This
article may need to be reworded to conform to a neutral point of view.
Public
relations (PR) is the practice of conveying messages to the public through the media on behalf
of a client, with the intention of changing the public's actions by influencing
their opinions. PR practitioners usually target only certain
segments of the public ("audiences"), since similar opinions tend to
be shared by a group of people rather than an entire society. However, by
targeting different audiences with different messages to achieve an overall
goal, PR practitioners can achieve widespread opinion and behavior change.
History
The
precursors to public relations can be found in the publicists who specialized
in promoting circuses, theatrical performances, and other public spectacles.
Many PR practitioners have also been recruited from the ranks of journalism and have used their understanding of
the news media to ensure that their clients receive favorable media coverage.
The
First World War
also helped stimulate the development of public relations as a profession. Many
of the first PR professionals, including Ivy Lee, Edward Bernays, and Carl Byoir, got their start
with the Committee for Public Information (also known as the Creel Committee),
which organized publicity on behalf of U.S. objectives during World War I. Some
historians regard Ivy Lee as the first real practitioner of public relations,
but Edward Bernays is generally regarded today as the profession's founder.
Ivy
Lee, who has been credited with developing the modern news release (also called
a "press release"), espoused a philosophy consistent with what has sometimes
been called the "two-way street" approach to public relations, in
which PR consists of helping clients listen as well as communicate messages to
their publics. In the words of the PRSA, "Public relations helps an
organization and its publics adapt mutually to each other." In practice,
however, Lee often engaged in one-way propagandizing on behalf of clients despised by
the public, including robber baron John D. Rockefeller. His career ended in scandal, when the U.S. Congress
held hearings to investigate his work on behalf of Nazi Germany in the years immediately preceding World War II.
Bernays
was the profession's first theorist. A nephew of Sigmund Freud,
Bernays drew many of his ideas from Freud's theories about the irrational,
unconscious motives that shape human behavior. Bernays authored several books,
including Crystallizing Public Opinion (1923), Propaganda (1928), and The
Engineering of Consent (1947). Bernays saw public relations as an "applied
social science" that uses insights from psychology, sociology, and other
disciplines to scientifically manage and manipulate the thinking and behavior
of an irrational and "herdlike" public. "The conscious and
intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is
an important element in democratic society," he wrote in Propaganda.
"Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an
invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country."
One
of Bernays' early clients was the tobacco industry. In 1929, he orchestrated a
legendary publicity
stunt aimed at persuading women to take up cigarette smoking,
which was then considered unfeminine and inappropriate for women with any
social standing. To counter this image, Bernays arranged for New York City
debutantes to march in that year's Easter Day Parade, defiantly smoking
cigarettes as a statement of rebellion against the norms of a male-dominated
society. Photographs of what Bernays dubbed the "Torches of Liberty
Brigade" were sent to newspapers, convincing many women to equate smoking
with women's rights. Some women went so far as to demand membership in all-male
smoking clubs, a highly controversial act at the time.
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