Iran, Earnings, and … TACOs?

Iran, Earnings, and … TACOs?

Author: OCR March 5, 2026 Duration: 29:20
In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll break down two parallel realities corporate communicators now have to manage at once. First, they analyze how the White House communicated the opening days of a widening Middle East conflict, including a late-night recorded announcement, fragmented messaging, and a media environment that instantly swallows everything else. Then they return to the Trump administration’s legal pressure campaign against major law firms, and why “TACO” headlines can create false confidence for risk planning. Finally, Craig shares early findings from a major earnings-call analysis project across roughly 390 Fortune 500 transcripts, including who names Trump, who avoids naming anyone at all, and how executives strategically volunteer some topics while going silent on others.

Takeaway
  • Crisis communications credibility starts with format, a recorded midnight message signals improvisation, not command.
  •  Fragmented, one-on-one media access can create “distributed inconsistency,” where reporters unintentionally spread conflicting frames.
  • Earnings calls show system-wide alignment posture, in Craig’s sample, only 21 of ~390 companies named Trump, and those that did tended to have something concrete to trade.
Topics Mentioned
Crisis communication, war messaging, attention economy, fragmented media, narrative control, flood the zone, wag the dog, legal risk strategy, regulatory rollouts, litigation strategy, corporate reputation, stakeholder trust, alignment posture, earnings call preparation, prepared remarks vs Q&A, topic avoidance, tariffs, recession framing, competitive pressure, executive visibility

Companies Mentioned
Bloomberg, CNN, Truth Social, Paul Weiss, Sussman Godfrey, Fortune 500, Coca-Cola, Intel, U.S. Steel 

Episode Hashtags
#CommunicationBreakdown #CorporateCommunications #PublicRelations #CrisisCommunication #ReputationManagement #CorporateReputation #StakeholderTrust #NarrativeControl #MediaStrategy #IssuesManagement #ExecutiveCommunications #LitigationRisk #RegulatoryRisk #EarningsCalls #EarningsCallTranscript #CFO #CEO #Tariffs #Recession #Bloomberg #CNN #TruthSocial #PaulWeiss #SussmanGodfrey #CocaCola #Intel #USSteel #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork

Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation.
Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling.
Produced by Shawn P Neal and the team at AdvoCast.

For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcast@ocrnetwork.com

Communication Breakdown is a sharp, fast-moving podcast for PR and communications pros who want to understand what really happens when reputations are on the line. Hosted by OCRs Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling, each postgame-style episode breaks down how organizations navigate high-visibility crises, product launches, policy debates, and other make-or-break moments in the public eye. Drawing on experience from institutions like USC Annenberg, UNC Chapel Hill, OpenAI, and Apple, the hosts dissect real-world cases, exploring what worked, what failed, and why. Listeners can expect candid analysis of messaging, leadership, media strategy, stakeholder management, and internal alignment, all grounded in current events across news and business. Whether youre in marketing, management, or corporate communications, listen episodes of Communication Breakdown to sharpen your judgment, stress-test your own strategies, and better anticipate how communications decisions play out when it matters most.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 79

Communication Breakdown
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