Sunday, March 28, 2010
Advertising vs. Real Life
Because of this large presence of advertising in our lives, it is important to look at what is advertised and the images that are portrayed. The first thing that came to mind is the way that women are depicted in ads and the pressure that is put on women as a whole in the society because of this. In an article from the TODAY show, they were talking to a woman who was a model for Ralph Lauren for eight years and just recently fired because they said she wasn’t fitting into the sample clothes that she needed to wear. As a size 4 she could not believe that they were firing her for this reason. Soon after this, she found an advertising image that had shown up on a blog site that had been photo shopped in a way that made her look unhealthily skinny. Ralph Lauren removed the ad and apologized for their poor retouching that resulted in a distorted image of a woman’s body. Filippa Hamilton, the model who was fired, said “It’s not a good example when you see this picture, every young woman is going to look at it and think that it is normal to look like that. It’s not. I saw my face on this super-extremely skinny girl, which is not me. It makes me sad. It makes me think that Ralph Lauren wants to have this kind of image. It’s an American brand ... and it’s not healthy and it’s not right.” (http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/33307721/ns/today-today_fashion_and_beauty/)
The way that women are depicted is not only dangerous to the model, but also to the young girls looking at the ads. Baran and Davis discuss symbolic interactionism in chapter 11 when saying, “Social roles and many other aspects of culture are learned through interaction, through experiences in daily life situations. Over time, we internalize the rules inherent in various situations and structure our actions accordingly” (302). This would explain the way that our society gets its values and ways of life from the media and its advertising. After seeing a number of skinny perfect women in magazines getting all the guys, it would be understandable to think that a young girl would act accordingly and try to manipulate the features of the women in the ads.
Do you believe that in our culture advertising tells us who we are and who we should be? Do you think that the way that women are depicted and the way the images tell us that in order to be accepted we need to be painfully thin? To what extent does advertising really keep us trapped in these specific roles that we are supposed to play, and specific characteristics that each gender should have?
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Too Slow of a Media Transformation?
We are supposed to be living in a “new age”. The United States is supposed to be gradually improving. While I am proud of my country, one of the things that I find hard to be proud of is the lack of racial and ethnic support that the media portrays in its work. The message that the media is giving young children is that those who are racially and ethnically different are not as important, which is simply not true.
The “more mature” readers of Cosmopolitan are not the only groups of people being affected. Nickelodeon, a highly influential children’s network, currently has 25 shows that it plays on a continuous basis during the day. Out of those shows, only 1 centers around a “non-white” character. On the Disney Channel, out of their normally running 26 shows, only 4 shows center around culturally diverse families.
In Chapter 27 of McQuail, the author states, “certainly advertising sets up connections between certain types of consumers and certain products” (300). The author goes on to say, “thus instead of being identified by what they produce, people are made to identify themselves with what they consume” (300).
I take McQuail’s words to mean that the media and its executives want us to consume “white culture”. But why? The United States has become so diverse, and yet the “white image” is continuously thrust down our throat. If McQuail’s theory is true, in a sick kind of way, the advertisers are telling people of diversity that if they buy a “white product” they will become a little “whiter”. Shouldn’t people be proud of their heritages?
In my opinion, the media and advertisers are steering the viewers in a non-culturally embracing direction. It is unfortunate to see, but yet it continues to happen.
Why do you think that the media just can’t seem to evolve culturally? Or if you do think it has evolved, do you think it has evolved enough? Do you think that what you saw on TV as a child swayed your cultural view of things today? Do you subconsciously recognize the lack of cultural diversity in the media in present day? Do you see the media changing/evolving in a more embracing cultural way in ten more years?
Monday, March 22, 2010
Celebrity Obsession
In this day in time, society is obsessed with the lives of the rich and the famous. From gossip magazines and websites to newspaper headlines and breaking news stories, celebrity news is of great importance in society as they are always being observed, reported on, and discussed. Though this is not a new type of fandom, our advanced technology has made the viewing of celebrities everyday living, even their most intimate moments, so accessible and so available that one no longer needs any sort of talent or intellect to become a celebrity. A great number of people read about, seek information on, talk about, and follow celebrity news all the time. As discussed by James Chapman in the Daily Mail in 2003, this type of societal fanatic infatuation is called celebrity worship syndrome:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-176598/Do-worship-celebs.html
According to the article by Chapman, there are three different dimensions of celebrity worship syndrome. The lowest level relates to the entertainment theory discussed in Barans and Davis which “conceptualizes and explicates key psychological mechanisms underlying audience and enjoyment of entertainment-oriented media content” (249). In this first dimension, fans are drawn to the celebrities in a casual way, taking pleasure in the talents of the celebrity, and chatting about them with other fans. Fans of the middle dimension feel they share an intensive personal connection to and about the celebrity. The third level of celebrity worship syndrome is characterized by obsessive behaviors and fantasies such as fantasizing about marrying that celebrity.
As seen in the past, a fan’s love for a celebrity has become perilous. Do you believe that this “celebrity worship syndrome” is a real illness? Or is it too ridiculous, too difficult to believe?
