Egyptians used papyrus to make sales messages and
wall posters. Commercial messages and political campaign displays have
been found in the ruins of Pompeii and ancient Arabia. Lost and found
advertising on papyrus was common in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome.
Wall or rock painting for commercial advertising is another
manifestation of an ancient advertising form, which is present to this
day in many parts of Asia, Africa, and South America. The tradition of
wall painting can be traced back to Indian rock art paintings that date
back to 4000 BC.[4] History tells us that Out-of-home advertising and
billboards are the oldest forms of advertising.
As the towns and cities of the Middle Ages began
to grow, and the general populace was unable to read, signs that today
would say cobbler, miller, tailor or blacksmith would use an image
associated with their trade such as a boot, a suit, a hat, a clock, a
diamond, a horse shoe, a candle or even a bag of flour. Fruits and
vegetables were sold in the city square from the backs of carts and
wagons and their proprietors used street callers (town criers) to
announce their whereabouts for the convenience of the customers.
As education became an apparent need and reading,
as well as printing, developed advertising expanded to include
handbills. In the 17th century advertisements started to appear in
weekly newspapers in England. These early print advertisements were
used mainly to promote books and newspapers, which became increasingly
affordable with advances in the printing press; and medicines, which
were increasingly sought after as disease ravaged Europe. However,
false advertising and so-called "quack" advertisements became a
problem, which ushered in the regulation of advertising content.
As the economy expanded during the 19th century,
advertising grew alongside. In the United States, the success of this
advertising format eventually led to the growth of mail-order
advertising.
In June 1836, French newspaper La Presse
was the first to include paid advertising in its pages, allowing it to
lower its price, extend its readership and increase its profitability
and the formula was soon copied by all titles. Around 1840, Volney
Palmer established a predecessor to advertising agencies in Boston.[5]
Around the same time, in France, Charles-Louis Havas extended the
services of his news agency, Havas to include advertisement brokerage,
making it the first French group to organize. At first, agencies were
brokers for advertisement space in newspapers. N. W. Ayer & Son
was the first full-service agency to assume responsibility for
advertising content. N.W. Ayer opened in 1869, and was located in
Philadelphia.[5]
An 1895 advertisement for a weight gain product.
At the turn of the century, there were few career
choices for women in business; however, advertising was one of the few.
Since women were responsible for most of the purchasing done in their
household, advertisers and agencies recognized the value of women's
insight during the creative process. In fact, the first American
advertising to use a sexual sell was created by a woman – for a soap
product. Although tame by today's standards, the advertisement featured
a couple with the message "The skin you love to touch".[6]
In the early 1920s, the first radio stations were
established by radio equipment manufacturers and retailers who offered
programs in order to sell more radios to consumers. As time passed,
many non-profit organizations followed suit in setting up their own
radio stations, and included: schools, clubs and civic groups.[7] When
the practice of sponsoring programs was popularised, each individual
radio program was usually sponsored by a single business in exchange
for a brief mention of the business' name at the beginning and end of
the sponsored shows. However, radio station owners soon realised they
could earn more money by selling sponsorship rights in small time
allocations to multiple businesses throughout their radio station's
broadcasts, rather than selling the sponsorship rights to single
businesses per show.
A print advertisement for the 1913 issue of the Encyclopædia
Britannica
This practice was carried over to television in
the late 1940s and early 1950s. A fierce battle was fought between
those seeking to commercialise the radio and people who argued that the
radio spectrum should be considered a part of the commons – to be used
only non-commercially and for the public good. The United Kingdom
pursued a public funding model for the BBC, originally a private
company, the British Broadcasting Company, but incorporated as a public
body by Royal Charter in 1927. In Canada, advocates like Graham Spry
were likewise able to persuade the federal government to adopt a public
funding model, creating the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. However,
in the United States, the capitalist model prevailed with the passage
of the Communications Act of 1934 which created the Federal
Communications Commission.[7] To placate the socialists, the U.S.
Congress did require commercial broadcasters to operate in the "public
interest, convenience, and necessity".[8] Public broadcasting now
exists in the United States due to the 1967 Public Broadcasting Act
which led to the Public Broadcasting Service and National Public Radio.
In the early 1950s, the DuMont Television Network
began the modern trend of selling advertisement time to multiple
sponsors. Previously, DuMont had trouble finding sponsors for many of
their programs and compensated by selling smaller blocks of advertising
time to several businesses. This eventually became the standard for the
commercial television industry in the United States. However, it was
still a common practice to have single sponsor shows, such as The
United States Steel Hour. In some instances the sponsors exercised
great control over the content of the show - up to and including having
one's advertising agency actually writing the show. The single sponsor
model is much less prevalent now, a notable exception being the
Hallmark Hall of Fame.
The 1960s saw advertising transform into a modern
approach in which creativity was allowed to shine, producing unexpected
messages that made advertisements more tempting to consumers' eyes. The
Volkswagen ad campaign—featuring such headlines as "Think Small" and
"Lemon" (which were used to describe the appearance of the car)—ushered
in the era of modern advertising by promoting a "position" or "unique
selling proposition" designed to associate each brand with a specific
idea in the reader or viewer's mind. This period of American
advertising is called the Creative Revolution and its archetype was
William Bernbach who helped create the revolutionary Volkswagen ads
among others. Some of the most creative and long-standing American
advertising dates to this period.
The late 1980s and early 1990s saw the
introduction of cable television and particularly MTV. Pioneering the
concept of the music video, MTV ushered in a new type of advertising:
the consumer tunes in for the advertising
message, rather than it being a by-product or afterthought. As cable
and satellite television became increasingly prevalent, specialty
channels emerged, including channels entirely devoted to advertising,
such as QVC, Home Shopping Network, and ShopTV Canada.
Marketing through the Internet opened new
frontiers for advertisers and contributed to the "dot-com" boom of the
1990s. Entire corporations operated solely on advertising revenue,
offering everything from coupons to free Internet access. At the turn
of the 21st century, a number of websites including the search engine
Google, started a change in online advertising by emphasizing
contextually relevant, unobtrusive ads intended to help, rather than
inundate, users. This has led to a plethora of similar efforts and an
increasing trend of interactive advertising.
