"George Gallup in Hollywood" is a fascinating look at the film
industry's use of opinion polling in the 1930s and '40s. George
Gallup's polling techniques first achieved fame when he accurately
predicted that Franklin D. Roosevelt would be reelected president
in 1936. Gallup had devised an extremely effective sampling method
that took households from all income brackets into account, and
Hollywood studio executives quickly pounced on the value of
Gallup's research. Soon he was gauging reactions to stars and
scripts for RKO Pictures, David O. Selznick, and Walt Disney and
taking the public's temperature on Orson Welles and Desi Arnaz,
couples such as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, and films like
"Gone with the Wind," "Dumbo," and "Fantasia."
Through interviews and extensive research, Susan Ohmer traces
Gallup's groundbreaking intellectual and methodological
developments, examining his comprehensive approach to market
research from his early education in the advertising industry to
his later work in Hollywood. The results of his opinion polls offer
a fascinating glimpse at the class and gender differences of the
time as well as popular sentiment toward social and political
issues.
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