Texarkana Gazette

Road to debate: Trump built image as he built business

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WASHINGTON—Donald Trump once claimed to be publicity shy.

No joke.

It’s right there in The New York Times of Nov. 1, 1976. In the same article, the 30-yearold real estate developer talks up his millions, showcases his penthouse apartment and Cadillac, and allows a reporter to tag along as he visits job sites and lunches at the “21” club before hopping an evening flight to California for more deal-making.

So much for that shy-guy claim.

Young and ambitious, Trump worked just as hard at building his image as he did at expanding his real estate empire.

Along the way, he honed the communicat­ions skills that would benefit him at the negotiatin­g table, turn him into a reality TV star and launch a presidenti­al campaign.

He’ll put them to the ultimate test as he goes one-on-one with Hillary Clinton in three nationally televised debates over the next month that will help determine the next president.

Trump, who’d never participat­ed in a debate before the presidenti­al primaries, is keeping his preparatio­ns for Monday’s leadoff general-election debate low key—no mock face-offs or the like.

“Really, you’re preparing all of your life for these,” he told Fox Business Network recently. “You’re not preparing over a two-week period and cramming.”

Is he ready?

Experts on public speaking find all kinds of faults with Trump’s oratory: His vocabulary is juvenile, his syntax is jumbled, he’s casual about accuracy, he’s demeaning, his voice is thin and nasal, he’s weak on policy details and more.

And yet, Aaron Kall, who directs the University of Michigan’s Debate Institute and debate team, will venture to tell you this: “He performs like a maestro.”

“He’s a media natural,” says Kall, who edited a book about Trump’s primary debate performanc­es. “He really understand­s audiences and tailors a message to what he thinks that they want to hear.”

Trump inherited a flair for promotion from his father.

Fred Trump, who built homes and apartments in Brooklyn and Queens, used all sorts of gimmicks to sell his properties: He filled the scoop of a bulldozer with women in bikinis. He released balloons on Coney Island containing $50 discount coupons. He dressed up apartment building lobbies with bird cages.

From the beginning, his son Donald never passed up an opportunit­y to be on camera.

Long before NBC’s “The Apprentice” turned Trump into a reality TV star in 2004, he was advancing his biz-whiz image in TV and movie cameos, chatting up Howard Stern on the radio and filming ads for Pizza Hut, McDonald’s and more. Then, over 14 seasons of “The Apprentice” and “Celebrity Apprentice,” he sharpened his ability to work the camera, think on his feet and promote the Trump brand.

As a presidenti­al candidate, he’s drawn on those same skills to keep himself in the news, dishing out provocatio­ns and insults sure to guarantee the public’s attention.

“Across his history, he evolved from a builder to a brand,” says Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “He would not be successful were it not for his ingenuity at securing publicity.”

A big question heading into today’s leadoff debate in Hempstead, New York, is which Trump will turn up on stage— the bombastic name-caller who dominated stages for most of the primary season or the more discipline­d candidate of late who marveled during the final Republican debate, “I can’t believe how civil it’s been up here.”

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