
Trump to Truman: Patterns from the Last 20 Inaugural Addresses
We analyze the last 20 presidential inaugural addresses to see if we could find some interesting patterns
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- Introduction and Research OverviewStudy ScopeAnalysis of the last 20 presidential inaugural addresses from Harry S Truman to Donald J Trump examining body language, verbal patterns, and persuasivenessResearch Questions• Which president used the most hand gestures • Which president smiled the most and least • Which party uses more negative languageMethodologyTeam coded inaugural addresses for body language and verbal patterns using detailed analysisTeaser QuestionsVideo challenges viewers with presidential trivia questions to test their knowledge before revealing the data findings
- Hand Gestures and Physical ExpressionMost Expressive PresidentDonald Trump used the most hand gestures with 641 hand gestures in just 17 minutes during his inaugural addressCommon Gestures• Thumbs up gesture • Pointing • Open palm gestureNotable PatternsRonald Reagan and Jimmy Carter relied heavily on their podium and used no hand gesturesParty ComparisonDemocrats are more handsy than Republicans overall in their inaugural addresses
- Smiling and Optimism IndicatorsHappiest PresidentBarack Obama smiled the most during his second term inaugural address for 14.5 seconds, with George Bush Senior close second at 13.5 secondsLeast SmilingJohn F Kennedy and Harry S Truman smiled the least during their inaugural addressesSecond Term PatternEvery president smiled more in their second term inaugural address than their first, suggesting they become more relaxed the second time aroundWhat Smiling SignalsSmiling indicates optimism, warmth, and openness in a presidential address
- Fashion Choices and AppearanceTie Colors• Blue is the most popular tie color • Red is the second most popular • Gray and blue mix also commonShirt ConsensusEvery president in the sample wore a white shirtSuit PreferencesEvery president wore a black suit except Dwight D Eisenhower who wore a renegade gray suitParty FashionBoth Republicans and Democrats wore blue and red, showing that most candidates do not stick to their party color
- Weather Conditions and Speech LengthWeather ExtremesRonald Reagan had the worst weather during his inaugural address at a bitterly cold 7.2 degrees, while Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan had good luck with pleasant temperaturesLongest Speeches• Harry S Truman spoke the longest at 22 minutes • George W Bush second term came close second at 21 minutesShortest SpeechGerald Ford had the shortest inaugural address in the last 20 presidents at 8 minutesParty VerbosityRepublicans are the more verbose party and spoke for more minutes than Democratic presidents overall
- Body Language and Alpha PosturingPride Poses ChampionDonald Trump showed pride poses 20 times in his inaugural address, significantly more than any other presidentOther High Performers• Barack Obama showed pride 8 times • Bill Clinton showed pride 4 timesResearch FoundationResearchers from the University of British Columbia found that winning athletes use broad expansive gesturesAlpha Language DefinedAlpha body language or expansive gestures project confidence and dominance
- Emotional Language and RhetoricMost Emotional SpeakerGeorge W Bush used the most emotional language in his inaugural address, exemplified by his quote about lighting a fire in the minds of menLeast EmotionalPresident Lyndon B Johnson used the least emotional language in his inaugural addressParty DifferencesRepublican presidents use 99.5% more emotion than Democratic presidents during their inaugural addressesAnalysis MethodPartnered with Quantified Communications who used their word analyzer software to examine each inaugural address transcript word for word
- Logic, Data, and Argumentative StrategyMost Logical PresidentHarry S Truman used the most logic in his inaugural address, establishing research and proof through structured arguments about four major courses of actionLeast LogicalBarack Obama used the least logic-based language in his inaugural addressLogic DefinitionSpeaking with logic involves using language that establishes research and proof, cites data and statistics to support argumentsSpeaker PurposeLogical appeals help listeners understand the reasoning and evidence behind presidential proposals
- Positive and Negative Language AnalysisMost Negative SpeakerJohn F Kennedy used the most negative language in his inaugural address, focusing on threats like the dark powers of destruction and self-destructionMost Positive SpeakerDwight D Eisenhower used the most positive language in his inaugural addresses, emphasizing virtues and the dignity of laborLeast Negative and Positive• George Bush Senior used the least negative language • Lyndon B Johnson used the least positive languageSecond Term PatternAlmost every single president used more positive language in his second term address, showing greater optimism going into their second term
- Personal Pronouns and IndividualismMost IndividualisticLyndon B Johnson used the most individualistic language with frequent use of I, me, and my throughout his inaugural addressLeast IndividualisticBarack Obama used the least I, me, my language in his inaugural addressParty Philosophy• Republican presidents use 18% more I language than Democratic presidents • Republicans tend to focus on individual rights and freedoms • Democrats tend to focus on fostering community and group supportLanguage PatternHigh personal pronoun use versus high third-person pronoun use reveals philosophical differences between presidents and parties
- Storytelling and Narrative AppealMost StorytellingLyndon B Johnson used the most storytelling language in his inaugural address with narrative examples like the rocket moving toward MarsLeast StorytellingHarry S Truman used the least storytelling language in his inaugural addressWhy Stories Matter• Storytelling is more persuasive than just logic or data • Stories appeal to a broader audience • Stories provide emotional appeal beyond statistics aloneStorytelling EffectivenessNarratives help listeners envision the future and create personal investment in the message
- Trustworthiness and Communication ClarityMost TrustworthyJimmy Carter used the most trustworthy language in his inaugural addressLeast TrustworthyHarry S Truman used the least trustworthy language in his inaugural addressClarity ChampionGeorge Bush Senior had the most clarity in his inaugural address with straightforward language about freedom and free marketsTrust and Clarity Analysis• Trustworthy language includes insights behind stated goals and directness • Demonstrated accountability and balanced emotional tone inspire trust • Republicans use 9.2% clearer language than Democratic presidents during inaugural addresses
- Summary of Key Patterns and Party DifferencesRepublican Rhetoric• Use more emotional language • Tell more stories with intense words both positive and negative • Use clearer language overall • Use more individualistic I, me, my languageDemocratic Rhetoric• Love data and logic • More likely to use neutral or we based language • More handsy with gestures • Less emotional overallNonverbal ExpressivenessMost nonverbally expressive presidents have been the more recent ones with Donald Trump and Barack Obama smiling and using the most hand gesturesVideo EngagementViewers are encouraged to share the video with political enthusiasts and history buffs, and to report their trivia scores in comments