In a second article, it is stated that celebrity worship syndrome is one that people should make themselves aware of since almost one-third of the world’s population is affected by this illness. Those who suffer from this have extremely diminished self esteem as well as depression and anxiety. As Jenson writes, “fandom is seen as excessive, bordering on deranged, behavior” (320). For those in fear of having this illness, the article does provide guidelines to help the reader diagnose the dimension he or she is in within this syndrome:
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/312088/celebrity_worship_syndrome_do_you_have.html?cat=4
So is society’s fascination in the lives of the rich and famous a healthy hobby or a dangerous addiction? Even if a person’s celebrity-following is to a minimum, can it really be considered as just a healthy, innocent hobby if it has the possibility to lead to a dangerous addiction? Do you think it is more or less common amongst certain demographics than others?
I'm so much cooler online
Sunday, March 21, 2010
The Media: Entertainment or Necessity?
Monday, March 1, 2010
Love at First Click?
Love at first sight is one of the oldest clichés. What does this quote mean in the 21st century with all the newest dating and relationship technologies? Today many people are heading to the Internet for love. So the question is can you find real love through website questionarires, email and instant messaging?
“The impact of emotionality and self-disclosure on online dating versus traditional dating,” a study by Larry D. Rosen, Nancy A. Cheever, Cheyenne Cummings, and Julie Felt says it is estimated that 40 million Americans visit online dating services monthly and that 25% of singles have tried one. Also, 14% of singles were dating; married to, or engaged to someone they met online (Rosen, Cheever, Cummings, & Felt, 2007).
In the Baran and Davis reading, they describe the five elements, or basic assumptions of the uses-and-gratifications model. One of the elements states “value judgments regarding the audience’s linking its needs to specific media or content should be suspended” (Baran & Davis 241). This means people use the media in different ways and people view the media in different ways. Some people view online dating sites as “creepy” because you never know whom you’re really talking to. However, some people swear by them. How do you think people perceive relationships that began online? Is there a stigma attached?
Baran and Davis write, “Defenders of new media advocate the merits of using social networking websites, e-mail, and text messaging to maintain contact with a wide variety of friends,” (Baran & Davis 241) I think this idea can be related to relationships. I’m sure many of us know someone or was the person who came to college with a boyfriend and girlfriend and realized they couldn’t do the long distance relationship. However, some people still do this everyday. Do you think with technologies like webcams and text messaging, it is possible to maintain a relationship where two people barely see each other in the “real” world?
The second idea I ask is why do people turn to online relationships to begin with? In the Utilization of Mass Communication by the Individual, Katz, Blumler, and Gurevitch write, “The media compete with other sources of need satisfaction. The needs served by mass communication constitute but a segment of the wider range of human needs,” (Katz, Blumler, & Gurevitch, 165) For billions of people love is a human need and they want to find their “soul mate.” Has the Internet just made it easier to do that? Has it made it easier to fulfill our need for love?
The smartphone: Making all other Mediums Obsolete?
"...the relationship between unique grammar of different media-that is, their specific technological and aesthetic attributes-and the particular requirements of audience members that they are capable or incapable of satisfying" (Katz, Blumler, Gurevitch, 5).
In the past 20 years we have seen the Internet start to replace older mediums such as newspaper and radio. Today it now has a high viewership rate for TV and movies. In a fast paced, never stopping society, is it realistic to think these capabilities can all be replaced and become obsolete due to the smartphone?
A smartphone is a cell phone with superior computer-like abilities. The advanced mobile device offers applications such as email, Internet, and music software. Essentially a computer with telephone capabilities, the sophisticated device could potentially be the source for all other mediums.
The Internet is the best example of this theory. According to Information Week, an online survey revealed that "30% of smartphone users say they use their devices for enterprise connectivity, and 37% either occasionally or frequently leave their laptops at home in favor of their smartphones" (Wolfe, 2008). Given the increasing advancements these phone have made in a short period of time, it seems likely that they can take over this market share sooner rather than later. Looking at this trend, could you realistically see your main source of all media being your cell phone?
"Old media increasingly competes for our attention with a growing range of new media that serve similar needs more cheaply, easily, and efficiently" (Baran and Davis, 240). Given this notion, the smartphone is becoming the easiest and most efficient device to access all mediums making it hard to deny that it could make all other sources obsolete.
In the chapter "Audience Theories: Uses, Receptions, and Effects", Baran and Davis explain that "...people weigh the level of the reward (gratification) they expect from a given medium or message against how much effort they must make to secure that reward" (232). This theory helps make the argument for the smartphone. Being that there are essentially no limitations, why wouldn't you choose it over any other medium? If people are weighing the level of the reward on effort, many will choose the ease of the smartphone.
Katz, Blumler, and Gurevitch explain that "...individuals use communications, among other resources in their environment, to satisfy their needs to achieve their goals..."(3). If this approach is true, is there any easier and more efficient way to do this then by using a device that can access anything simply from the palm of your hand?