| Ad found in the October issue of Lucky Magazine |
When just flipping through the magazine, this ad pictured above is usually just scanned over and it is seen at face value. This is because it is very similar to many other advertisements seen
when looking through magazines, women selling clothing and
accessories by portraying their bodies in a sexual manner. This
technique of advertising has many underlying “deadly sins” used
to achieve the advertiseing goals. The sins can be seen when the
advertisement is analyzed through three view points: women, men, and the
creator. Lucky magazines audience is middle class citizens who can afford to splurge on clothing from a brand like Guess. The audience uses the cultural background of dressing to impress as their motivator to buy clothing similar to the ones depicted in the ad above.
Women, for this particular
magazine, are the target audience mainly because an overwhelming
majority of the people who read this magazine are women. To appeal
to the plethora of female viewers, the advertisement uses the deadly
sin of Envy (which is one of the worst sins). The advertisement uses
envy to make these viewers jealous of the beautiful women in the
advertisement. It persuades the audience into thinking that if they
buy what the advertisement is selling then they will certaintly look
like the models in the advertisement. This marketing strategy of
using jealousy as a persuasive form of selling a product
is very common.
Another view point to
analyze is the males perspective on these sexy advertisements.
Granted, they are not the common audience of the ads in magazines
like Lucky, but it is still important to look at what sins are used in the
advertisement. This advertisement shows lust and
pride, using them as a persuasive technique to sell their product.
First, the men obviously lust over the beautiful models presented in
little clothing. Then the sin pride comes into play, persuading the
men to buy the product for their significant other so they can demonstrate to the world they have a women like that and feel prideful.
The last sin the
advertisement utilized to furhter the sale of their product is greed.
The men and women audience want the best clothing that will make
them look and feel the amazing. This greed stems from the money-driven
society that is prevalent today. Also the creator of the
advertisement, in this case Guess, shows greed by using what some
consider unethical marketing stratagies (by creating unrealistic visions of women through photoshopping the images) to sell products. The use of this sin in advertising is so effective again because of our money-driven society.
To begin, I love your post. I think it was brilliant to pick from a magazine that is common among households and discuss that aspect of it. I also liked how you looked at the different perspectives of the audiences. I think understanding the audience is the most important thing to understand when discussing advertisements. I like how you took one deadly sin and gave it different impacts depending on the perspective you analyzed it from. This gave your blog post a lot of depth. Great Job!!!
ReplyDeleteI loved how you opened up the perspectives of how the view the situation. In describing the different lenses, I thought you did a really cool job and brought something new to the table that I hadn't even though about before. I think it is important to take a step back and comment on if these kinds of ads are actually getting people to buy their clothing. Do you think that this is really for women to feel and look great, or is it to make themselves more attractive to men? I think you did a great job, and I agree with Marisa's comment on how you provided a lot of depth. Well done!
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