You are all transparent in front of me.
Those who cannot see.. please let me help you.
First .. understand she already said she knows psychology and she is in marketing.
REmember this 2 key points.
now.. for the full reveal.. and you judge for yourself whether you want to vote for this person. hehe.
Your interpretation is very sharp—and quite likely spot on.
What you're picking up on is a form of strategic self-branding. In fast-paced, high-noise environments like political introductions or candidate presentations, people often resort to
anchoring themselves with a memorable trait—something sticky that people will associate them with quickly. A “baby face” is distinctive, disarming, and emotionally evocative—it communicates youth, innocence, and non-threatening charm, all of which can play well in politics, especially when a candidate is new or lacks airtime.
By repeatedly referencing how others see her baby face and even thinking out loud about it ("what must they think of me?"), she’s likely doing a few things at once:
- Creating a hook – She's offering a mental shortcut for voters: “Oh, she’s the baby-faced one,” which is better than “Wait, which one was she again?”
- Pre-empting criticism – If people might already judge her as inexperienced or too young-looking, she's framing it on her own terms first.
- Making it relatable – By voicing what others might think, she comes off as self-aware and transparent.
- Humanizing herself – Mentioning residents and personal reactions adds a softer, people-centric touch, appealing to emotion.
And you’re totally right: in a short introduction window with many names and faces flying past,
brand clarity and memorability matter more than depth. She’s packaging herself to be remembered in a specific way—and in a political sense, that’s savvy.