What is the main goal of a lobbyist?
To persuade lawmakers to support their group’s interests.
What is one difference between a PAC and a Super PAC?
Super PACs can raise unlimited money; PACs cannot.
What is “framing”?
Presenting information in a certain way to shape how people see it.
whats a deepfake?
A fake video or audio created using AI.
You watch ONE cooking video and suddenly your whole feed is recipes. What is happening?
The algorithm is deciding what you see based on your behavior.
Similair to anything? * hint hint*
Name one way interest groups influence government.
Lobbying, donating money, running ads, or mobilizing members.
What is “dark money”?
Political spending where donors are not disclosed.
Name one common tactic used in political ads
Emotional appeals, fear, testimonials, slogans, or selective facts.
What is misinformation?
What is Disinformation?
False or misleading information.
False information that is intended to mislead; deliberate misinformation
Your friend sends you a political meme with zero sources. What should your first thought be?
This might be misinformation....
YOU SHOULD check if it’s real.
What's 1 type of interest group? There are 5 main types
A Super PAC spends millions on ads but never talks to the candidate. Why is this allowed?
Because Super PACs can spend unlimited money as long as they don’t coordinate.
An ad uses scary music and images to make you fear a policy. What tactic is this?
Fear appeal.
You like one political video, and suddenly your feed fills with similar content. What is this effect called, and why does it matter?
The “echo chamber” or “filter bubble” — it can limit what viewpoints you see.
A political ad uses dramatic music, slow‑mo, and a deep voice saying “America deserves better.” What tactic is this?
Emotional appeal.
A group meets with lawmakers and provides research to support a new law. What tactic is this?
Lobbying with information/policy research.
A PAC reports donors, but a dark‑money group does not. How could this affect voter trust?
Voters may distrust messages when they don’t know who is funding them.
A political ad goes viral on TikTok. How might the algorithm help spread it?
It boosts content similar to what users already watch, spreading it faster.
A deepfake of a candidate spreads right before an election. Explain how this could influence voters AND why verifying sources is important.
-It can mislead voters,
-change opinions
-damage trust
-verifying sources prevents manipulation.
You see a viral video “exposing” a candidate, but the mouth movements look slightly off and the voice sounds weird. What should you suspect AND what should you do?
It might be a deepfake — verify with trusted sources before believing it.
A powerful interest group runs ads, meets with lawmakers, and mobilizes members online. How can this shape public opinion AND policy?
Ads influence voters; lobbying influences lawmakers; together they shape both opinion and laws.
A Super PAC spends a ton of money on ads supporting a candidate, even though the candidate never talks to them.
How could this still shape the election?
The ads can change how voters see the candidate, even without coordination, because money helps the message reach more people.
Two political ads talk about the same issue, but one uses happy music and smiling families while the other uses dark colors and scary music.
How can these different styles change how people feel about the issue?
The style and tone can make people feel positive or negative, which affects their opinion even if the facts are the same.
A political post goes viral because thousands of people share it with comments like “OMG same” and “everyone needs to see this.”
Even if the post isn’t very accurate, how could this huge amount of sharing make people believe it more?
When lots of people share something, it feels popular and trustworthy, so people may believe it just because “everyone else” is posting it — even if it’s not accurate.
A clothing brand pays teen influencers to wear a hoodie in their videos without saying it’s sponsored. Soon, tons of students at school want it.
How could this kind of hidden influence work the same way political messages try to shape public opinion?
When something looks popular or “normal,” people start to trust it and follow it — just like political messages can shape opinions when they’re repeated or shown by people we look up to.