Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Stereotypical Advertisements

Stereotyping can be defined as linking a person, group, culture, etc. to a group of traits. As I watched television and paid close attention to the advertisements, I found that most stereotypes were between men and women as opposed to based on race, religion, etc. Also, I noticed a stereotype present in terms of actors and actresses ages relative to the product they were selling.

The commercial for Caduet, a medicine for blood pressure and cholesterol, has an older man walking two paths in the woods, which come together (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdEXl9r-Kb8). The stereotype in this advertisement is that many associate high blood pressure and high cholesterol with older people and more specifically older males.

A commerical for Progresso soup's new 100 calorie soups shows all different women of different races and ages walking around saying their on a Progresso soup diet. I know I, along with many others, associate dieting with women as you rarely see a man dieting in commericals. In addition to this, women are notorious for going from one diet to another.

I find cosmetic commericals and advertisements very stereotypical as well, especially Covergirl's advertisements. In a three minute block of commercials I saw two Covergirl advertisements, one for mascara and one for foundation and eye shadow. The spokesperson for mascara was Drew Barrymore and the spokespeople for the foundation and eye shadow commerical were Queen Latifah and Penelope Cruz. I find that Covergirl and other cosmetic companies use new or well-known, beautiful, flawless looking actresses to demonstrate their product. The spokespeople appeal to a target group such as Queen Latifah appeals to curvy people and African Americans. These cosmetic commericals suggest that if you, an average citizen, use this product you will have beautiful, flawless looking skin as well.

Finally, I found that the majority of commercials selling household products such as Swifter mops and dusting products and Reynolds Wrap, showed women in the kitchen cooking for the family, or mopping the house, or dusting the house. In fact, I do not believe I saw one man in any commerical in the block of television I watched performing such tasks. I found this a little demeaning. I viewed such commericals as suggesting that women still belong in the household cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children as opposed to having a career of their own outside of the home.

I was surprised by how much stereotyping takes place in commercials and advertisements. Many of the above commericals I have seen over and over again, but I did not notice the stereotyping until I paid attention to exactly what the commercial was saying, showing, and how they were showing it. As a result of this, I believe I will be paying much more attention to commericals in the future.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Current Advertisements

In the media today there are new and changing advertisements constantly being broadcasted. Each advertisement is in some way or another attempting to capture the consumer's attention, get the brand name in the consumer's minds, and make the consumers feel as though they have to have that product. All advertisements have a demographic in mind, or a target group of people to which they intend to sell thier product. Advertisers for one company may have several different commercials that target different demographics. We discussed how Geico does this by using a geiko, a caveman, and celebrities.

There have been a few commercials that recently captured my attention. One commercial that I found interesting was the commercial for Comcast that uses the turtles, The Slowskys and says that they are DSL customers. This commercial uses the turtles to say that DSL is much slower than Comcast and that is why the turtles like it, suggesting that everyone else should sign up for Comcast. Another commercial that I found interesting was the Mastercard commercial that has different events occurring that sets dollar amounts for each event. The last event they say is priceless. The commercial usually ends by saying something like: some things in life are priceless, but for everything else there is Mastercard. Mastercard has different commericals set in different places but with the same theme. This is most likely the result of Mastercard's advertisers trying to appeal to various demographics. Each of these commercials had elements that appealed to me and made the company name or brand stay in my mind.