"Advertising is the art of convincing people to spend money they don't have for something they don't need." – Will Rogers

Poking Fun at Objectification

Posted: February 9th, 2010 | Author: elena | Filed under: advertising, billboards, body, exploitation, inspiring women, objectification, self-image | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments »

© Cathy Thorne – everydaypeoplecartoons.com

For other inspiring, thought provoking cartoons by Cathy Thorne, check out her website: everydaypeoplecartoons.com


Dept. of Sexist TV Commercials: Copy Machine & Bubblegum

Posted: June 4th, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: TV commercials, advertising, discrimination, exploitation, objectification, sexism | Tags: , , | No Comments »

Could ad men come up with the reverse scenarios (meaning, a 20-something male in both ads)?

(insert no brainer answer here)


The Hall of Fame of Misogynist Adverts – Car Edition

Posted: April 2nd, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: TV commercials, advertising, corporate hypocrisy, discrimination, exploitation, hidden propaganda, media, objectification, print, sexism, television | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Before you go any further, please just stop for a second and contemplate the fact that these ads, like any ads, were produced after a series of meetings in between the ad agency and the client. These ads passed the normal stages of strategic planning (what to do), creative development (how to do it), production (casting call, photo/film shoot, editing), media planning (where to show the ads: street billboards, TV shows, magazines, newspapers, online), media buying (purchasing billboard space / TV commercial slots / pages in magazines). These ads didn’t simply come out of the blue. Everything was deliberate and at no stage did anyone raise an objection strong enough to stop the ads. Because sexism and objectification are fun, right? Had the ads discriminated against a racial minority, with racist stereotypes, the people at the ad agency would have likely been crucified. But women are a whole other target. Misogyny is so deeply ingrained in our culture that some of the most prestigious car manufacturers can get away with this:

Mercedes Benz… and you thought it was a classy brand. Think again.

And another class act by BMW – an underage girl in an overtly sexual pose, mouth open, sultry look, and the ad copy: “You know you’re not the first.” Bravo BMW!

bmwnotthefirst

BMW – “The Ultimate Attraction”:

bmw_ultimate_attraction

Nissan:

(hilarious, right?)

WARNING: EXPLICIT AD ahead (sort of)

N.B. This ad is actually for an optometrist (it asks, “Do you need glasses”). But it still belongs to the Hall of Fame of offensive ads for so many reasons…

As for advertisements that portray men as bumbling idiots AND sexual objects? They simply do not exist. I dare you find an example…


Italian TV = PUTRID

Posted: March 11th, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: discrimination, exploitation, media, objectification, sexism, television | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

No need to speak Italian to understand the I.Q. lowering, rotten quality of Italian TV. Here is a clip from Big Brother 9… A textbook case of Madonna-Whore complex. Italy’s prime minister – the disgraceful Mr. Berlusconi – owns this TV channel (and many more) and was a pioneer in the 1980s of this kind of trash TV.

Fast-forward to 5:30 for the crème de la crème:

[EDIT] I somehow forgot to mention that this is the “American Idol” of Italy – the TV show that draws the biggest audience. It is dissected by mainstream media – all major newspaper cover it on a daily basis. But there have been no feminist critiques of it. None at all. It is seen as normal and matter of fact. This is what Italy has become. So, so sad.


Princeton Study: “Men view half-naked women as objects”

Posted: February 18th, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: discrimination, exploitation, men, objectification, sexism | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

From the Daily Princetonian.

davidlachapelle2

Doug Eshleman writes:

Some men may view scantily clad women as objects rather than as people, a recent study found. The research, conducted by Princeton psychology professor Susan Fiske, Mina Cikara GS and Stanford psychology professor Jennifer Eberhardt, was performed on 21 undergraduate male students at the University who identified themselves as heterosexual. Fiske’s team used an MRI machine to scan the brains of the students while they viewed a series of photographs of men and women, some of whom were fully clothed and others of whom wore only swimsuits.

The pictures of bikini-clad women activated brain regions associated with objects or “things you manipulate with your hands,” Fiske said. The students also remembered the photos of the half-naked women better than they did any of the others, she added, noting that the subjects remembered the bodies, not the faces, most clearly. Fiske said the results indicated that some men may objectify or dehumanize partially clothed women, though further research is needed to confirm these findings.

[...]

“I think [the study] does relate to the effects of having pornography and sexualized images of women around and in the media because they spill over into how people treat women in general,” Fiske said, adding that these images may dehumanize women and encourage men to see them as objects. “You have to be aware of the effect of these images on people,” Fiske explained. “They’re not neutral. They do have an effect on how people think about other women.” 

 

Full article here.


Annals of Obscenely Offensive Advertising : Fleggaard

Posted: February 3rd, 2009 | Author: elena | Filed under: TV commercials, advertising, body, breast surgery, exploitation, internet, media, self-image, sexism, subliminal advertising | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

From Denmark, here is an ad/featurette promoting a web site selling discounted surplus merchandise (in short: a Danish overstock.com)

It has to be one of the most degrading, objectifying ads I’ve ever seen in my entire life.

Oh and it is MOST DEFINITELY NSFW (lots of silicone-enhanced breasts on display).

via PlanetWaves.