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Subliminal Advertising is an important method of influencing consumers to buy
company's products. Subliminal advertising, which first came to the public
attention in 1957 is embedded, camouflaged, or hidden words and/or symbols in
advertisements. Although most of the subliminal advertising is done in the
media, subliminal messages are often played in department stores to discourage
shoplifters from stealing. Some of the different messages are "stealing is
dishonest", and "I am a dishonest person". Every 7.5 seconds
messages were played either under songs or really low so no one can consciously
hear it. Another form of advertising not in the media is by a group called
Interloc design who uses computers to do their subliminal advertising. They use
the newest way of subliminal advertising which is screen savers. Text or images
may be inserted in the screen saver and flash at 1/50 of a second. The only way
to detect it would be with either laser disc or four-head VCR's. There are many
different techniques and symbols that advertisers use. There are also many ways
of stopping advertisers from abusing your unconscious brain.
"They can manipulate anything from your
political views to your reproductive
behavior, all in the interest of making a buck" says expert Wilson Bryan
Key who
wrote the most popular subliminal advertising book ever, Subliminal Subduction.
There isn't just one technique that advertisers use to brainwash buyers.
A technique that can normally be viewed in movies or in television. What is
normally
done by advertisers is they flash images that are pleasing to the viewers eye
such as
a flashy color or a sexual innuendo. A technique that is very effective is
questioning
the buyer. When used, it makes the buyer ask themself the question "would
I be a bad
person if I did not buy this product?" The next technique used is another
way to catch
the buyers eye. "Buzz words" which are words that make us want to see
what all the fuss
is about, and to read the company's advertisement. The way it's used in
newspapers is
if your flipping through the pages, not really looking at what your reading.
What
advertisers will do is put in big, huge word in an ad to catch the reader such
as NEW!,
or IMPROVED!. The way it's used in magazines is advertisers would put the word
100% if they were trying to advertise for a product. The way it's used in
catalogues is they
put the word HURRY! in, or put something like $20 off!, and that's all they
have to do
and people see that and they automatically think of saving money. The way it's
used
in billboards is if the advertiser is trying to get a new sandwich a little
more hype,
they would put the word Homemade! The celebrity technique is seen more on
television,
billboards, and magazines. The reason celebrities endorse products is to give
the
product a trait that it doesn't really have such as wealth, fame, or even
success.
There are different celebrities that endorse for different products. Just to
name a
few: Michael Jordan always drinks Gatorade, Jerry Seinfeld never leaves home
without
his American Express card, and Paul Reiser never uses anything except AT&T.
What this technique does is make people think "well if the best basketball
player in the world drinks Gatorade, then maybe if I drink Gatorade, I could be
as great as Michael Jordan.
The "bandwagon technique" asks you the question "Everyone else
is doing it, so why aren't you?" What this technique implies is that it's
second nature to buy this product, and that it's so popular that you would have
to be insane not to have this product in your house. Some of the different
slogans are "Did somebody say McDonalds?", and "Thirsty? Drink
Coke." The last technique used is the fear technique. This technique lets
the buyer know that not buying this product could be disastrous on your own
self. The questions advertisers simply are "Do you want to be fat?",
"Are you trying to treat your hair badly?", "Would you like to
have zits?", "Do you want to have dandruff on prom night?". The
mechanism that supports this technique is the Before/After scene. This is the
scene where the advertiser has someone looking terrible in one picture, than in
the after picture, they look terrific.
There are many ways to manipulate consumers; one is symbolism. The first symbol
the unconscious sees is of death. Death is the most repressed fear of the
unconscious mind. It represents the feared and repressed of the reader. The
symbol most used when using the death technique is the skull-death symbol. Out
of all of the death symbols is the most obvious embed. An embed is a subliminal
mechanism which is a word, slogan, or symbol inserted faintly so it isn't
perceived. Another type of symbol used is a sexual symbol. According to expert
Wilson Bryan Key, "sex is the most frequently embedded word in the
American advertising industry". Fruit appears a lot in advertisements.
