Monday, December 14, 2009
Because Chris Brown's Twitter is REALLY the Breaking News of the Century...?
Sunday, December 13, 2009
DTC Ads
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Technology Incorporated in Media
Different modes of technology influence us everyday. Through new technological developments we are affected by the media. In our world today we are constantly updated with news, ads and events through our cellphones or by some sort of device we use everyday.
It seems like most people either have a IPhone or Blackberry two leading cellphone brands and everyday the people with these devices are updated with news from all around the world.
Media Plays such an important role in influencing what is important in our society. If it wasn't for these new devices that allow us to be informed about what is going on in the world we would not be so much emphasis on news, movies, and tv shows.
The news is framed into a particular way to show more emphasis on certain events which make us believe, that is more important. These frame's may happen because of top executives who cannot report real facts because of their investors who allow their programs to run. If it isn't for advertisers, networks would not be able to air their shows to the public without charging them.
Also, Movie and TV show critics, report more on certain shows to spark the popularity of the show. Through this tactic more people watch these shows because they may seem more popular or appealing. Media effects what we watch and think about in this world. Our perspectives are changed through the way media represents it to the public.
Science with a Racial Slant
Science can easily be manipulated and used for negative purposes, because no one really knows the absolute answers. A new discovery always comes up, and while one can think they know the scientific cure it can always change. For this reason, it can be taken and used for propaganda purposes. It has legitimacy, even though it is still this unknown aspect of civilization. The Nazis used “scientific” explanations to demonstrate why Jews, Gypsies and other groups of people were inferior to the Aryan race. Physicians would measure the eyes, skulls and noses of the Jewish people in order to measure what they said was the Jewish intelligence. They also did very torturous experiments on woman and twins. They basically used Jews as guinea pigs in order to look for new discoveries, and perhaps find more differences between the Jews and the Aryans. The public associates doctors with honesty and having a desire for the common good, so by having a doctor talk about the deficiencies in the Jewish race, the public believed it.
This was also taught in school, thus young kids believed in the inferiority of the Jewish race when they heard scientific research demonstrated it. Putting a racial slant on science has been a common technique throughout history in order to alienate a group of people whether by religion, race, or nationality. It was used against Africans to encourage slavery and make it ok to treat them as less than human. It was used with African tribes in Rwanda and it is still used today in other milder forms. We must always remember that while science contains what are called facts, the answers are never totally absolute since science is beyond human control and can only be studied from a distance. It is a dangerous thing when its’ legitimacy is used to reaffirm pre-existing racist values.
Friday, December 11, 2009
Oh capitalism.
I found the birth control pill information site by Planned Parenthood. It seems like the reason why medical products' websites and advertisements discuss the negative symptoms so casually at the end of the ad (or page) is to achieve maximum profit. The website's information about "the disadvantages of using the birth control pill" does not straight up even say heart attack, stroke, etc. in the list, but after 5 paragraphs, at the end. In our capitalist society, the driving force is money. Is it too harsh to say that the driving force for money is greed? Maybe I'm getting too cynical, but the truth is, many people are deceived and exploited by companies, corporations, and other people, for money and profit. These birth control ads and websites are trying to prevent unwanted pregnancies, but at the same time, they are doing their best to rake in as much money as they can get. It is difficult to trust anything when you see that our society is based on deception and greed.
(However, not to be such a downer, I believe advertisements can be used to compel, interest, and bring people together to do things that are good as well.)
1 Less- Gardasil Vaccine
When the Gardasil vaccine came out, I remember many of the women I knew were rushing to have their daughters vaccinated. When I refused the vaccine, first at my primary care physician's and then at a doctor here in New York, they acted like I was crazy. I've just never been one to take a medication or vaccine that is so new and to be quite honest, not really necessary. I find it fascinating that the commercial (above) can't even definitely say that the vaccine does what it is supposed to do. The dialogue keeps saying "may protect" and strains of HPV that "might cause" cervical cancer. We've discussed society's relationship to health care so many times in class and I think that this commercial is a perfect example of American society's irrational need to find a fix for everything. Oh, by the way, the vaccine "may not protect everyone". The thing that jumps out at me the most, however, is the language used to talk about what the vaccine protects against. Cancer is the most emphasized word and at the end of the commercial, the vaccine is called the cervical cancer vaccine. This is clearly playing on America's fear of and obsession with cancer. But the vaccine doesn't protect against cancer, it protects against a few (of many) strains of HPV that might cause cancer. It seems to me that society has an insatiable desire to treat peoples' ailments or potential ailments even when we don't fully understand the nature of the problem and/or solution.
P.S. The vaccine can have some pretty scary side effects... ones that the commercial doesn't mention:
And while we're on the topic of unnecessary medical procedures...