The share of advertising spending relative to GDP
has changed little across large changes in media. For example, in the
U.S. in 1925, the main advertising media were newspapers, magazines,
signs on streetcars, and outdoor posters. Advertising spending as a
share of GDP was about 2.9 percent. By 1998, television and radio had
become major advertising media. Nonetheless, advertising spending as a
share of GDP was slightly lower—about 2.4 percent.[9]
A recent advertising innovation is "guerrilla
marketing", which involve unusual approaches such as staged encounters
in public places, giveaways of products such as cars that are covered
with brand messages, and interactive advertising where the viewer can
respond to become part of the advertising message.Guerrilla advertising
is becoming increasing more popular with a lot of companies. This type
of advertising is unpredictable and innovative, which causes consumers
to buy the product or idea. This reflects an increasing trend of
interactive and "embedded" ads, such as via product placement, having
consumers vote through text messages, and various innovations utilizing
social network services such as MySpace.
[edit] Public service advertising
The same advertising techniques used to promote
commercial goods and services can be used to inform, educate and
motivate the public about non-commercial issues, such as HIV/AIDS,
political ideology, energy conservation and deforestation.
Advertising, in its non-commercial guise, is a
powerful educational tool capable of reaching and motivating large
audiences. "Advertising justifies its existence when used in the public
interest - it is much too powerful a tool to use solely for commercial
purposes." - Attributed to Howard Gossage by David Ogilvy.
Public service advertising, non-commercial
advertising, public interest advertising, cause marketing, and social
marketing are different terms for (or aspects of) the use of
sophisticated advertising and marketing communications techniques
(generally associated with commercial enterprise) on behalf of
non-commercial, public interest issues and initiatives.
In the United States, the granting of television
and radio licenses by the FCC is contingent upon the station
broadcasting a certain amount of public service advertising. To meet
these requirements, many broadcast stations in America air the bulk of
their required public service announcements during the late night or
early morning when the smallest percentage of viewers are watching,
leaving more day and prime time commercial slots available for
high-paying advertisers.
Public service advertising reached its height
during World Wars I and II under the direction of several governments.
[edit] Types of advertising
Paying people to hold signs is one of the oldest
forms of advertising, as with this Human directional pictured above A
bus with an advertisement for GAP in Singapore. Buses and other
vehicles are popular mediums for advertisers. A DBAG Class 101 with
UNICEF ads at Ingolstadt main railway station
Virtually any medium can be used for advertising.
Commercial advertising media can include wall paintings, billboards,
street furniture components, printed flyers and rack cards, radio,
cinema and television adverts, web banners, mobile telephone screens,
shopping carts, web popups, skywriting, bus stop benches, human
billboards, magazines, newspapers, town criers, sides of buses, banners
attached to or sides of airplanes ("logojets"), in-flight
advertisements on seatback tray tables or overhead storage bins,
taxicab doors, roof mounts and passenger screens, musical stage shows,
subway platforms and trains, elastic bands on disposable diapers,doors
of bathroom stalls,stickers on apples in supermarkets, shopping cart
handles (grabertising), the opening section of streaming audio and
video, posters, and the backs of event tickets and supermarket
receipts. Any place an "identified" sponsor pays to deliver their
message through a medium is advertising.
[edit] Television
Main articles: Television advertisement and Music
in advertising
The TV commercial is generally considered the most
effective mass-market advertising format, as is reflected by the high
prices TV networks charge for commercial airtime during popular TV
events. The annual Super Bowl football game in the United States is
known as the most prominent advertising event on television. The
average cost of a single thirty-second TV spot during this game has
reached US$3 million (as of 2009).
The majority of television commercials feature a
song or jingle that listeners soon relate to the product.
Virtual advertisements may be inserted into
regular television programming through computer graphics. It is
typically inserted into otherwise blank backdrops[10] or used to
replace local billboards that are not relevant to the remote broadcast
audience.[11] More controversially, virtual billboards may be inserted
into the background[12] where none exist in real-life. Virtual product
placement is also possible.[13][14]
[edit] Infomercials
Main article: Infomercial
An infomercial is a long-format television
commercial, typically five minutes or longer. The word "infomercial" is
a portmanteau of the words "information" & "commercial". The
main objective in an infomercial is to create an impulse purchase, so
that the consumer sees the presentation and then immediately buys the
product through the advertised toll-free telephone number or website.
Infomercials describe, display, and often demonstrate products and
their features, and commonly have testimonials from consumers and
industry professionals.
[edit] Radio advertising
Radio advertising is a form of advertising via the
medium of radio.
Radio advertisements are broadcasted as radio
waves to the air from a transmitter to an antenna and a thus to a
receiving device. Airtime is purchased from a station or network in
exchange for airing the commercials. While radio has the obvious
limitation of being restricted to sound, proponents of radio
advertising often cite this as an advantage.
[edit] Press advertising
Press advertising describes advertising in a
printed medium such as a newspaper, magazine, or trade journal. This
encompasses everything from media with a very broad readership base,
such as a major national newspaper or magazine, to more narrowly
targeted media such as local newspapers and trade journals on very
specialized topics. A form of press advertising is classified
advertising, which allows private individuals or companies to purchase
a small, narrowly targeted ad for a low fee advertising a product or
service.
[edit] Online advertising
Online advertising is a form of promotion that
uses the Internet and World Wide Web for the expressed purpose of
delivering marketing messages to attract customers. Examples of online
advertising include contextual ads that appear on search engine results
pages, banner ads, in text ads, Rich Media Ads, Social network
advertising, online classified advertising, advertising networks and
e-mail marketing, including e-mail spam.
[edit] Billboard advertising
Billboards are large structures located in public
places which display advertisements to passing pedestrians and
motorists. Most often, they are located on main roads with a large
amount of passing motor and pedestrian traffic; however, they can be
placed in any location with large amounts of viewers, such as on mass
transit vehicles and in stations, in shopping malls or office
buildings, and in stadiums.
[edit] Mobile billboard advertising
The RedEye newspaper
advertised to its target market at North Avenue Beach with a sailboat
billboard on Lake Michigan.
Mobile billboards are generally vehicle mounted
billboards or digital screens. These can be on dedicated vehicles built
solely for carrying advertisements along routes preselected by clients,
they can also be specially-equipped cargo trucks or, in some cases,
large banners strewn from planes. The billboards are often lighted;
some being backlit, and others employing spotlights. Some billboard
displays are static, while others change; for example, continuously or
periodically rotating among a set of advertisements.
