Taubes, G. (2012). The New Obesity Campaigns Have it All Wrong. (cover story). Newsweek, 159(20), 32.…
For the last several years, fast food resteruant Carl’s Jr. has been implementing an advertising campaign that any regular TV watcher would find themselves being familiar with. The commercial is simple: an attractive young woman, preferably a model, wears something seductive and eats a Carl Jr.’s product while moaning. In Dan Neil’s article “Company Town: Seduced by a Juicy Burger” published in the LA Times in 2009, he jokingly criticizes not only Carl’s Jr., but other fast food giants that have employed a similar advertising strategy. Neil finds himself conflicted by the commercial featuring model and cooking show host Padma Lakshmi. These over zealous commercials have become nothing but the norm, nevertheless, Neil wonders if it has gone…
In “Commodify Your Dissent,” Thomas Frank implicates “Advertising teaches us not in the ways of puritanical self-denial (a bizarre notion on the face of it), but in orgiastic, never-ending self-fulfillment.” In these lines Frank denotes that the marketing and business industry no longer promote selflessness and conformity as it did in the 60’s. The goal is to promote and advertise a dissolute idea where people could never get enough and long for more whether it be with food, clothes, cars, electronics, etc. I agree with Frank’s assertions, society no longer conforms. New products, innovations, and changes in pop culture continue to unravel because people want to prove to society that they have it all. Commercials nowadays stimulate a “rock-n-roll”…
In this Star models ad, there are two women presented. One is a sketch of a woman and the other is the woman in reality. The ad says in skinny writing, “You are not a sketch…say no to anorexia.” While this campaign is to encourage women by telling them that they are not a sketch, it also goes along with Craig’s quote. Society often produces images and ideas that you are not beautiful if you are not skinny. They fill women’s heads up with these ideas and the woman starts to feel bad about her physical attractiveness. When these insecurities take place, it allows for diseases and disorders to take over, such as Anorexia. This ad does a good job of portraying how society thinks and how in turn it encourages people to think. By having a sketch and a person actually mimicking the sketch, it shows how people feel they need to be others’ expectations. Craig did a great job of identifying how the most common commercials make women feel.…
So (the irony of my word choice does not fall short on me), you say I am gluttonous. Such foolishness! How senseless! This notion is beginning to aggravate me. If I were truly greedy, wouldn’t I have killed and eaten your majesty, King Hrothgar, by now? And his bed-mate, Wealtheow? I would have gorged myself on the flesh of their royal bones, watching blood spatter against the walls, rejoicing at the sight of such important figures being reduced to meals on a platter. If I were truly greedy, would I have spared them? Killing everyone would lead to my demise. I would no longer be Grendel the Beast; I would roam the streets alone, with no one to laugh at, plague, or humiliate. I especially will not kill Unferth, the coward, as I will not be his…
Nowadays our world and people are being eaten by advertisements and commercials almost as much as five, ten, and even twenty years ago. But of course now modern people have changed their opinions and thoughts almost on everything, advertisement included. And they have changed also. In "Hunger as Ideology", Susan Bordo talks about her view on commercials and gives us the gender-dualities, which she thinks are traditional for ads. In her essay Bordo examined the historical stereotype of women; the portrayals that have arrested them, turning their psychological makeup into something destructive to their health, and yet, supported by society. It seems that to be thin is a goal for most women and as Bordo points…
The ad industry is revolving around trends, fashion, and creating new ways to express ideas from the past and making them popular today. But these ads, whether they be on magazines, commercials or billboards, they all surround the idea of being “beautiful” and giving the false representation that they care more about being healthy than being…
I believe that the images portrayed in advertising correlate with the increase in cases of eating disorders over the past thirty years (Comer, 2015)(pg. 317). With…
In biblical times God has always instructed his people against usury and gluttony. Sadly this type of activity still occurs in today’s society. Largely because man’s mind is not renewed to seek the welfare of others. Government policy has helped occasionally to reinforce this principal and promote…
By definition, nationalism is the love, devotion, and loyalty to ones country or ones cultural group. Imperialism is the domination of other areas by imposing political, social, and economic policies to improve their own country. The Industrial revolution was the change from the use of human and animal power to the use of mechanical power in order to produce goods.…
In Philosophy this far, we’ve covered many topics. In highlighting Philosophy, Wisdom, and the quote, “ The Unexamined Life is Not Worth Living”, I will express the knowledge and insight I’ve taken away from Unit 1. This embodies one of the many examples of the concepts I will explain: “Too often, we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of the thought” (JFK).…
The media contributes to what teenagers believe is “thin and beautiful.” This is why controlling what is in the media is vital to teenagers. Frances O’Connor, the author of Obesity and the Media, explains advertisers bombard viewers with approximately five hundred advertisements everyday, and at least ten percent of these advertisements are directly about beauty. This information shows that there are an overwhelming number of messages from the media about beauty. In addition, O’Connor later goes on to write that, advertisers expose viewers to the idea that being skinny and losing weight will make them happier. However, in the article, “Eating Disorders and the Media,” The Camp Recovery Center Health Group proves that long-term “regimented diet plans do not work”, the more people purchase diet products, the more the diet industry will keep pushing their false advertisements and slogans. According to the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders, “Nearly 70 percent of girls in grades five through 12 said magazine images influence their ideals of a perfect body.” This shows that the media, which can lead to many eating disorders, influences more…
Cited: Belk, Russell W., and Richard W. Pollay. “Images of Ourselves: The Good Life in Twentieth Century Advertising.” The Journal of Consumer Research. 11 (1985): 887-97.…
According to the article “A Fear of Food: A History of Eating Disorders”, “It is a disorder characterized by the rapid consumption of food followed by attempts to purge the body of the food via vomiting, laxatives, or excessive exercise” (“A Fear of Food: A History of Eating Disorders”). Symptoms of bulimia were seen many centuries ago. The article adds that “While gluttony was one of the medieval seven deadly sins reviled by the Catholic Church, food insecurity often led to uncontrolled consumption during times of plenty. Furthermore, wealthy families in the Middle Ages would vomit during meals because consuming large amounts of food was seen as a sign of wealth (“A Fear of Food: A History of Eating Disorders”). Wealthy families in the Middle Ages were expected to eat a lot so people would see how wealthy they were, however, they did not want to overeat so much that they would gain weight so they vomited it all up. However, bulimia nervosa was not considered a disorder until the 1970s when it emerged in full force (“A Fear of Food: A History of Eating…
Advertisements for weight loss are everywhere, but are they helpful or manipulative? According to the Federal Trade Commission, the only thing being lost in weight loss advertisements is money, not weight. With weight loss ads preying on the insecurities of a targeted overweight audience, they abuse the innocence of the viewer by influencing them with displays of skinny models. Weight loss ads use sex appeal to manipulate the audience through the usage of healthy food to appeal to the overweight audience, the display of model transformation pictures, and the way advertised models are clothed and expressed.…