I have never been one to get the seasonal flu shot. Maybe it's a West Coast thing or a California thing or a Bay Area thing, but where I grew up, the only people who got flu shots were ones with compromised immune systems. Since coming to New York, I've met perfectly healthy people who get flu shots every winter and several physicians have tried to persuade me to get it. My worst experience was at the NYU Health Center when I was sick earlier this semester. The physician who examined me suggested I get the seasonal flu shot and when I didn't, he tried to guilt me into it by listing all the different people I could get sick and potentially kill by not getting a flu shot. This was fascinating to me because the argument seemed to be framed around the idea that it was my duty to get the vaccine.
It’s the Most Caffeinated Time of the Year
And like any major event in the U.S., this season has its corporate sponsors. In recent years, none has been more present than the Austrian company Red Bull GmbH. This past week the company’s red, white, blue, and yellow cars with the rotating beverage affixed to the hood have been stationing themselves at various high traffic points around NYU’s campus including Bobst, Cantor, and Silver. Representatives have been passing out free cans of the energy drink along with a small, accordion booklet that is a perfect example of target marketing. With a cartoon bull parody of Sir Edmund scaling Mount Everest, the cover states that “if you want to stay on top of things in this 24/7 world, you’ll need some wings.” Then on both sides of the booklet, the same cartoon bull depicts the many ways Red Bull can be beneficial. One side explains what is in the drink while the opposite shows how different types of people including people in the work force, students, hard partying night owls, and the super-star wonder mom have all realized how Red Bull can help propel them through their hectic lives.
And if Red Bull’s familiar claims to increase performance and concentration, improve reaction speed, increase endurance, and stimulate metabolism weren’t enough, a study at the University of Loughborough incorporation with the British Ministry of Environment and Transportation has cited Red Bull as a positive influence on cognitive as well as reactionary performance. Of course, the sales pitch does its best not to bring attention to the fine print. The study’s results were limited to the improvement in the “efficiency of a ‘functional energy’ drink in counteracting driver sleepiness.’ As we all know anything with caffeine in it will stimulate your body to some extent, and the fine points of the study including the drink’s range of effectiveness in correlation to the driver’s exhaustion are left up to the proactive consumer to pursue.
Interestingly, in the pamphlet Red Bull goes beyond listing its healthiest aspects including taurine and vitamins B6 and B12 to including crouching the carbohydrates and sugars as a “unique mixture of substances [that] results in a dose of pure energy.”
Though this is not necessarily medical based media criticism, I believe that Red Bull operates with the same bill of fare as the ads for Lunesta and Gardasil. They emphasize the benefits of the product, but glaze over the consequences of excessive or improper use. Furthermore, at least most people take prescriptions with a grain of seriousness while with regards to energy drinks; less savory consumers may believe that he or she is receiving an appropriate amount of vitamins. They keep chugging it down without a second thought which leads to its own medical complications such as elevated heart rate as in the case of this University of Lincoln which may have contributed her death. (http://www.heraldscotland.com/red-bull-caffeine-drink-may-have-helped-cause-student-s-death-1.901617 ) Therefore, during this crazy final season, perhaps we should think twice about how many energy drinks we’re guzzling down when ninety minutes—an entire sleep cycle—may be just as refreshing and less harmful.
Censorship in South Park
Science in Popular Culture.
Sherlock Holmes is briefly mentioned in this chapter so I thought about investigation stories and popular culture detective genre. As such, detective stories have social commentary ranging from having a strong emphasis on scientific evolution, such as in the stories of Sherlock Holmes, to the moral decay and hopelessness of the times as portrayed in later works of "The Maltese Falcon" or "farewell My Lovely."
Sherlock Holmes exalts in solving the unknown crime and as scientific genius finds resolution, involved in an ambiguous game of science and knowledge. He is respected by Scotland Yard, and reflects the optimism of budding scientific discoveries, such as the finger print. To solve crimes he relies heavily on science, however limited it seems by comparison to present day shows like CSI, Bones and the like. But it is more interesting to me how according to Sturken and Cartwright, "Scientific looking does not occur in isolation from other social context although society may have some stake in seeing science as a separate social realm"
In original stories/films of Sherlock Holmes, there is a strong emphasis on scientific evolution whereas the new Guy Richie Sherlock Holmes has an emphasis on technology and digital imagery. Based on the trailer it would appear that this movie is less about science and more about turning a scientific genius into a swash buckling ham, having very little to do with scientific skills. What reflection on the times does this film cast now in comparison to the "you have less frontal development than I expected" turn of the century? It seems to me the latter celebrates our era of technology and computer generated enhancements, suspense of disbelief, and an ideology of the hero will save the day. Without having seen it, it is hard to say, but what I did see in the trailer is enough to recognize a very different social point of view. I'll be curious to see if this Sherlock Holmes does cocaine and locks himself away in the world of the 'other' as he did in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle brilliant original depiction.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUQbmFAE5WI New Version
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FOyKEZUyiDc Older Version (full film)
The Choice: Good Health vs Sleep
Doc, I Got The RLS. Bad.
In 2005 they issued a press release titled "New survey reveals common yet under recognized disorder—restless legs syndrome—is keeping Americans awake at night." It just so happens that later in 2005, the FDA approved the drug ropinirole as a treatment method for RLS.