Mobile displays are used for various situations in
metropolitan areas throughout the world, including:
- Target advertising
- One-day, and long-term campaigns
- Conventions
- Sporting events
- Store openings and similar promotional events
- Big advertisements from smaller companies
- Others
[edit] In-store advertising
In-store advertising is any advertisement placed
in a retail store. It includes placement of a product in visible
locations in a store, such as at eye level, at the ends of aisles and
near checkout counters, eye-catching displays promoting a specific
product, and advertisements in such places as shopping carts and
in-store video displays.
[edit] Covert advertising
Main article: Product placement
Covert advertising, also known as guerrilla
advertising, is when a product or brand is embedded in entertainment
and media. For example, in a film, the main character can use an item
or other of a definite brand, as in the movie Minority Report,
where Tom Cruise's character John Anderton owns a phone with the Nokia
logo clearly written in the top corner, or his watch engraved with the Bulgari
logo. Another example of advertising in film is in I, Robot,
where main character played by Will Smith mentions his Converse
shoes several times, calling them "classics," because the film is set
far in the future. I, Robot and Spaceballs
also showcase futuristic cars with the Audi and Mercedes-Benz
logos clearly displayed on the front of the vehicles. Cadillac chose to
advertise in the movie The Matrix Reloaded, which
as a result contained many scenes in which Cadillac cars were used.
Similarly, product placement for Omega Watches, Ford, VAIO, BMW and
Aston Martin cars are featured in recent James Bond films, most notablyCasino Royale. In "Fantastic Four:
Rise of the Silver Surfer", the main transport vehicle shows a large
Dodge logo on the front. Blade Runner includes
some of the most obvious product placement; the whole film stops to
show a Coca-Cola billboard.
[edit] Celebrities
Main article: Celebrity branding
This type of advertising focuses upon using
celebrity power, fame, money, popularity to gain recognition for their
products and promote specific stores or products. Advertisers often
advertise their products, for example, when celebrities share their
favorite products or wear clothes by specific brands or designers.
Celebrities are often involved in advertising campaigns such as
television or print adverts to advertise specific or general products.
The use of celebrities to endorse a brand can have
its downsides, however. One mistake by a celebrity can be detrimental
to the public relations of a brand. For example, following his
performance of eight gold medals at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing,
China, swimmer Michael Phelps' contract with Kellogg's was terminated,
as Kellogg's did not want to associate with him after he was
photographed smoking marijuana.
[edit] Media and advertising approaches
Increasingly, other media are overtaking many of
the "traditional" media such as television, radio and newspaper because
of a shift toward consumer's usage of the Internet for news and music
as well as devices like digital video recorders (DVR's) such as TiVo.
Advertising on the World Wide Web is a recent
phenomenon. Prices of Web-based advertising space are dependent on the
"relevance" of the surrounding web content and the traffic that the
website receives.
Digital signage is poised to become a major mass
media because of its ability to reach larger audiences for less money.
Digital signage also offer the unique ability to see the target
audience where they are reached by the medium. Technology advances has
also made it possible to control the message on digital signage with
much precision, enabling the messages to be relevant to the target
audience at any given time and location which in turn, gets more
response from the advertising. Digital signage is being successfully
employed in supermarkets.[15] Another successful use of digital signage
is in hospitality locations such as restaurants.[16] and malls.[17]
E-mail advertising is another recent phenomenon.
Unsolicited bulk E-mail advertising is known as "e-mail spam". Spam has
been a problem for email users for many years.
Some companies have proposed placing messages or
corporate logos on the side of booster rockets and the International
Space Station. Controversy exists on the effectiveness of subliminal
advertising (see mind control), and the pervasiveness of mass messages
(see propaganda).
Unpaid advertising (also called "publicity
advertising"), can provide good exposure at minimal cost. Personal
recommendations ("bring a friend", "sell it"), spreading buzz, or
achieving the feat of equating a brand with a common noun (in the
United States, "Xerox" = "photocopier", "Kleenex" = tissue, "Vaseline"
= petroleum jelly, "Hoover" = vacuum cleaner, "Nintendo" (often used by
those exposed to many video games) = video games, and "Band-Aid" =
adhesive bandage) — these can be seen as the pinnacle of any
advertising campaign. However, some companies oppose the use of their
brand name to label an object. Equating a brand with a common noun also
risks turning that brand into a genericized trademark - turning it into
a generic term which means that its legal protection as a trademark is
lost.
As the mobile phone became a new mass media in
1998 when the first paid downloadable content appeared on mobile phones
in Finland, it was only a matter of time until mobile advertising
followed, also first launched in Finland in 2000. By 2007 the value of
mobile advertising had reached $2.2 billion and providers such as Admob
delivered billions of mobile ads.
More advanced mobile ads include banner ads,
coupons, Multimedia Messaging Service picture and video messages,
advergames and various engagement marketing campaigns. A particular
feature driving mobile ads is the 2D Barcode, which replaces the need
to do any typing of web addresses, and uses the camera feature of
modern phones to gain immediate access to web content. 83 percent of
Japanese mobile phone users already are active users of 2D barcodes.
A new form of advertising that is growing rapidly
is social network advertising. It is online advertising with a focus on
social networking sites. This is a relatively immature market, but it
has shown a lot of promise as advertisers are able to take advantage of
the demographic information the user has provided to the social
networking site. Friendertising is a more precise advertising term in
which people are able to direct advertisements toward others directly
using social network service.
From time to time, The CW Television Network airs
short programming breaks called "Content Wraps," to advertise one
company's product during an entire commercial break. The CW pioneered
"content wraps" and some products featured were Herbal Essences, Crest,
Guitar Hero II, CoverGirl, and recently Toyota.
Recently, there appeared a new promotion concept,
"ARvertising", advertising on Augmented Reality technology.
[edit] Criticism of advertising
While advertising can be seen as necessary for
economic growth, it is not without social costs. Unsolicited Commercial
Email and other forms of spam have become so prevalent as to have
become a major nuisance to users of these services, as well as being a
financial burden on internet service providers.[18] Advertising is
increasingly invading public spaces, such as schools, which some
critics argue is a form of child exploitation.[19] In addition,
advertising frequently uses psychological pressure (for example,
appealing to feelings of inadequacy) on the intended consumer, which
may be harmful.
