The commercial became a
viral video, and was compared to the
Morning in America commercial in
Ronald Reagan's
1984 presidential campaign. The ad drew criticism from several leading U.S.
conservatives, who saw the commercial as an endorsement of the
United States automotive bailout of 2008 and 2009 that helped steer Chrysler out of bankruptcy protection.
Republican political consultant Karl Rove, who had been opposed to the automotive bailout, Asked about the criticism in a
60 Minutes interview with
Steve Kroft, Sergio Marchionne, the CEO of Chrysler at the time, responded "just to rectify the record I paid back the loans at 19.7% Interest. I don't think I committed to do to a commercial on top of that" and characterized the
Republican reaction as "unnecessary and out of place". Additional discussion focused on a short scene in the commercial filmed at an evening protest held by members of a local education union at the
Wisconsin State Capitol during the
2011 Wisconsin protests. For the commercial, video frames were
digitally edited to replace pro-union, pro-public education messages on the picket signs, during a segment where Clint Eastwood's "gravely voice intones 'the fog, division, discord, and blame made it hard to see what lies ahead. ==References==