Furhermore, both the media and GlaxoSmithKline stressed the “…relatively few doctors know about restless legs. This is the most common disorder your doctor has never heard of" angle. Which basically says, we here at GlaxoSmithKline know more than your doctors do, you better tell them what's going on.
So let's recap. In 2003, a drug company starts a campaign to raise awareness for a little known "disease" (if you can even call it that). Then they release a document which plays into the mystery surrounding the "disorder." Notice how it's called a disorder because it is not medically recognized as a disease. The term "disorder" connotes the idea that there is something out of the ordinary, or something that we can fix that is keeping us up at night. I also just realized that GlaxoSmithKline did an incredible job of introducing another aspect into the mix. Not only are they marketing pills for their ADD leg disease, but by talking about insomnia, they are subtly referencing their sleep medication Ambien, and a host of other sleeping pills they produce. Finally, they urge consumers to educate their doctors. They are literally telling me, a 20-year-old college student to tell my ivy-league educated, award-winning, book-publishing doctor that there's a disease out there, of which she's not familiar, but that she shouldn't worry because GlaxoSmithKline has got us covered.
Science, Religion, and Holy Cows
You know the discourse of science has spiraled out of control when it is being used to prove everything under the sun. We have been indoctrinated with the science vs religion but even that seems to collapse under the weight of science.
I found this video of a cow born in Connecticut with what looks like a cross on his forehead. (Actually I think it looks more like a lightning bolt. Reminds me of Harry Potter, or Lady Gaga.) The owner proclaims it must be "divine intervention" because she knows all about "reproduction and genetics". Really? I don't know if the cross on the calf's forehead is at all a message to us lowly beings, but I do know one thing, those breeders were pretty quick to call the local news. How sacred is a cow that's used for press? really what the breeders want is "higher milk prices". I don't think Jesus would want to further raise the cost of living his people are already jobless, hungry, and in debt.
Things Are Getting Ridiculous
I first saw this poster in a subway car directly after leaving one of our Media Criticism classes... and well... it's asking for it! This advertisement almost blatantly attempts to play off of the normal cliche's that plague the advertising industry.
The advertisement is for Remy Martin, purveyor of "fine cognac", but how would you ever even know that? Unless you recognize their trademark centaur logo in the bottom left of the poster, or you can read the almost-fine print label under the "Remy Martin" label in the other corner, there is literally nothing in the advertisement that indicates it is for an alcoholic beverage. Because of this, it becomes clearly evident that the entire campaign is focused on drawing in customers simply because of the innuendos presented by the two women and the cliche tagline "Things are getting interesting".
For starters, this ad is incredibly demeaning towards women, using them as bait almost to attract male customers. To take this further, who are "things getting interesting" for? The women? OR, the man admiring the two flirtatious women? In both instances, women are depicted as being mere objects for men; objects used to pleasure men in some manner. This sort of advertising is so over used that it is often surprising that it dominates the liquor industry even still. It is my hope that people become more critical of these sort of cheap gimmecks; so much so that the industry is forced to alter their advertising strategies. With enough social change, hopefully this demeaning depiction of women can be less prevalent in media, and eventually vanish entirely.
Food Inc: Capitalism and the Food Industry
In Robert Kenner’s documentary titled, Food Inc., Kenner, with the help of authors Eric Schlosser and Michael Pollan, as well as countless other farmers and other players in the food production business, works to shed some light on the greatly veiled food industry that exists today. The documentary contemplates the role of ethics within the current method of raw food production, as well as how the methods are largely a response to the growth of the fast food industry since the 1950s and what that says about American capitalism.
I have always been greatly interested in the food production industry, as well as in issues of animal cruelty. As a result, I have seen many documentaries over the years that depict the horrible ways in which animals are treated in our food production industry. For this reason, I was less shocked with the horrific images within the documentary than I was of the overwhelming role that American capitalism has played in reaching the state that the industry is currently in. For the first time, this connection between capitalism and the negative aspects of our food industry was clearly illuminated.
While watching the documentary, it was shocking to see how often I found myself comparing the food industry to today’s media. The reason why both are so similar is because both systems are heavily rooted in capitalism. The food industry, as mentioned earlier, was greatly changed when the idea of fast food was introduced. In order to make the most money, big fast food chains relied heavily on their food providers. As chains became more popular and profitable, so did certain food suppliers who were then able to buy up other companies, resulting in fewer suppliers. Now, there are essentially only a handful of companies that run our entire food system.
What happened to the food industry is basically what also happened to the media industry. In order to make the most profit, media companies began to converge resulting in fewer companies controlling the entire media system. In addition, in just the same way that food is being mass produced and it’s quality can be considered to be going down, many aspects of the media can be seen as following the same trend. In news for example, news reports are forced to fit in with the capitalist agenda determined by the companies that run them. Often, this results in a decrease in the quality of news reporting, as reports often cover noncontroversial issues in order to gain more profits in advertisement sales. Whether news reports or BigMacs, capitalism and the desire for profit that stems from it has greatly hampered both food and media systems.