[edit] Hyper-commercialism and the commercial
tidal wave
Criticism of advertising is closely linked with
criticism of media and often interchangeable. They can refer to its
audio-visual aspects (e. g. cluttering of public spaces and airwaves),
environmental aspects (e. g. pollution, oversize packaging, increasing
consumption), political aspects (e. g. media dependency, free speech,
censorship), financial aspects (costs), ethical/moral/social aspects
(e. g. sub-conscious influencing, invasion of privacy, increasing
consumption and waste, target groups, certain products, honesty) and,
of course, a mix thereof. Some aspects can be subdivided further and
some can cover more than one category.
As advertising has become increasingly prevalent
in modern Western societies, it is also increasingly being criticized.
A person can hardly move in the public sphere or use a medium without
being subject to advertising. Advertising occupies public space and
more and more invades the private sphere of people, many of which
consider it a nuisance. "It is becoming harder to escape from
advertising and the media. … Public space is increasingly turning into
a gigantic billboard for products of all kind. The aesthetical and
political consequences cannot yet be foreseen."[20] Hanno Rauterberg in
the German newspaper ‘Die Zeit' calls advertising a new kind of
dictatorship that cannot be escaped.[21]
Ad creep: "There are ads in schools, airport
lounges, doctors offices, movie theaters, hospitals, gas stations,
elevators, convenience stores, on the Internet, on fruit, on ATMs, on
garbage cans and countless other places. There are ads on beach sand
and restroom walls."[22] "One of the ironies of advertising in our
times is that as commercialism increases, it makes it that much more
difficult for any particular advertiser to succeed, hence pushing the
advertiser to even greater efforts."[23] Within a decade advertising in
radios climbed to nearly 18 or 19 minutes per hour; on prime-time
television the standard until 1982 was no more than 9.5 minutes of
advertising per hour, today it's between 14 and 17 minutes. With the
introduction of the shorter 15-second-spot the total amount of ads
increased even more dramatically. Ads are not only placed in breaks but
e. g. also into baseball telecasts during the game itself. They flood
the internet, a market growing in leaps and bounds.
Other growing markets are ‘'product placements''
in entertainment programming and in movies where it has become standard
practice and ‘'virtual advertising'' where products get placed
retroactively into rerun shows. Product billboards are virtually
inserted into Major League Baseball broadcasts and in the same manner,
virtual street banners or logos are projected on an entry canopy or
sidewalks, for example during the arrival of celebrities at the 2001
Grammy Awards. Advertising precedes the showing of films at cinemas
including lavish ‘film shorts' produced by companies such as Microsoft
or DaimlerChrysler. "The largest advertising agencies have begun
working aggressively to co-produce programming in conjunction with the
largest media firms"[24] creating Infomercials resembling entertainment
programming.
Opponents equate the growing amount of advertising
with a "tidal wave" and restrictions with "damming" the flood. Kalle
Lasn, one of the most outspoken critics of advertising on the
international stage, considers advertising "the most prevalent and
toxic of the mental pollutants. From the moment your radio alarm sounds
in the morning to the wee hours of late-night TV microjolts of
commercial pollution flood into your brain at the rate of around 3,000
marketing messages per day. Every day an estimated twelve billion
display ads, 3 million radio commercials and more than 200,000
television commercials are dumped into North America's collective
unconscious".[25] In the course of his life the average American
watches three years of advertising on television.[26]
More recent developments are video games
incorporating products into their content, special commercial patient
channels in hospitals and public figures sporting temporary tattoos. A
method unrecognisable as advertising is so-called ‘'guerrilla
marketing'' which is spreading ‘buzz' about a new product in target
audiences. Cash-strapped U.S. cities do not shrink back from offering
police cars for advertising.[27] A trend, especially in Germany, is
companies buying the names of sports stadiums. The Hamburg soccer
Volkspark stadium first became the AOL Arena and then the HSH Nordbank
Arena. The Stuttgart Neckarstadion became the Mercedes-Benz Arena, the
Dortmund Westfalenstadion now is the Signal Iduna Park. The former
SkyDome in Toronto was renamed Rogers Centre. Other recent developments
are, for example, that whole subway stations in Berlin are redesigned
into product halls and exclusively leased to a company. Düsseldorf even
has ‘multi-sensorial' adventure transit stops equipped with
loudspeakers and systems that spread the smell of a detergent. Swatch
used beamers to project messages on the Berlin TV-tower and Victory
column, which was fined because it was done without a permit. The
illegality was part of the scheme and added promotion.[21]
It's standard business management knowledge that
advertising is a pillar, if not "the" pillar of the growth-orientated
free capitalist economy. "Advertising is part of the bone marrow of
corporate capitalism."[28] "Contemporary capitalism could not function
and global production networks could not exist as they do without
advertising."[1]
For communication scientist and media economist
Manfred Knoche at the University of Salzburg, Austria, advertising
isn't just simply a ‘necessary evil' but a ‘necessary elixir of life'
for the media business, the economy and capitalism as a whole.
Advertising and mass media economic interests create ideology. Knoche
describes advertising for products and brands as ‘the producer's
weapons in the competition for customers' and trade advertising, e. g.
by the automotive industry, as a means to collectively represent their
interests against other groups, such as the train companies. In his
view editorial articles and programmes in the media, promoting
consumption in general, provide a ‘cost free' service to producers and
sponsoring for a ‘much used means of payment' in advertising.[29]
Christopher Lasch argues that advertising leads to an overall increase
in consumption in society; "Advertising serves not so much to advertise
products as to promote consumption as a way of life."[30]
[edit] Advertising and constitutional rights
Advertising is equated with constitutionally
guaranteed freedom of opinion and speech.[31] Therefore criticizing
advertising or any attempt to restrict or ban advertising is almost
always considered to be an attack on fundamental rights[citation
needed] (First Amendment in the USA) and meets the combined
and concentrated resistance of the business and especially the
advertising community. "Currently or in the near future, any number of
cases are and will be working their way through the court system that
would seek to prohibit any government regulation of ... commercial
speech (e. g. advertising or food labelling) on the grounds that such
regulation would violate citizens' and corporations' First Amendment
rights to free speech or free press."[32] An example for this debate is
advertising for tobacco or alcohol but also advertising by mail or
fliers (clogged mail boxes), advertising on the phone, in the internet
and advertising for children. Various legal restrictions concerning
spamming, advertising on mobile phones, addressing children, tobacco,
alcohol have been introduced by the US, the EU and various other
countries. Not only the business community resists restrictions of
advertising. Advertising as a means of free expression has firmly
established itself in western society[citation needed].