However, the orange is probably the most common fruit symbol. The orange
historically symbolizes women, and peeling the orange symbolizes undressing the
woman. If one imagines a woman in place of an orange in all of the
advertisements, the orange appears some rather interesting results may occur.
The playboy bunny is also a very common embed. The playboy bunny represents,
because of it's universal popularity, the finest international class. There are
many phallic symbols that are used in some advertisements which are neckties,
arrows, flagpoles, automobiles, rockets, pencils, cigars and cigarettes.
According to Wilson Bryan Key, there is, in a Hilton Hotel room service menu,
the word "Sex" embedded all throughout. Symbolism is also used in
getting people to watch TV shows. Some people believe that just because
"Chachi" means penis in Korean, that the first episode of Happy Days,
"Joanie loves Chachi" was the highest rated American TV program in
the history of Korean television. Coincidence? There were some other ways that
symbolism has been used in the past. Vance Packard, the author of the book
Hidden Persuaders saw something subliminal about the design of Cadillac’s. He
described the bumper lumps on Cadillac convertibles as subliminal marketing
tools appealing to sexual desires. Another way subliminal advertising was used
in the past was to sell syrup. Aunt Jemima of Aunt Jemima's maple syrup used to
have the appearance of a southern slave, which was done to attract African
Americans. Another way of using subliminal advertising is in ice cubes. In a
soda advertisement, the advertiser used an ice cube, which had a mountain
embedded in it, which represents a place of revelation.
There are many different ways of defending the effects of subliminal
advertising. First are the defense mechanisms. Repression is repressing, or
hold back, any memories or feelings that have high anxiety producing potential.
Repression is used more than any other in which to avoid reality. Isolation is
avoiding acknowledging relations between related phenomena when acknowledging
that relation is highly anxiety producing. One example of isolation is if
someone had a fourth accident and driving under the influence of alcohol court
conviction, they would be referred as an alcoholic. Sublimation is socially
accepting the rechanneling of basic drives and emotions. The two examples of
sublimation are sex and aggression. Denial is denying the existence of the
basic drives such as sex or aggression. Projection is transferring anxiety
through phenomena. The example of projection is the "scape goat".
Introjection is making you the scapegoat. The first step, however, against
subliminal advertising is believing that it exists. Until we accept the
possibility that our buying behavior is subliminally manipulated advertisers
and the corporations they represent will keep on bringing in profits through
subliminal messages. There are six questions that, as a buyer, you have to ask
yourself. In actuality, do you really need this product? This means is this
product a necessity, and do you really have to have it. The second is has the
advertiser showed more than just the basics of the product? For example, if a
buyer is watching a toothbrush commercial, and it tells you how it will help
you get more men or more women. The third question is: Do you catch yourself
reciting a slogan or humming a jingle? If you see someone walking down the
street whistling the Mentos commercial, you would know they have been affected
by subliminal advertising. The fourth question the buyer needs to ask is do you
ever find your presenter absolutely hilarious, enough to buy the product? For
example if Bugs Bunny was on a commercial for a shoe company, and you went out
and bought that shoe just because it was Bugs Bunny on the commercial and he
made you laugh. The fifth question would be: Have you ever purchased a product
just because the commercial says everyone has it? An example of that would be
if there was a basketball sneaker commercial and it stated that "Everyone
has that sneaker, and it is the best around. The last question you would ask
yourself would be: Do you believe that there is no such thing as subliminal advertising?
If the consumer knows it exists, there is no way to manipulate them. If yes was
the reply to any of these questions then that person was clear-cut victim of
subliminal advertising.
When we are aware of all of the embeds, they become ineffective. In the 1950's,
executive James Vicary flashed messages across movie screens. The messages
flashed were "drink Coca Cola" and "eat popcorn".
Coincidentally Vicary's research on the movie screen flashes reported increases
in the sales of Coke and popcorn. Surprisingly, moviegoers bought 60% more
popcorn than usual and almost 20% more Coke. According to expert Michael
Buchenroth, "Subliminal Advertising does not necessarily need to be highly
refined or sophisticated to sell products; it just needs to be subliminal."