To combat this, Kenner submits a notion that is very much similar to Michael Moore’s advice for combating capitalism in his documentary Capitalism: A Love Story. Like Moore, Kenner suggests that the power rests in the average person, not the big businesses that rule almost every sector of the Western market. Schlosser said it best, stating “the irony is that the average consumer doesn’t think of themselves as very powerful… [but] when we run an item across the scanner, we are voting! For local or not, organic or not…” Essentially, Schlosser asserts that individuals can, in fact, fight “the man” even if just little by little… purchase by purchase. Often when facing big businesses whose influence is terrifying, such as in the case of the food industry, an individual could take on a defeatist attitude. This documentary however was greatly empowering and hopefully it can assist in creating the cultural change necessary to empower others to realize that each item they purchase is a vote they are casting as well.
correction
Adderall for all
"One less" life.
YAZ
Check the commercial!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipTjROfdkV4
Thursday, December 10, 2009
The Invasion of Doctor's Offices By Something Other Than Germs
My sister is currently in her last year of pharmacy school and as a requirement for graduation, has to go on rotations where she works in various clinics and pharmacies to get a sense for opportunities in the pharmaceutical field. On one of her rotations at a nursing home for the elderly, she described how she witnessed one of these drug reps who came into the home dressed in scrubs so that they could better connect with the doctors who also wore scrubs (she could identify the rep based on the fact that drug reps wear badges, and she saw this badge pinned to his scrubs); after all, a doctor is probably more likely to sit down with and listen to a drug rep who is dressed in the same attire as he or she is, rather than one who is dressed in a fancy business suite and might be seen as too fancy for a hospital like setting. It is just weird the lengths that these people will go to in order to sell their product. She was describing another time when she happened to be in a doctor's office outside of work and she noticed that all of the receptionist were writing with pens advertising a drug, on pads of paper advertising this same drugs, in addition to posters for this drug being prominently displayed. It was a clear sign that the office had been visited by a drug rep.
I think this whole concept is just plain disturbing because it makes you wonder how many doctors write prescriptions for unnecessary drugs just because of these drug reps and their peddling of persciption drugs. Especially unnerving is the fact that drug reps don't need to have a background in medicine or pharmacy which means they probably have little knowledge about their drugs, other than what they learned from the company that makes the drug.
The first 15 seconds of the commercial features a rooster (cultural sign/image icon woohoo!) following a woman around with a voice-over asking, "Still tired of morning coming at the middle of the night? Still tired the next day, too?" By 0:17 the tired woman is tucking herself into bed peacefully because Ambien "helps you fall asleep quickly" (with a small caption at the bottom that reads "Dramatization" haha). By 0:22 the narrator is already reading off the warnings and side effects for using Ambien....and continues to do so for the next 36 seconds (with more captions detailing additional warnings) before smoothly transitioning into a suggestion to "ask your doctor about Ambien" during the last two seconds of the commercial.
While all of these warnings and disclaimers are going on, the video shows the obnoxious rooster leaving the woman's room and going away down the street as she sleeps peacefully and wakes up refreshed in the morning. Apparently, the possibility of sleepwalking, driving with memory loss, and possible risk of suicide and fatality aren't really that important when it comes to getting your 6-7 hours of sleep and making the rooster go away. Go figure.
Cialis
Since the hot topic this week in class discussion was about drug ads, I figured I'd bring in the male enhancement portion of them. I think it is crazy that pharmeceutical companies can even advertise on TV, but it is very strange that we allow male enhancement ads. These ads are especially frequent on sports channels, during football and later at night. I personally do not like these ads with all of the male and female fondling, and the awkward fake intimacy of the actors. I don't necessarily like these ads at all, nor do I really care to watch them.
Cialis is a brand that has advertisements all over the television. Men with erectile dysfunction are supposed to take the 36 hour pill. Of course the ad also says talk to your doctor to see if Cialis is right for you. I agree that it is very strange that people are being asked to ask their doctors to take a pill. The doctor is no longer suggesting a pill, but the patient is. It is a complete reversal of roles. But these commercials are trying to promote the product and get men to believe they have erectile dysfunction or that they need this miracle drug to help their sex lives. The commercial only quickly discusses (in the very fast talking, while people are floating around being super happy) the possible symptoms such as back pain, indigestion, headache, muscle aches and more serious things like decrease or loss of vision and hearing. I think that that is kind of a big deal, although I'm glad that the side effects do not say that death or heart attack is possible. It also says that if your erection last longer then 4 hours, you should call your doctor. I can't imagine that that would be a nice experience for anyone. I am glad that these companies are supposed to tell the side effects though because they are very important for the consumer. Overall, I think that it is ridiculous that the US still allows these ads on TV. People should tell their doctors what their problems are and then the doctor should suggest products, not the other way around.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Latisse
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
While watching television this morning I saw a commercial for WebMD, the American corporation that is believed to provide health information services to the public. The commercial promoted a “heath check” for depression. It went further to recommend that if the viewer had any “feelings of sadness” he or she should visit the website to answer a few questions to “easily and discreetly assess your symptoms, treatments, lifestyle, and medical history”. The commercial did a good job of making it sound like we all should go to the website as the symptoms described were very vague. Individuals are no longer persuaded to ask doctors for help. The creation of websites like WebMD make it seem as though doctors aren’t even needed for a diagnosis. Such websites give individuals another means to answer health questions or problems. Could this possibly have to do with how expensive doctor visits are? Or how hard it is to even get an appointment with doctors?