McChesney argues, that the government deserves constant vigilance when
it comes to such regulations, but that it is certainly not "the only
antidemocratic force in our society. ...corporations and the wealthy
enjoy a power every bit as immense as that enjoyed by the lords and
royalty of feudal times" and "markets are not value-free or neutral;
they not only tend to work to the advantage of those with the most
money, but they also by their very nature emphasize profit over all
else….Hence, today the debate is over whether advertising or food
labelling, or campaign contributions are speech...if the rights to be
protected by the First Amendment can only be effectively employed by a
fraction of the citizenry, and their exercise of these rights gives
them undue political power and undermines the ability of the balance of
the citizenry to exercise the same rights and/or constitutional rights,
then it is not necessarily legitimately protected by the First
Amendment." In addition, "those with the capacity to engage in free
press are in a position to determine who can speak to the great mass of
citizens and who cannot".[33] Critics in turn argue, that advertising
invades privacy which is a constitutional right. For, on the one hand,
advertising physically invades privacy, on the other, it increasingly
uses relevant, information-based communication with private data
assembled without the knowledge or consent of consumers or target
groups.
For Georg Franck at Vienna University of
Technology advertising is part of what he calls "mental
capitalism",[34][35] taking up a term (mental) which has been used by
groups concerned with the mental environment, such as Adbusters. Franck
blends the "Economy of Attention" with Christopher Lasch's culture of
narcissm into the mental capitalism:[36] In his essay „Advertising at
the Edge of the Apocalypse", Sut Jhally writes: "20. century
advertising is the most powerful and sustained system of propaganda in
human history and its cumulative cultural effects, unless quickly
checked, will be responsible for destroying the world as we know it.[37]
[edit] The price of attention and hidden costs
Advertising has developed into a billion-dollar
business on which many depend. In 2006 391 billion US dollars were
spent worldwide for advertising. In Germany, for example, the
advertising industry contributes 1.5% of the gross national income; the
figures for other developed countries are similar.[citation
needed] Thus, advertising and growth are directly and
causally linked. As far as a growth based economy can be blamed for the
harmful human lifestyle (affluent society) advertising has to be
considered in this aspect concerning its negative impact, because its
main purpose is to raise consumption. "The industry is accused of being
one of the engines powering a convoluted economic mass production
system which promotes consumption."[38]
Attention and attentiveness have become a new
commodity for which a market developed. "The amount of attention that
is absorbed by the media and redistributed in the competition for
quotas and reach is not identical with the amount of attention, that is
available in society. The total amount circulating in society is made
up of the attention exchanged among the people themselves and the
attention given to media information. Only the latter is homogenised by
quantitative measuring and only the latter takes on the character of an
anonymous currency."[34][35] According to Franck, any surface of
presentation that can guarantee a certain degree of attentiveness works
as magnet for attention, e. g. media which are actually meant for
information and entertainment, culture and the arts, public space etc.
It is this attraction which is sold to the advertising business. The
German Advertising Association stated that in 2007 30.78 billion Euros
were spent on advertising in Germany,[39] 26% in newspapers, 21% on
television, 15% by mail and 15% in magazines. In 2002 there were
360.000 people employed in the advertising business. The internet
revenues for advertising doubled to almost 1 billion Euros from 2006 to
2007, giving it the highest growth rates.
Spiegel-Online reported that in the USA in 2008
for the first time more money was spent for advertising on internet
(105.3 billion US dollars) than on television (98.5 billion US
dollars). The largest amount in 2008 was still spent in the print media
(147 billion US dollars).[40] For that same year, Welt-Online reported
that the US pharmaceutical industry spent almost double the amount on
advertising (57.7 billion dollars) than it did on research (31.5
billion dollars). But Marc-André Gagnon und Joel Lexchin of York
University, Toronto, estimate that the actual expenses for advertising
are higher yet, because not all entries are recorded by the research
institutions.[41] Not included are indirect advertising campaigns such
as sales, rebates and price reductions. Few consumers are aware of the
fact that they are the ones paying for every cent spent for public
relations, advertisements, rebates, packaging etc. since they
ordinarily get included in the price calculation.
[edit] Influencing and conditioning
Advertising for McDonald's on the Via di
Propaganda, Rome, Italy
The most important element of advertising is not
information but suggestion more or less making use of associations,
emotions (appeal to emotion) and drives dormant in the sub-conscience
of people, such as sex drive, herd instinct, of desires, such as
happiness, health, fitness, appearance, self-esteem, reputation,
belonging, social status, identity, adventure, distraction, reward, of
fears (appeal to fear), such as illness, weaknesses, loneliness, need,
uncertainty, security or of prejudices, learned opinions and comforts.
"All human needs, relationships, and fears – the deepest recesses of
the human psyche – become mere means for the expansion of the commodity
universe under the force of modern marketing. With the rise to
prominence of modern marketing, commercialism – the translation of
human relations into commodity relations – although a phenomenon
intrinsic to capitalism, has expanded exponentially."[42]
'Cause-related marketing' in which advertisers link their product to
some worthy social cause has boomed over the past decade.
