What's behind the Media?
Media shapes reality by making people believe
that we have to buy what we see on TV. The advertisements are very interesting
and eye catching that’s makes people feel like they need what they see in the
advertisement. For example, lets say we are the producers and we want to make a
commercial for beer. Our target audience for this example is young men in the
need of attention. In the commercial we want the perfect man, a buff, tall with
a nice smile man holding a beer. Next to him there is his perfect match, a
young beautiful girl dressed very provocative trying to get his attention
because there is also other girls holding on to him by his muscles. This
particular commercial would make young men in the need of attention go buy a
beer thinking that they will get girls attention just like the perfect man in
the commercial. Now the
question is, how do the researchers get society to follow the new trend? Market
researchers study teen culture to find cutting edge trends leading advertisers
to use those certain trends, which mean the trends, become part of mass
culture. Back in the 1990’s Sprite was popular, MTV found a way to
introduce hip hop to society by paying kids to dance and drink sprite to show
how cool they are. Sprite became associated with the ‘coolness’ of hip-hop.
Those are examples of how producers get us to buy their products to be part of
the new trend. Now that we know how they catch our attention let’s talk about
consumerism. Consumerism creates problems with how people spend their money,
how teenagers and young adults get manipulated and how it creates an emotional
connection to specific restaurants or brands, resulting in consumers to blindly
follow marketers’ expectations. Advertising makes individuals believe that
it’s a positive outcome to keep buying their products and the promise ads make
to teenagers is that spending money helps them fit in. It’s easy to catch teenagers’
attention as we see. The American culture can manipulate
us by making us believe that we need to have the money moving from store to
store. When in reality buying things we don’t need is a waste of our money. In
the article called “ Debtor’s Prism,” the author shows that there
are many contradictory messages about debt. In the article the author talks
about how if you don’t spend your money you will be an unhappy person, but it’s
a negative reality because if you spend too much money you will catch yourself
borrowing money leaving you in debts that may have to be paid until death.
The author writes “It’s not whether you have it: its not even how you get
it, exactly… it’s what you do with your riches that really counts”. The message
behind that is that as long as the money moves you are good. The article also
brought up Ebenezer Scrooge, a character that did not like to spend money on
food nor does he liked to spend money on food for him. Even some ads had
recognized that he would just sit on top of his money.
man! Our young people are super taken advantage of. getting dragged in to believing that they NEED things.
ReplyDeleteSo what invisible narratives are present in the text? Also, where's your multimedia?
ReplyDelete