Through a variety of multiple choice questions the individual can determine what is wrong with us on the WebMD website. The slogan for the website is “Better Information. Better Health”. However, I have used this website many times in the past few years and my sore throat has been diagnosed as the Black plague on more than one occasion, but I’m still here today. So either I’m really strong and have a great immune system or WebMD isn’t as good as it says it is.
http://www.webmd.com/
RED, Pink, and Conflicts of Interest
In Chapter 9 of “Practices of Looking,” Sturken and Cartwright mention different ways that corporate marketing and advertising can help to generate consumer health awareness and also promote charity venues. The chapter explains that the charity benefits from donations and exposure, the corporation benefits from their image of benevolence, and the consumer benefits from the good feeling of supporting an important cause. Previously this year, I posted a link to the blog about something I found very interesting, the branding of different diseases by companies. I would argue that the endorsement of different health problems by companies is not only to generate consumer awareness for health issues, but also to capitalize on consumers and gain large amounts of profit.
This made me think of the RED organization, which nine major companies are associated with in order to help donate money to the AIDS cause in Africa. The RED organization is an easy and effective way to donate and help a cause, and consumers can feel good about buying a RED product knowing that some of the proceeds get donated. RED is perfect because the money spent for merchandise you would buy anyway is going to a cause with no extra effort by the customer, as long as the customer chooses to buy a RED product rather than another. In this case, if both of the products were the same and one product donated a portion of the cost to AIDS, I would bet that the consumer would choose the one that supported the cause, as a simple way to feel they are contributing. Integrating a donation system within certain brands and consequently capitalizing off of it raises a moral question, that although it is great that the RED campaign is raising funds for AIDS, is it okay for them to also earn a profit while doing so?
Clearly, the RED organization knows how consumers operate, and are taking advantage of that in these campaigns. However, RED has become a look and a socially conscious trend and fashion statement, especially with GAP’s RED T-shirts and endorsements by celebrities, most notably Bono. Therefore, using this form of corporate marketing has become very beneficial for the companies involved in the RED campaign. Situations like this continue to be debated; when corporations endorse a cause in order to gain a profit, and the public is unsure of where, exactly, the money is going. This most frequently happens with Breast Cancer, where products with pink ribbons on them tend to sell more than others, but the corporations cap their donation to the cause at a certain amount, despite the people who continue to buy the product assuming that they are contributing to the cause. Granted, this debate escalates when focusing on the ties between the private corporate interests of pharmaceutical companies in relation to the business of health and national healthcare, and the debate continues today.
Monday, December 7, 2009
Cialis: Spoofs and Side Effects
When we were talking in class today about how many pharmaceutical ads relate to sex, I immediately thought of the Viagra and Cialis commercials that I always see late at night when I’m up watching trashy VH1 shows or something similar (Tool Academy, anyone?). I also thought of this mock Cialis commercial that I stumbled upon a while ago, in which Cuba Gooding, Jr. acts as a man who no longer suffers from erectile dysfunction after taking 36-hour Cialis.
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1833992/cialis_commercial/
I thought the video was funny because of how outrageous it is in its portrayal of the effects of the drug. But I also noticed something this time around that I hadn’t noticed when I viewed this video initially. We had talked in class about how oftentimes in pharmaceutical advertisements when the side effects are being mentioned, the on-screen images will portray happiness and excitement and fun in order to distract from the harsh and off-putting words and diseases being mentioned in the background narration. This video expertly satirizes that practice. In fact, I remember that when I watched this video for the first time, I was so taken aback by the ridiculousness nature of it that I barely listened to the voiceover; it was the same generic sounding man I had heard on countless other commercials.
This time, I paid more attention to the combination of images and words. When the narrator spoke of the side effects, which “may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache,” the images on the screen were of a happy couple cuddling in bed oblivious to the erection pitching their sheets up and then that same couple driving through with his erection guiding the steering wheel. These images are so absurd that the entire focus of the audience goes toward them, not the dangerous side effects or other information that is offered about the product. Although this commercial is clearly a parody of Cialis ads, it is interesting as it sheds light on some of the tactics used by pharmaceutical companies in their advertising.
“One Less” but you may also get fever, dizziness, or nausea!
