"Eleanor Roosevelt and FDR: Social Media in the Midst of the Depression That Resonates Today."

If the Roosevelts were here today, they'd be on Twitter reaching out, connecting and keeping hope alive during tough times.
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Lately, I feel the ghosts of the long ago New Deal and the Roosevelt administration shadowing me. They are shadowing me in the words of President Obama and the actions of Mrs. Obama. Many of President Obama's recent speeches and Mrs. Obama's actions echo of the language of FDR and Mrs. Roosevelt. The Roosevelt's were the original power couple and innovators in the use of Social Media during the Great Depression.

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Pictured: FDR , pre-YouTube or TV giving a radio "Fireside Chat"

In a recent speech, Pres. Obama said, "We will rebuild. We will recover, and the United States of America will emerge stronger than before." Those words echo FDR's statement about the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the 1930's. He put forward the idea of the WPA, saying, "American workers will rebuild the nation's roads and bridges. Yes, we will "put people to work." I think of those words a lot as I drive around Los Angeles through various tunnels built by the WPA and over bridges like the ones on the road to Big Sur, all built by WPA workers. Without the WPA, Big Sur would not be accessible to us today.

I feel the presence and influence of Eleanor Roosevelt, possibly the first Recessionista, in Obama's speeches. President Obama often talks about responsibility mingled with hope. This phrasing reminds me of Eleanor. If you look at her newspaper columns from the 1930s, responsibility and hope were some of her over arching themes. There is a great site with all her columns online that you can look at called My Day.

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Pictured: Eleanor Roosevelt's "My Day" Daily Newspaper Column, the Blog of the Depression-era

Thinking about her columns today, and the echoes of her words in the speeches of both Obamas, I had an interesting thought about Eleanor. Her "My Day" columns were really the first blog. In those pre-blog-0-sphere, Depression days, she connected with people on a daily basis through her columns. She also received over 300,000 letters from her readers and from children during the Depression. That's one hell of a social network. People wrote to her just as they would post comments on a blog today. I didn't realize until I " Googled" it this evening, but her column ran from 1936 to 1962. Like bloggers today, she always connected her daily tasks and thoughts with larger issues. And like Mrs. Obama before her, Mrs. Roosevelt practiced Recessionista dressing and style. When I was researching the first ladies Inaugural gowns for my blog, The Recessionista, I was fascinated to learn that Eleanor only had one Inaugural gown, and it was a classic, but not ostentatious, long blue dress. She passed on other Inaugural balls after the first term and had March of Dimes dinners instead. She was a lover of fine fashions, and she did buy some designer frocks, but never anything too attention getting or colorful. Her fashions definitely reflected the times. Very similar to Michelle Obama today who wears J. Crew and H&M mixed with high-end designers.

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Pictured: Mrs. Roosevelt in an elegant, but frugal fashion choice

So just as the Obama administration tips their hat to the Roosevelts, I want to tip my hat to them in my humble blog post. Would there even be bloggers today, writing in such an informal style, if Eleanor had not kicked it all off with "My Day?" And would anyone be able to talk about the "Audacity of Hope" during this recession if FDR had not shown us the way and connected to the nation via his "Fireside Chats" pre-YouTube or TV via the radio? To quote FDR, "One thing is sure. We have to do something. We have to do the best we know how at the moment... if it doesn't turn out right, we can modify it as we go along."

If only the Roosevelts were here today, I know they would be on Twitter and probably here on The Huffington Post, reaching out, connecting and keeping hope alive during tough times.

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