Friday, November 28, 2014

Gendered Marketing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JDmb_f3E2c

     This Youtube video from channel, The Checkout, is titled Gendered Marketing. The two women in the video, one dressed in blue, and one decked in pink, set out to explain how advertisers use gender to their advantage.
     The two start by explaining children's toys. An accurate example provided is legos, which used to be advertised to all demographics. Although recently, lego released a product called lego friends, which consists of stylized lego dolls, complete with constructible teashops and dollhouses. This is an example of what is known as market segmentation. Advertisers appeal to specific groups in order to increase sales, where the only thing changing about the product between genders is the label. Products advertised to women include light colors, soft edges, and pretty flowers, while male packaging consists of dark colors hard, angular edges, and smart looking diagrams.The strange part is, often times one is more expensive than the other. For example, gillette shaving creme is 7% more expensive for women than men.

     This strategy seems to be working. The popular soap brand Dove, took to this plan by creating Dove men+care, which racked up $150 million in sales. the ad campaign did a good job at reminding the potential customer how much of a man he is, and this isn't the first product to do this.
      This kind of marketing is depressing to me, I hate seeing TV ads that reduce, at such a young age, the ambitions of a girl to just things that fit her gender. And for boys too! This advertising is not only enforcing gender roles, but creating them.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

The Problem With Time Magazine's Worst Words of 2014 Poll

Article Here


     Just last week, Time Magazine put up a poll for which popular word from 2014 should be banned in 2015. The words included on the list were words such as yaaaaaaass, bae, turnt, and one of the most controversial, feminist. 

     The description of the word feminist by Time was that it was a useless label used by celebrities like, "ticker tape at a Susan B. Anthony parade," whatever that means. 


     When i first heard about this, i have to say I was pretty upset. I started to have one of those "lost all faith in humanity" moments. I was shocked and angry, and i wasn't the only one. Time Magazine recently pasted an apology on the top of the article that reads:


Editor’s Note:
TIME apologizes for the execution of this poll; the word ‘feminist’ should not have been included in a list of words to ban. While we meant to invite debate about some ways the word was used this year, that nuance was lost, and we regret that its inclusion has become a distraction from the important debate over equality and justice.
–Nancy Gibbs
     The real issue here is not the word feminist itself, but how the word is used, and what different people associate with the word. So how is the word feminist used? the dictionary definition of feminist, or denotation is, "a person who supports feminism," which doesn't really get us anywhere. We then have to take a look at the denotative definition of feminism, which is "the advocacy of women's rights on the grounds of political, social, and economic equality to men."

    There are many connotations, or associations we apply to words, that people have with feminism. Many believe that women are already equal to men, and that feminists are complaining for no reason, or trying to be above men in society. (the correct term for that definition is not feminist, but misandrist). This idea was popularized by the popular term created by Rush Limbaugh, 'feminazi'. (Its easy to be against feminists when we compare them to nazi's, right?) In this Time article feminism is portrayed as a label that takes away from the issues, implying that people who call themselves a feminist "like some politician declaring a party," do not plan to take action.


 The whole poll seemed pretty stupid to me, so what if people literally cant even! Thats not what is wrong with society. As George Orwell would say, what is wrong is that people don't care enough to see how connotation can drastically change our view on things.