American Dollars Doesn’t Grow On Trees
Do American Dollars really grow on trees? If they do, how does it grow? If not, why? American dollars does not grow on trees, we earn them. American Dollars draw attention of consumers because of financial, market, and language. To begin with, financial products draw attention of consumers. In Joseph Turow’s article, Targeting a New World, he states that in order to aim at package of individuals or groups of people that would make them useful targets of advertising products (294). The article talks about selling goods through mass media (294). Selling goods through mass media will be beneficial to the industry. The industry’s job is to promote images about places in society of where we belong, why and how we should act towards others (295). Financial matters are a revolutionary shift-taking place in America and its society. Furthermore, marketers are reaching out to groups of how certain products tie into their lifestyles. Also, advertising practitioners see racial and ethnic lines etc., as “lifestyles.” The way they targeted and mass marketed in the U.S. media breaks down the nation. Programming services that was created by their formats intentions were to attract the right audience to the point that they will draw advertisers (296). The media is on a haunt for their viewers. They will chase away the unrelated viewers as they draw the pleasing related viewers (296).
In addition, advertisers develop different messages to individuals. They use Nickelodeon and MTV as an invite to target their audiences. In the late 70’s television was viewed with no charge but by the mid 90’s it was available to majority of the population with an interest and a budget to match (295). This value of the media system encourages partitioning of people with different lifestyles. It’s a technological extensive target to have viewers to pay for important sponsors such as news, information, and entertainment.
Another reason can
Cited: Goshgarian Gary, Kathleen Kruger., eds. Dialogues: An Argument Rhetoric and Reader. Library of Congress Cataloging: Library of Congress DC, 2011, 2009, 2007. Print.