So there’s this book.
Authored by B.J. Novak, “The Book with No Pictures” is a children’s story, an homage to the power of sound, and, dare I say, a political text.
At least, I’ve seen it that way.
When I stumbled upon it in 2015, I thought it had a powerful underlying message: Words and sounds have resonance — perhaps, more than even visuals. Novak, for example, has talked about the allure of books that are fun to hear being a “gateway drug” to get kids hooked on literature.
Today, despite ever-growing television sizes and home theaters to boot, I think sound remains a dominant means for people to take in information, entertainment or the modern merger of the two we’ve come to call “infotainment.”
And with substantial amounts of political conversation happening on sound-dominant platforms, like TikTok, talk radio and podcasts, I think it behooves anyone working in political communication to understand the consequence of sound and its ability to move us — especially, as something we can ingest and enjoy without being fully engaged.
We’ve already heard the beginnings of these conversations.
Tech experts have warned about the prolific spread of misinformation and disinformation on TikTok, a platform that’s made sounds and songs trend in the same way images might on visual-heavy platforms like Instagram and Twitter.








