Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Sexualized Images in Advertising


by Jane TallimMedia Awareness NetworkMay 2003


Over the past ten years, advertisements in mainstream magazines have increasingly relied on the explicit sexualization of both men and women to sell products. Over the same period, the models used have become younger and younger.
The images in these ads often contain or imply
violence
superiority and domination
dismemberment (fragmenting and sexualizing body parts)
playfulness and exaggeration
coy behaviour
approval seeking
emaciation
drug addiction
fetishism
It's not unusual in the fashion industry to see very young models setting standards of attractiveness for older women. What's new is the emergence over the past two decades of highly eroticized portrayals of these young women. The same trend applies to men: images of very young men commonly focus on the abdominal/genital area, with traces of pubic hair or genital “bulge” clearly visible.

For more: http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/articles/advertising_marketing/sex_images_in_ads.cfm

Thursday, February 12, 2009

We’re for the Under-Dogs too

A few days ago, it was announced that Pluto lost it’s status as a planet.TBWA\RAAD in Dubai decided to take this opportunity to create an advertisement for Pedigree dog food.The global tagline for Pedigree is “We’re for dogs”, so the agency added a ‘twist’ to it to suit the occasion.Also, note the dog’s shadow pictured in the ad …. it’s Walt Disney’s Pluto. Smart indeed!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

McCann India's Hanes ads run into global controversy




They were ads that McCann-Erickson India was hoping would win them some international awards. Instead, they have now snowballed into an international controversy.
The ads featured a man dragging offensive images and racist words associated with the gay (faggot), the African-American (nigger) and the South Asian (Paki) communities, which appeared once each on December 26, 27 and 28, 2007, in the Free Press Journal.



What noticeable is that these ads nowhere relate the brand.