Since the 90s, the United States has allowed direct-to-consumer advertising for prescription drugs, allowing consumer-patients to receive information about medicine choices. Even though these consumer-patients cannot purchase such as drug without a doctor’s prescription, pharmaceutical companies market their drugs through direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising tactics (“ask your doctor about…”). Many of these ads offer abstract promises such as being more fulfilled, normal, happier, etc, through the use of images of people in post treatment states of being. Simultaneously, however, by law, these print ads and TV commercials are required to discuss the conditions and potential negative side effects the drug can produce. They will often try to do this as subtly as possible via fine print on print ads and verbally racing through them (listen out for the chipmunk squeal) at the end of the commercials.
On such advertising campaign that really lends to this topic is for Gardasil. In November 2006, Merck & Co., Inc. announced the launch of a national print, television, and online advertising campaign for the world’s first cervical cancer vaccine. Adding to Merck’s ongoing cervical cancer and HPV education efforts, the campaign, called One Less, encourages females who are eligible for the vaccine to begin their vaccination series and to also continue to see their doctor for regular healthcare and screening. To inform and encourage these girls and women, the campaign focuses on a strong and positive message that is designed to empower them to want to become (or help their daughters want to become) “one less” person who will battle cervical cancer.
The campaign also focuses on important information about the vaccine not being about to fully protect everyone and not being able to prevent all types of cervical cancer. In each of their ads, they always address that ongoing cervical cancer screenings are important. They also add that Gardasil is not for use in pregnant women and will not treat cervical cancer. Maybe just as popular as their tag line “one less” is their rant that “Gardasil can cause injection site-pain, swelling, itching and redness as well as fever, dizziness or nausea.” I can practically say that by-heart now.
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Before it's in Fashion, it's in Vogue
Saturday, December 5, 2009
I am African
The "I am African" campaign that we touched upon briefly in class on Wednesday fascinates me. Upon googling it, I found out that the campaign is part of Keep A Child Alive. While this is certainly a great cause, I have some problems with the campaign itself. First as Song already mentioned, the people in the ad are wearing "tribal" war paint which exoticizes Africa and the idea of "Africanness". The beaded jewelry that many of the celebrities in the ads are wearing is also meant to create this sense of "Africanness" when in reality, beaded jewelry comes from all over the world, much like the bright woven cloth that Mercer refers to in the article we read for Wednesday. Like the Benetton ads that Mercer cites, this ad is meant to create a sense of diversity and togetherness when all it does is stifle any real dialogue about the issues that Africans face. This ad is playing on diversity and a sense of interconnectedness in order to draw attention to their cause. The ad seems seems to me to detract from the cause since it doesn't really open up dialogue. Since I had no idea what the ad was for, I focused on the celebrities rather than the cause. Diversity and Africa in this instance seem to be marketing ploys.
Friday, December 4, 2009
Joseph Lister and the myth of 'chronic halitosis'
If you want to kill bad breath causing germs, you use Listerine. It's been around forever and it's in practically every medicine cabinet. If something says that it's 99.9% effective, and that 9 out of 10 doctors use it and recommend it, then it just has to be the best. Well, not so much. This wintry-green, tonsil burning potion that we gargle every morning was actually used (in an extremely distilled form) as floor cleaner and a gonorrhea remedy. But it wasn't a terribly revenue-generating product until the 1920's, when according to Steve Levitt's and Stephen J. Dubner's pop culture and economics book "Freakonomics,"
Similar to soap, we don't actually need Listerine, medically. It doesn't kill germs that create halitosis, because there is no such thing as halitosis. Halitosis is human breath, repackaged as something that could ruin a marriage according to Listerine's first ads. In the case of Listerine's ad campaign which drove sales through the roof, the advertisers relied on the use of fear to sell their product. One of our supposed biggest fears is to end up as old maids or spinsters destined to die alone. However, if our breath is fresh that's one less reason for our mates to leave us, and we can live happily ever after.
White is Beautiful ( or that is what we are told to believe)
This week in class we discussed how dirtiness is associated with people of other races and ethnicities. Our society is obsessed with cleanliness and often this cleanliness is equal to whiteness. When we see commercials telling us to give money to orphans in Africa, it always shows them lying in garbage and it mentions how these people can’t even bathe in clean water. Slumdog Millionaire provoked emotions in the audience by showing young children sleeping in garbage. Apparently, the worst state of life is not being able to bathe or have pure water. The advertising industry plays off this all the time from advertising bottled water that comes from the fresh streams of Fiji, to the new soap that doesn’t leave soap scum on your body, or simply the new products for making sure all the germs come off your counter tops. These commercials usually portray Caucasian, middle to upper class women who enjoy bathing, or cleaning because of such a great new products. How often do we see cleaning products advertised with minorities as the demonstrators?