Advertising exploits the model role of celebrities
or popular figures and makes deliberate use of humour as well as of
associations with colour, tunes, certain names and terms. Altogether,
these are factors of how one perceives himself and one's self-worth. In
his description of ‘mental capitalism' Franck says, "the promise of
consumption making someone irresistible is the ideal way of objects and
symbols into a person's subjective experience. Evidently, in a society
in which revenue of attention moves to the fore, consumption is drawn
by one's self-esteem. As a result, consumption becomes ‘work' on a
person's attraction. From the subjective point of view, this ‘work'
opens fields of unexpected dimensions for advertising. Advertising
takes on the role of a life councillor in matters of attraction. (…)
The cult around one's own attraction is what Christopher Lasch
described as ‘Culture of Narcissism'."[35][36]
For advertising critics another serious problem is
that "the long standing notion of separation between advertising and
editorial/creative sides of media is rapidly crumbling" and advertising
is increasingly hard to tell apart from news, information or
entertainment. The boundaries between advertising and programming are
becoming blurred. According to the media firms all this commercial
involvement has no influence over actual media content, but, as
McChesney puts it, "this claim fails to pass even the most basic giggle
test, it is so preposterous."[43]
Advertising draws "heavily on psychological
theories about how to create subjects, enabling advertising and
marketing to take on a ‘more clearly psychological tinge' (Miller and
Rose, 1997, cited in Thrift, 1999, p. 67). Increasingly, the emphasis
in advertising has switched from providing ‘factual' information to the
symbolic connotations of commodities, since the crucial cultural
premise of advertising is that the material object being sold is never
in itself enough. Even those commodities providing for the most mundane
necessities of daily life must be imbued with symbolic qualities and
culturally endowed meanings via the ‘magic system (Williams, 1980) of
advertising. In this way and by altering the context in which
advertisements appear, things ‘can be made to mean "just about
anything"' (McFall, 2002, p. 162) and the ‘same' things can be endowed
with different intended meanings for different individuals and groups
of people, thereby offering mass produced visions of individualism."[1]
Before advertising is done, market research
institutions need to know and describe the target group to exactly plan
and implement the advertising campaign and to achieve the best possible
results. A whole array of sciences directly deal with advertising and
marketing or is used to improve its effects. Focus groups,
psychologists and cultural anthropologists are ‘''de rigueur''' in
marketing research".[44] Vast amounts of data on persons and their
shopping habits are collected, accumulated, aggregated and analysed
with the aid of credit cards, bonus cards, raffles and internet
surveying. With increasing accuracy this supplies a picture of
behaviour, wishes and weaknesses of certain sections of a population
with which advertisement can be employed more selectively and
effectively. The efficiency of advertising is improved through
advertising research. Universities, of course supported by business and
in co-operation with other disciplines (s. above), mainly Psychiatry,
Anthropology, Neurology and behavioural sciences, are constantly in
search for ever more refined, sophisticated, subtle and crafty methods
to make advertising more effective. "Neuromarketing is a controversial
new field of marketing which uses medical technologies such as
functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) -- not to heal, but to
sell products. Advertising and marketing firms have long used the
insights and research methods of psychology in order to sell products,
of course. But today these practices are reaching epidemic levels, and
with a complicity on the part of the psychological profession that
exceeds that of the past. The result is an enormous advertising and
marketing onslaught that comprises, arguably, the largest single
psychological project ever undertaken. Yet, this great undertaking
remains largely ignored by the American Psychological Association."[45]
Robert McChesney calls it "the greatest concerted attempt at
psychological manipulation in all of human history."[46]
[edit] Dependency of the media and corporate
censorship
Almost all mass media are advertising media and
many of them are exclusively advertising media and, with the exception
of public service broadcasting are privately owned. Their income is
predominantly generated through advertising; in the case of newspapers
and magazines from 50 to 80%. Public service broadcasting in some
countries can also heavily depend on advertising as a source of income
(up to 40%).[47] In the view of critics no media that spreads
advertisements can be independent and the higher the proportion of
advertising, the higher the dependency. This dependency has "distinct
implications for the nature of media content…. In the business press,
the media are often referred to in exactly the way they present
themselves in their candid moments: as a branch of the advertising
industry."[48]
In addition, the private media are increasingly
subject to mergers and concentration with property situations often
becoming entangled and opaque. This development, which Henry A. Giroux
calls an "ongoing threat to democratic culture",[49] by itself should
suffice to sound all alarms in a democracy. Five or six advertising
agencies dominate this 400 billion U.S. dollar global industry.
"Journalists have long faced pressure to shape
stories to suit advertisers and owners …. the vast majority of TV
station executives found their news departments ‘cooperative' in
shaping the news to assist in ‘non-traditional revenue
development."[50] Negative and undesired reporting can be prevented or
influenced when advertisers threaten to cancel orders or simply when
there is a danger of such a cancellation. Media dependency and such a
threat becomes very real when there is only one dominant or very few
large advertisers. The influence of advertisers is not only in regard
to news or information on their own products or services but expands to
articles or shows not directly linked to them. In order to secure their
advertising revenues the media has to create the best possible
‘advertising environment'. Another problem considered censorship by
critics is the refusal of media to accept advertisements that are not
in their interest. A striking example of this is the refusal of TV
stations to broadcast ads by Adbusters. Groups try to place
advertisements and are refused by networks.[51]
It is principally the viewing rates which decide
upon the programme in the private radio and television business. "Their
business is to absorb as much attention as possible. The viewing rate
measures the attention the media trades for the information offered.
The service of this attraction is sold to the advertising business"[35]
and the viewing rates determine the price that can be demanded for
advertising.
"Advertising companies determining the contents of
shows has been part of daily life in the USA since 1933. Procter
& Gamble (P&G) …. offered a radio station a
history-making trade (today know as "bartering"): the company would
produce an own show for "free" and save the radio station the high
expenses for producing contents. Therefore the company would want its
commercials spread and, of course, its products placed in the show.
Thus, the series ‘Ma Perkins' was created, which P&G skilfully
used to promote Oxydol, the leading detergent brand in those years and
the Soap opera was born …"[52]
While critics basically worry about the subtle
influence of the economy on the media, there are also examples of blunt
exertion of influence. The US company Chrysler, before it merged with
Daimler Benz had its agency, PentaCom, send out a letter to numerous
magazines, demanding them to send, an overview of all the topics before
the next issue is published to "avoid potential conflict". Chrysler
most of all wanted to know, if there would be articles with "sexual,
political or social" content or which could be seen as "provocative or
offensive". PentaCom executive David Martin said: "Our reasoning is,
that anyone looking at a 22.000 $ product would want it surrounded by
positive things. There is nothing positive about an article on child
pornography."[52] In another example, the „USA Network held top-level
‚off-the-record' meetings with advertisers in 2000 to let them tell the
network what type of programming content they wanted in order for USA
to get their advertising."[53] Television shows are created to
accommodate the needs for advertising, e. g. splitting them up in
suitable sections. Their dramaturgy is typically designed to end in
suspense or leave an unanswered question in order to keep the viewer
attached.
The movie system, at one time outside the direct
influence of the broader marketing system, is now fully integrated into
it through the strategies of licensing, tie-ins and product placements.
The prime function of many Hollywood films today is to aid in the
selling of the immense collection of commodities.[54] The press called
the 2002 Bond film ‘Die Another Day' featuring 24 major promotional
partners an ‘ad-venture' and noted that James Bond "now has been
‘licensed to sell'" As it has become standard practise to place
products in motion pictures, it "has self-evident implications for what
types of films will attract product placements and what types of films
will therefore be more likely to get made".[55]
Advertising and information are increasingly hard
to distinguish from each other. "The borders between advertising and
media …. become more and more blurred…. What August Fischer, chairman
of the board of Axel Springer publishing company considers to be a
‘proven partnership between the media and advertising business' critics
regard as nothing but the infiltration of journalistic duties and
freedoms". According to RTL-executive Helmut Thoma "private stations
shall not and cannot serve any mission but only the goal of the company
which is the ‘acceptance by the advertising business and the viewer'.
