had to leave. 642 00:55:40,586 --> 00:55:43,772 His aim was to go to Britain, but he knew Britain like many countries 643 00:55:44,054 --> 00:55:46,761 was refusing entrance to most Jewish refugees. 644 00:55:49,615 --> 00:55:53,175 But help came from the leading psychoanalyst in Britain, Ernest Jones. 645 00:55:54,147 --> 00:55:57,773 He was in the same ice skating club as the Home Secretary - Sir Samuel Hall, 646 00:55:58,449 --> 00:56:02,273 and Jones persuaded Hall to issue Freud a British work permit 647 00:56:05,544 --> 00:56:12,244 and in May 1938 Freud, his daughter Anna and other members of his family set off for London. 648 00:56:19,336 --> 00:56:23,898 Freud arrived in London as Britain was preparing for war and he settled with his daughter Anna 649 00:56:24,264 --> 00:56:26,350 in a house in Hampstead. 650 00:56:27,443 --> 00:56:31,665 But Freud's cancer was now far advanced and in September 1939, 651 00:56:31,900 --> 00:56:36,022 just 3 weeks after the outbreak of war, he died. 652 00:56:41,148 --> 00:56:45,309 The second world war would utterly transform the way government saw democracy 653 00:56:45,808 --> 00:56:47,892 and the people they governed. 654 00:56:49,913 --> 00:56:53,777 Next week's program will show how the American government, as a result of the war 655 00:56:54,057 --> 00:56:59,389 became convinced there were savage dangerous forces hidden inside all human beings. 656 00:56:59,998 --> 00:57:02,121 Forces that needed to be controlled. 657 00:57:03,839 --> 00:57:07,401 The terrible evidence from the death camps seemed to show what happened 658 00:57:07,651 --> 00:57:10,107 when these forces were unleashed. 659 00:57:10,457 --> 00:57:13,200 And politicians and planners in post war America 660 00:57:13,200 --> 00:57:16,457 would come to believe that hidden under the surface of their own population 661 00:57:16,457 --> 00:57:19,435 were the same dangerous forces. 662 00:57:22,060 --> 00:57:27,287 And they would turn to the Freud family to help control this enemy within. 663 00:57:32,474 --> 00:57:37,936 And ever adaptable Edward Bernays would work not just for the American government but the CIA 664 00:57:41,373 --> 00:57:45,957 and Sigmund Freud's daughter Anna, would also become powerful in the United States 665 00:57:46,282 --> 00:57:51,030 because she believed that people could be taught to control the irrational forces within them. 666 00:57:51,750 --> 00:57:58,203 Out of this, would come vast government programs to manage the inner psychological life of the masses. 70110

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