THE CHALLENGE
In the last issue, we ran a column on the U.S. Marine Corps
recruiting website. It was a very sophisticated example of interactive
design. But since it seemed a bit manipulative, I let my personal
views on the content slip a few times. Several readers sent
e-mails taking issue with this. They felt I was insulting the Marines in general, rather than questioning the
recruiting site in particular, and that doing so at a time when we
are at war was in poor taste. Reggie Byrum, a designer from Charlotte,
N.C, added that as a professional journal, STEP shouldn’t be
in the business of promoting any particular point of view. We had to
admit that he had a point. He then challenged us to review a liberal
website, and give equal time to the opposite view. Again, we agreed.
After all, part of our job is to show people how to look at communications critically, and see how design adds implicit meanings.
A WELL-DESIGNED LIBERAL WEBSITE
The first step was to find a site that was a) clearly liberal, and b)
well designed. To fulfill the first requirement, I Googled “liberal
websites.” Pages and pages and pages of links came up—who knew?
Fulfilling the second criterion was much more difficult. To be
worthy of review, the site had to do more than just organize the
information logically, have an easy-to-understand interface, and
be visually attractive. It also had to carry strong messaging, build
on that messaging with a distinctive visual language, and use interactive technology in a meaningful way.
Most of the liberal sites failed these tests—as do most commercial
sites. Visually pedestrian, chaotic, and verbally hyperbolic,
they lacked basic communications discipline. Why so? Do
liberal groups lack the funds to hire excellent designers? Do they
fail to establish a strong enough sense of mission to attract excellent
design volunteers? You may be better equipped to answer that
question than I.
Finally, after clicking through sites for several hours, I found
one that was clean, visually powerful, with consistently branded
messaging and intelligent interactivity: “Who Dies for Bush Lies?”. The title tells us where it stands on the political
spectrum. Let’s see if the design pays off.
A few of the source sites that in-text links take you to. Sources run the gamut from ultra liberal to official pentagon pages, plus international news agencies and senatorial sites.
VISUAL LANGUAGE
The home page is unusually focused. It uses a half-black, half-white
format, a blazing orange title that spans the halves, and a
pair of image blocks that balance each other with enough asymmetry
to create interest. One image is a blazing military convoy;
against it in the opposite field are pictures of protestors. Both have
been darkened and flattened so the orange text remains dominant.
An orange subtitle, “What YOU Can Do” sits below the protestors
and over a list of links—which are in such thin, dark type that
they’re illegible, and therefore negligible.
Symbolically, this visual language speaks of opposition and
conflict: black against white, orange against black, hard edges,
militaristic imagery. No moral gray areas here. On interior pages,
the black-and-white, for-or-against symbolism continues. The
half-and-half layout persists, with links and content switching
between the black and white fields for variety. Photographs are
black and white, divided into positive and negative zones. I would
have thought that the site’s political position was clear. However,
when I sent the link to a sister (who lives in a passive-solar log
house in central New Hampshire), at first glance she thought that
this was a conservative venue.
Maybe the design spoke louder than the text. Maybe the cue
was the fascistic color palette—most antiwar sites deploy happy
blues and greens. Maybe it was the slick, professional layout—most
antiwar sites look homemade. Maybe it was the angry, militaristic
imagery—most antiwar sites use images of human hope and suffering.
In any case, however good its design values, the site almost
lost an impassioned liberal on the home page.