The setting of priorities in this order actually says everything about
the ‘design of the programmes' by private television."[52] Patrick Le
Lay, former managing director of TF1, a private French television
channel with a market share of 25 to 35%, said: "There are many ways to
talk about television. But from the business point of view, let's be
realistic: basically, the job of TF1 is, e. g. to help Coca Cola sell
its product. (…) For an advertising message to be perceived the brain
of the viewer must be at our disposal. The job of our programmes is to
make it available, that is to say, to distract it, to relax it and get
it ready between two messages. It is disposable human brain time that
we sell to Coca Cola."[56]
Because of these dependencies a widespread and
fundamental public debate about advertising and its influence on
information and freedom of speech is difficult to obtain, at least
through the usual media channels; otherwise these would saw off the
branch they are sitting on. "The notion that the commercial basis of
media, journalism, and communication could have troubling implications
for democracy is excluded from the range of legitimate debate" just as
"capitalism is off-limits as a topic of legitimate debate in U.S.
political culture".[57]
An early critic of the structural basis of U.S.
journalism was Upton Sinclair with his novel The Brass Check in which
he stresses the influence of owners, advertisers, public relations, and
economic interests on the media. In his book "Our Master's Voice –
Advertising" the social ecologist James Rorty (1890–1973) wrote: "The
gargoyle's mouth is a loudspeaker, powered by the vested interest of a
two-billion dollar industry, and back of that the vested interests of
business as a whole, of industry, of finance. It is never silent, it
drowns out all other voices, and it suffers no rebuke, for it is not
the voice of America? That is its claim and to some extent it is a just
claim..."[58]
It has taught us how to live, what to be afraid
of, what to be proud of, how to be beautiful, how to be loved, how to
be envied, how to be successful.. Is it any wonder that the American
population tends increasingly to speak, think, feel in terms of this
jabberwocky? That the stimuli of art, science, religion are
progressively expelled to the periphery of American life to become
marginal values, cultivated by marginal people on marginal time?"[59]
[edit] The commercialisation of culture and sports
Performances, exhibitions, shows, concerts,
conventions and most other events can hardly take place without
sponsoring. The increasing lack arts and culture they buy the service
of attraction. Artists are graded and paid according to their art's
value for commercial purposes. Corporations promote renown artists,
therefore getting exclusive rights in global advertising campaigns.
Broadway shows, like ‘La Bohème' featured commercial props in its
set.[60]
Advertising itself is extensively considered to be
a contribution to culture. Advertising is integrated into fashion. On
many pieces of clothing the company logo is the only design or is an
important part of it. There is only little room left outside the
consumption economy, in which culture and art can develop independently
and where alternative values can be expressed. A last important sphere,
the universities, is under strong pressure to open up for business and
its interests.[61]
Inflatable billboard in front of a sports stadium
Competitive sports have become unthinkable without
sponsoring and there is a mutual dependency. High income with
advertising is only possible with a comparable number of spectators or
viewers. On the other hand, the poor performance of a team or a
sportsman results in less advertising revenues. Jürgen Hüther and
Hans-Jörg Stiehler talk about a ‘Sports/Media Complex which is a
complicated mix of media, agencies, managers, sports promoters,
advertising etc. with partially common and partially diverging
interests but in any case with common commercial interests. The media
presumably is at centre stage because it can supply the other parties
involved with a rare commodity, namely (potential) public attention. In
sports "the media are able to generate enormous sales in both
circulation and advertising."[62]
"Sports sponsorship is acknowledged by the tobacco
industry to be valuable advertising. A Tobacco Industry journal in 1994
described the Formula One car as ‘The most powerful advertising space
in the world'. …. In a cohort study carried out in 22 secondary schools
in England in 1994 and 1995 boys whose favourite television sport was
motor racing had a 12.8% risk of becoming regular smokers compared to
7.0% of boys who did not follow motor racing."[63]
Not the sale of tickets but transmission rights,
sponsoring and merchandising in the meantime make up the largest part
of sports association's and sports club's revenues with the IOC
(International Olympic Committee) taking the lead. The influence of the
media brought many changes in sports including the admittance of new
‘trend sports' into the Olympic Games, the alteration of competition
distances, changes of rules, animation of spectators, changes of sports
facilities, the cult of sports heroes who quickly establish themselves
in the advertising and entertaining business because of their media
value[64] and last but not least, the naming and renaming of sport
stadiums after big companies. "In sports adjustment into the logic of
the media can contribute to the erosion of values such as equal chances
or fairness, to excessive demands on athletes through public pressure
and multiple exploitation or to deceit (doping, manipulation of results
…). It is in the very interest of the media and sports to counter this
danger because media sports can only work as long as sport exists.[64]
[edit] Occupation and commercialisation of public
space
Every visually perceptible place has potential for
advertising. Especially urban areas with their structures but also
landscapes in sight of through fares are more and more turning into
media for advertisements. Signs, posters, billboards, flags have become
decisive factors in the urban appearance and their numbers are still on
the increase. "Outdoor advertising has become unavoidable. Traditional
billboards and transit shelters have cleared the way for more pervasive
methods such as wrapped vehicles, sides of buildings, electronic signs,
kiosks, taxis, posters, sides of buses, and more. Digital technologies
are used on buildings to sport ‘urban wall displays'. In urban areas
commercial content is placed in our sight and into our consciousness
every moment we are in public space. The German Newspaper ‘Zeit' called
it a new kind of ‘dictatorship that one cannot escape'.[21] Over time,
this domination of the surroundings has become the "natural" state.
Through long-term commercial saturation, it has become implicitly
understood by the public that advertising has the right to own, occupy
and control every inch of available space. The steady normalization of
invasive advertising dulls the public's perception of their
surroundings, re-enforcing a general attitude of powerlessness toward
creativity and change, thus a cycle develops enabling advertisers to
slowly and consistently increase the saturation of advertising with
little or no public outcry."[65]
The massive optical orientation toward advertising
changes the function of public spaces which are utilised by brands.
