Thursday, December 8, 2011

Children and Advertising

I chose to talk about Ali's blog because it was very interesting and really got me thinking. She mentioned children are our future, it's true they will be the one's running our governments and becoming the inventors of our world. And with the ways advertising affects them it is harming their health and their minds. One major thing that is worrisome is children and obesity is directly linked to advertising. I believe that the government needs to take further precautions and stricter laws about commercials on tv during children t.v. shows or eliminate them altogether. If something doesn't change about advertising and how it is presented to our children its evil affects will be irreversible.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Celebration, Condemnation, and Critical Use


 According to David Trend, author of “Consumption Ideology,” there are three
viewpoints regarding the relationship between mass media and consumer culture: celebration, condemnation, and critical use. Dittmar, author of “To have is to be,” would endorse both the condemnation and critical use approaches because consumers make "poor decisions from a system of marketing and advertising that promotes false consciousness by distorting needs and instilling irrational  desires" (46). And "the critical use model confronts discrimination by recognizing that some goods are not available to all people and that certain consuming practices are destructive both to people and to the environment" (47). Both Trend and Dittmar contribute to the understanding of the way in which identity is formed in postmodern culture is all about outward image and materialistic possessions. Trend explains that modern capitalism has gotten people to believe the road to happiness lies in material possessions and superficial signs of success (43). And Dittmar affirms, material possessions systematically influence how we perceive the identity of other people; not only that but people use them to express who they are and to construct a sense of who they would like to be. Which give people control, independence, enjoyment, or emotional comfort (43). Ultimately they both assert that postmodern culture is all about image, material possessions, and being a good consumer.