Persuaders Frontline PBS Movie Review

PAGES
3
WORDS
904
Cite

Persuaders (PBS) Douglas Rushkoff's Frontline / PBS documentary "The Persuaders" offers a history of advertising and a critical exploration of the evolution of advertising in the twentieth century, along with techniques used in corporate marketing, concepts such as "brand loyalty," and the effects that advertising has on the public. The first portion of "The Persuaders" concentrates on the "clutter" that is caused by advertising, asking us to consider the way in which products are now no longer advertised by a description of their function or merits, but on the basis of image. This concludes with a long examination of the launch of a new "brand," a low-cost air carrier called "Song" which is a subsidiary of Delta Airlines. We watch as Delta identifies the female consumer as their target audience, and then attempts to construct an "identity" for Song which will invite women to purchase tickets to be part of that identity. The second portion goes on to explore political advertisement more closely, and to ask how the techniques of the first part are now being applied in politics. Overall the documentary makes a persuasive case that the ethical standards in advertising in America are in need of greater enforcement.

"The Persuaders" makes such disquieting viewing because the ordinary person is not likely to have considered themselves as illustrative simply of a demographic profile. Not only are we invited to see...

...

Kevin Roberts, the marketing expert interviewed in the film, has a long description of what he calls "lovemarks" -- these are corporate brands that inspire passionate devotion in consumers even when this devotion is not logically warranted. In other words, advertising seeks to create through imagery the same factor that (say) nicotine creates in tobacco: the impetus whereby a sense of dependent need is created between consumer and corporate product. In other words, we are being appealed to on an emotional level, even when economics presupposes that the consumer is making rational choices.
On the political level this becomes even more disquieting, as the American political system dates from the Enlightenment and presupposes the rationality of the electorate. In the second portion of the documentary, the corpulent Republican pollster Frank Luntz claims that "I am more interested in how you feel than how you think," claiming that "only 20%" of human motivation is rational and "80% is emotion." One of the sharpest points of critique of the contemporary culture of political advertising comes, though, with the documentary's revelation of imposed "truth in advertising" standards that apply to products and corporations, but not to political ads. As the film puts it: "politicans can legally say whatever they want." This…

Cite this Document:

"Persuaders Frontline PBS" (2011, May 10) Retrieved April 25, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/persuaders-frontline-pbs-119062

"Persuaders Frontline PBS" 10 May 2011. Web.25 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/persuaders-frontline-pbs-119062>

"Persuaders Frontline PBS", 10 May 2011, Accessed.25 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/persuaders-frontline-pbs-119062

Related Documents

When people watch such documentaries that expose the intense persuasion campaigns and connect them to the entertainment industry, they feel used, they feel like they cannot even trust the shows that they like. Probably each time they turn on the TV they wonder if the program they are watching is based on solid facts or it is just a manipulation technique. In my opinion, marketers abuse of the media environment by

The Hidden Persuaders ends on a very negative note, stressing how the commercial media has even co-opted teenage rebellion. However, new uses social media do not have to be negative -- anti-smoking and AIDS awareness are examples of campaigns that have been conducted through Twitter, Facebook, and other online venues (Evans 2006). But the problem with social media and marketing remains that it is often hard to see who the