Urban landmarks are turned into trademarks. The highest pressure is
exerted on renown and highly frequented public spaces which are also
important for the identity of a city (e. g. Piccadilly Circus, Times
Square, Alexanderplatz). Urban spaces are public commodities and in
this capacity they are subject to "aesthetical environment protection",
mainly through building regulations, heritage protection and landscape
protection. "It is in this capacity that these spaces are now being
privatised. They are peppered with billboards and signs, they are
remodelled into media for advertising."[34][35]
[edit] Socio-cultural aspects: sexism,
discrimination and stereotyping
"Advertising has an "agenda setting function"
which is the ability, with huge sums of money, to put consumption as
the only item on the agenda. In the battle for a share of the public
conscience this amounts to non-treatment (ignorance) of whatever is not
commercial and whatever is not advertised for. Advertising should be
reflection of society norms and give clear picture of target market.
Spheres without commerce and advertising serving the muses and
relaxation remain without respect.[neutrality is disputed]
With increasing force advertising makes itself comfortable in the
private sphere so that the voice of commerce becomes the dominant way
of expression in society."[66] Advertising critics see advertising as
the leading light in our culture. Sut Jhally and James Twitchell go
beyond considering advertising as kind of religion and that advertising
even replaces religion as a key institution.[67]
"Corporate advertising (or commercial media) is
the largest single psychological project ever undertaken by the human
race. Yet for all of that, its impact on us remains unknown and largely
ignored. When I think of the media's influence over years, over
decades, I think of those brainwashing experiments conducted by Dr.
Ewen Cameron in a Montreal psychiatric hospital in the 1950s (see
MKULTRA). The idea of the CIA-sponsored "depatterning" experiments was
to outfit conscious, unconscious or semiconscious subjects with
headphones, and flood their brains with thousands of repetitive
"driving" messages that would alter their behaviour over
time….Advertising aims to do the same thing."[25]
Advertising is especially aimed at young people
and children and it increasingly reduces young people to consumers.[49]
For Sut Jhally it is not "surprising that something this central and
with so much being expended on it should become an important presence
in social life. Indeed, commercial interests intent on maximizing the
consumption of the immense collection of commodities have colonized
more and more of the spaces of our culture. For instance, almost the
entire media system (television and print) has been developed as a
delivery system for marketers its prime function is to produce
audiences for sale to advertisers. Both the advertisements it carries,
as well as the editorial matter that acts as a support for it,
celebrate the consumer society. The movie system, at one time outside
the direct influence of the broader marketing system, is now fully
integrated into it through the strategies of licensing, tie-ins and
product placements. The prime function of many Hollywood films today is
to aid in the selling of the immense collection of commodities. As
public funds are drained from the non-commercial cultural sector, art
galleries, museums and symphonies bid for corporate sponsorship."[54]
In the same way effected is the education system and advertising is
increasingly penetrating schools and universities. Cities, such as New
York, accept sponsors for public playgrounds. "Even the pope has been
commercialized … The pope's 4-day visit to Mexico in …1999 was
sponsored by Frito-Lay and PepsiCo.[68] The industry is accused of
being one of the engines powering a convoluted economic mass production
system which promotes consumption. As far as social effects are
concerned it does not matter whether advertising fuels consumption but
which values, patterns of behaviour and assignments of meaning it
propagates. Advertising is accused of hijacking the language and means
of pop culture, of protest movements and even of subversive criticism
and does not shy away from scandalizing and breaking taboos (e. g.
Benneton). This in turn incites counter action, what Kalle Lasn in 2001
called ‘'Jamming the Jam of the Jammers''. Anything goes. "It is a
central social-scientific question what people can be made to do by
suitable design of conditions and of great practical importance. For
example, from a great number of experimental psychological experiments
it can be assumed, that people can be made to do anything they are
capable of, when the according social condition can be created."[69]
Advertising often uses stereotype gender specific
roles of men and women reinforcing existing clichés and it has been
criticized as "inadvertently or even intentionally promoting sexism,
racism, and ageism… At very least, advertising often reinforces
stereotypes by drawing on recognizable "types" in order to tell stories
in a single image or 30 second time frame."[38] Activities are depicted
as typical male or female (stereotyping). In addition people are
reduced to their sexuality or equated with commodities and gender
specific qualities are exaggerated. Sexualized female bodies, but
increasingly also males, serve as eye-catchers. In advertising it is
usually a woman being depicted as
- servants of men and children that react to the
demands and complaints of their loved ones with a bad conscience and
the promise for immediate improvement (wash, food)
- a sexual or emotional play toy for the
self-affirmation of men
- a technically totally clueless being (almost
always male) that can only manage a childproof operation
- female expert, but stereotype from the fields
of fashion, cosmetics, food or at the most, medicine
- as ultra thin, slim, and very skinny.
- doing ground-work for others, e. g. serving
coffee while a journalist interviews a politician[70]
A large portion of advertising deals with
promotion of products that pertain to the "ideal body image." This is
mainly targeted toward women, and, in the past, this type of
advertising was aimed nearly exclusively at women. Women in
advertisements are generally portrayed as good-looking women who are in
good health. This, however, is not the case of the average woman.
Consequently, they give a negative message of body image to the average
woman. Because of the media, girls and women who are overweight, and
otherwise "normal" feel almost obligated to take care of themselves and
stay fit. They feel under high pressure to maintain an acceptable
bodyweight and take care of their health. Consequences of this are low
self-esteem,eating disorders, self mutilations, and beauty operations
for those women that just cannot bring themselves eat right or get the
motivation to go to the gym. The EU parliament passed a resolution in
2008 that advertising may not be discriminating and degrading. This
shows that politicians are increasingly concerned about the negative
impacts of advertising. However, the benefits of promoting overall
health and fitness are often overlooked. Men are also negatively
portrayed as incompetent and the butt of every joke in advertising.
[edit] Children and adolescents as target groups
The children's market, where resistance to
advertising is weakest, is the "pioneer for ad creep".[71] "Kids are
among the most sophisticated observers of ads. They can sing the
jingles and identify the logos, and they often have strong feelings
about products. What they generally don't understand, however, are the
issues that underlie how advertising works. Mass media are used not
only to sell goods but also ideas: how we should behave, what rules are
important, who we should respect and what we should value."[72] Youth
is increasingly reduced to the role of a consumer. Not only the makers
of toys, sweets, ice cream, breakfast food and sport articles prefer to
aim their promotion at children and adolescents. For example, an ad for
a breakfast cereal on a channel aimed at adults will have music that is
a soft ballad, whereas on a channel aimed at children, the same ad will
use a catchy rock jingle of the same so
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