Jennie Blackton started her career acting on Broadway when she was a teenager, and progressed to hosting talk-shows on radio and TV both in New York City and Los Angeles. Not wishing to continue to look good at 7am five days a week, she decided to be on the other side of the camera and began writing sitcoms. She wrote for many years, from “One Day at a Time” to “Roseanne.” When she didn’t feel funny anymore she became a Vice President of several movie studios.

She got started in political communication because she was frustrated when candidates that she supported seemed unable to utter a straight honest sentence that would make an audience listen, with the emphasis on listen. She started to teach candidates in how to make an audience sit up, listen and applaud at the end of a speech and discovered that delivering a solid message + stump speech and writing sitcoms for a critical audience utilize the same skills. She combined her experience in all media into one interactive workshop and found her soul work in the process.

In the last 12 years, she has worked in all kinds of campaigns, specializing in local, city and state elections – where the real people are. She has also worked outside the United States on campaigns in countries as diverse as Malawi, Haiti and Greece, where she worked with George Papandreou, candidate for Prime Minister. Currently, she develops candidates for Progressive Majority, an organization that finds and elects progressive candidates to state and local offices.

Blog Entries by Jennie Blackton

Failsafe Speaking Without Lots of Words

8 Comments | Posted September 25, 2008 | 07:54 PM (EST)


No disrespect to anyone meant, but could I suggest that creating a stump speech is not that difficult. Yet, I find a lot of people want to complicate it and I (respectfully) submit that that only makes the process more confusing. The most important thing to remember about communicating with...

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Some of His Best Friends

Posted August 18, 2008 | 11:17 AM (EST)


A bouquet of eulogies for the playwright and actor, George Furth, who died at 75 last week. These titles are simply the way George would surely introduce us to each other, as he couldn't NOT introduce us without a sobriquet of some sort...

Jennie Blackton
Mommy dearest called her...

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