While looking into this subject, I cam across a website dedicated to posting advertisements which are considered controversial, but nevertheless had been produced to advertise products we have all seen in the stores. The one I am posting on this blog shows an Indian women and an Indian man, who we find out is a celebrity, who are obviously in love. For some reason they split and years later she sees him on the cover of a magazine with another women, who is Caucasian. Then she sees him on the street with his new girl friend and their eyes meet, but he doesn’t go back to talk with her. The camera then shows her looking at a TV with an advertisement. This advertisement is for a Ponds product. This advertisement was for a product that they claimed contained some sort of chemical to produce a glowing white, pink color in ones skin. So the message is that she could maybe get him back if she changed the color of her skin to appear Caucasian. Even though this isn’t advertising soap it still has to do with one’s hygiene. The fact that this advertisement was actually produced in England in today’s times is disgusting. Not to mention the fact that England has a huge Indian population. I also find it interesting how the people they use to portray the Indian people in the commercial aren’t even dark skinned to begin with. If you think about our entertainment industry only a few people, become famous with dark skin. Most of the African American women who are famous have very Caucasian features, with extremely light skin. A couple examples of these women are Halley Barry and Tyro Banks.
Even in India the people who are famous for their roles in movies and as singers, are of lighter skin. I find it strange that this commercial is advertising a product for lighter skin when the female already has light skin. I guess in the end they still want to appeal to the public and they think by showing beautiful, light-skinned, women people are more inclined to associate their product with beauty. I don’t agree with this, but perhaps beauty products sell better if a beautiful light skinned female or male is advertising a beauty product? In the end the company is out to make money.
Here is a blatant example of a beauty product reflecting the dominant ideology that raises whiteness to the top of all other races. To be clean is to be white; to be dark is to be dirty. As a result one must change their appearance or adapt some attribute of the idealized Caucasian person to rise above their lower position. Lifestyle is also connected to cleanliness and in turn whiteness. An upper middle class housewife must have everything clean, which is why this character is portrayed in commercials for cleaning products. Or in this case an upper class Indian women must use this beauty product in order to be whiter.
http://www.cracked.com/article/182_8-racist-ads-you-wont-believe-are-from-last-few-years/
Diasporic Characters in Film and Television
During this week’s classes, we discussed the diasporic themes found in hip hop music and the issues embedded in postcolonial media. However, what stuck me this week was the mention of how the fairly generic image of the “Bubbles,” the baby girl with the bubbles floating up from the washing basin became exclusively synonymous with Pears Soap. I began to wonder which other images have become so prominently associated with a particular brand. Though the three circle silhouette of Mickey Mouse’s head is instantly recognizable, it is by no means generic and neither are other brand manufactured symbols like it. However, one image did occur to me. The rough collie’s association with the protagonist of Eric Knight’s novel “Lassie Come Home” ever since it debuted in 1943.
Furthermore, as recently as the 2005 version of "Lassie Come Home," the Lassie franchise has been revived multiple times while other animal based ones have faded into memory. Why does the character of Lassie endure?
I believe it is due to the nature of basic story of Lassie. A Depression era
Today, the image of Lassie has transformed in the popular consciousness to be a rescue dog that saves Timmy from the well, but at the heart of every incarnation of the character is the theme that she always wishes to return home to her beloved master. It is the belief that one will face great dangers to return to one’s family that keeps the character of Lassie in the public’s consciousness and it is a story that is revisited again and again in books and movies featuring both human and animal protagonists.
"Good Hair" : Images of African-Americans in the Media
Slimming Seaweed Soap
As we have discussed in class there was this newly found obsession with hygiene. Importance of hygiene goes hand in hand with a stressed importance of outer beauty, and in this day and age that also stresses peoples weight. Americans buy into all these ways of losing weight, wether it be diet pills, cellulite creams, or hundred calorie packs, we do it all. But, the most absurd in my mind is the fact that we would believe in a "slimmig soap". Their key slogan is "lathering up for a meltdown" in which they are refering to fatty cells that supposedly go away with the use of this product, and "cleansing outside and reducing fat inside" . I am biased since I have never put this soap to the test, but I'd say that the odds are in my favor.
Fabri Fibra- Italian Hip Hop
There are things nobody will give you
You were born and you died here,
you were born and you died here.
Born in the Land of half-truths.
Where do you run away?
In Italy, guns in the cars.
In Italy, Machiavelli and Foscolo.
In Italy, world champions.
I'm in Italy
Welcome
In Italy, go on holiday to the seaside.
In Italy, it's better not to get surgeries.
In Italy, don't go to the hospital.
In Italy, life is beautiful.
In Italy, parties and gala nights.
In Italy, you make deals with the underworld/mafia.
In Italy, your neighbor will shoot you.
In Italy...
There are things nobody will tell you
There are things nobody will give you
You were born and you died here,
you were born and you died here.
Born in the Land of half-truths.
Where do you run away?
In Italy, there is the real Mafia
In Italy the most dangerous are,
In Italy the hookers.
In Italy you eat home-made pasta,
In Italy burglars enter your house,
In Italy you can't find a job,
in Italy, but you kiss the Crucifix.
In Italy the monuments,
In Italy churches with paintings,
In Italy people with feelings,
In Italy countryside and kidnappings
There are things nobody will tell you
There are things nobody will give you
You were born and you died here,
you were born and you died here.
Born in the Land of half-truths.
Where do you run away?
In Italy, dating girls,
In Italy photographed pin-ups,
In Italy you learn Art,
In Italy the fortune-tellers/gypsies,
In Italy murderers are never caught,
In Italy lost faces and sure votes.
In Italy
There are things nobody will tell you
There are things nobody will give you
You were born and you died here,
you were born and you died here.
Born in the Land of half-truths.
The new commercial for downy fabric softener, entitled Downy Simple Pleasures, allows the consumer to “feel more expressive with luxurious scents” that are “designed for every side of you”. Cleanliness has gone to a new level of personalization, where the different smells can now represent your different moods: allure, “a sweet and mysterious scent”, bliss, “a warm, sweet scent”, radiance, “the cool, watery scent”, serenity, “the soft and soothing scent” and dare, “a rich, dynamic scent”.
It seems as though cleanliness has taken on a new purpose of expressing one’s identity. The commercial discusses the various scents to express “every woman’s different sides”. The commercial goes further to state that the consumer, clearly directed to the female consumer, will feel more enhanced in certain feelings: “Feel more calm with downy serenity, feel more daring with downy dare, feel more elegant with downy allure… feel more”.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0e5SGb5GFE
http://www.downy.com/en-US/product-line/simple-pleasures.jspx
So this is just weird.. Charmin's Free Bathroom in Times Square?
An article: Charmin Makes Bathroom Break Social
This is their blog: http://charminenjoythego.blogspot.com/
Portable!
In class this week, and previous weeks before, we have discussed our nation's obsession with cleanliness. In particular, the product Purell makes is quite popular in our culture. Of course it is necessary to wash our hands and keep them clean, but as we have pointed out, it has become quite out of control today. The image above is Purell's portable hand sanitizer you can attach on your purse, back pack strap, or key chain. I came across these in person multiple times because of friends of mine who own them. Apparently it is not enough to just have access to hand sanitizers in every floor of every building, but to also have it on you all day, everyday. Those germs will never get us now! Right?
The Dangers of Consumerism
When I was thinking of the negative effects that consumption had in the film, I began to think how the world has definitely began to see the negative impact of consumerism, especially with how it has been affecting the environment. Thus, I feel a big result of the consumer society in the past, is the notion of going green today. But ironically, just as in the film, we as a society are not changing our consumer tendencies. Rather, we are using this notion of "going green" to justify consumerism, which in turn, continues to hurt our planet.
For instance, rather than slow down production of SUVs, today, you can buy "hybrid" SUVs. These cars still use a lot of gas, but they are "green," so people assume that they are automatically doing good by the environment when they buy them. In reality, green or not, cars continue to eat away at the finite resource of oil. Likewise, when you go into a store, everything from household cleaners to clothes are "certified green" so we buy them to help the environment. In reality, we are still contributing to environmental harm every time we give into consumerist tendencies to buy, buy, buy, because we are still creating excess. A person may buy a bottle of water that is green "because it uses less plastic," but at the end of the day, many people who buy these bottles of water, don't even recycle them. Rather, they are too lazy and throw them in the trash instead. Thus, they bought the product to "help" the environment, but ended up hurting the environment anyway.
While "going green" in essence should be anti-consumerism, it has thrived based off of the consumer society and this can be a dangerous thing as shown by the film Wall-E where consumer society destroyed the world.
Clean in America
This week in class we talked a lot about Soap and that America is obsessed with the idea about being clean and sterile. Today in our world, everything is made of steal or plastic so that germs do not get on the products we use everyday. But as we talked about Soap I found it interesting that New York City, the biggest City in America is extremely dirty. When we walk down the streets of New York there is trash everywhere and it is definitely no the cleanest place. Foreigner's who usually come to New York to view America may think this is what our nation is composed of. We may stress cleanliness but in reality the streets of our country are dirty and it smells really bad as well. The subway system is terrible also. In countries like Japan and Korea the subway system is highly maintained, clean, and is presentable to the public. If a Korean came to New York and rode the subway's here they would consider the U.S. the supreme nation to be a cheap nation that cannot afford their citizens with a nice subway system.
If you really look into American's are not really clean. We impose and act like we are but if you really look into the realities we are not clean.
BioPower: Mascots on Diets
When I think of raisins, I think of the ultimate healthy snack. I remember recycling dozens of mini cardboard boxes at the preschool I worked everyday. This is what we give the kiddies to help them grow up big and strong.
So when I saw an article questioning Sun Maid Raisin Company's decision to slim down their mascot, I knew right then and there this was one of those biopower issues Foucault talks about. Just like the soap ADs in the McClintock piece, Sun Maid is perpetuating an image the state wants to maintain. Looks like the Sun Maid girl was put on a diet. She is no longer than full figured homely girl we remember. Instead, the state wants people to believe that skinny=healthy. No more fat people in America!