Super.Humans Flashcards

Super.Humans

1
Q

PRODUCT CONTEXT

A
  • The advertisement Super. Human. was created
    to promote the 2020 Paralympic Games
    by Bradford Young, the Oscar nominated
    cinematographer and the first African American
    cinematographer to be nominated for an award
    in 2017 for his work on the film Arrival.
  • It was devised and created by Channel 4’s inhouse creative agency 4Creative and produced
    by Serial Pictures and Somesuch, a global
    production company. The trailer is the third
    campaign for the Paralympics undertaken by
    Channel 4, who were broadcasting the event,
    and was part of a bigger campaign including
    posters and social media.
  • The advertisement explores the sacrifices made
    and the trials endured by Paralympic athletes
    in preparation for the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic
    Games.
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2
Q

audio codes

A
  • The producers of this sub-genre of
    advertisements are very aware of compassion
    fatigue and so will often aim to make
    advertisements that offer a different perspective
    on the issue or event, usually one that is more
    positive and upbeat. This approach is evident
    in Super. Human. with the use of audio codes.
    The choice of the soundtrack of So You Want
    to be a Boxer from Bugsy Malone effectively
    communicates the struggles of the disabled
    athletes whilst giving the advertisement a
    positive feel. The more typical conventions,
    for example a voice-over and dramatic music,
    appear at the start of the advertisement, but
    rapidly change to the alarm and the realities of
    daily life. Sound effects underscore the music,
    emphasising the battle of training including
    grunts, groans and tape being applied.
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3
Q

technical
codes

A
  • Advertisements have a limited amount of time to
    convey their message and so rely on technical
    codes and editing to do this rapidly. This
    advertisement uses close-up shots of expressions
    to engage the audience and to portray aspects of
    disability in a non-victim way, emphasising that
    this is part of their lives. For example, a range
    of shots are used to convey the strength and
    determination of the swimmer Ellie Simmonds,
    cutting between an establishing shot showing her
    alone in the pool, a close-up of her putting on
    her swimming goggles, a
    low angle shot creating
    power and an extreme close-up of her eyes
    connoting concentration. Slow motion is also
    used to show the cycling track crash combined
    with muting the sound for a more dramatic
    effect
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4
Q

Visual codes

A

also communicate meanings.
The iconography and settings are related to
the athlete and the sport, for example Ellie
Simmonds putting on her goggles in the pool,
or training in the gym, but these settings are
juxtaposed with domestic scenes of everyday life
as a disabled person, suggesting the normality
of their situation. Gestures communicate
frustration, competition and celebration, visually highlighting the result of the hard work.

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5
Q

narrative

A

The narrative follows the lives of the
Paralympians and their battles through training.
The sequence where the athlete is trying to sing
‘Happy Birthday’ to his daughter on a mobile
phone whilst training on a bike reinforces the
clash between the sport and the family and
further establishes the athletes as real people.

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6
Q

humour

A

The advert also uses humour to convey
information, for example, the image of the
hamster on the wheel and the ‘puke bucket’ are
recognisable visual signifiers of struggle. The
animated sequences also insert aspects of the
comic into what is a gruelling regime.

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7
Q

Semiotics
– Roland Barthes

A
  • As advertisements have to communicate
    meaning rapidly, they use recognisable codes
    and conventions that signify messages for
    audiences to decode. In this advertisement,
    consider the connotations of the signs used.
    Clothing is used to rapidly place the athletes
    within their sport, for example, the track cyclist’s
    clothing or the swimming costumes contrast
    with the athletes in their everyday life, such as
    the hospital clothing when the woman is giving
    birth or casual clothing when the wheelchair
    user tries to access the café. These signs serve to
    illustrate aspects of the lives of the people and
    creates realism.
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8
Q

Structuralism – Claude Lévi-Strauss

A

The images of gruelling training
regimes are contrasted with the celebratory
images at the end of the advertisement when
success is achieved.

  • A further visual binary opposition is created
    between the dreamlike sequences with dramatic
    images, music and the rich colour palette, and
    the reality conveyed though ambient lighting and
    the strident sound of the alarm clock.
  • Animated and archive footage are included
    in opposition to real-life actions to introduce
    humour and reinforce the narrative.
  • The on-screen graphic ‘To be a Paralympian
    there’s got to be something wrong with you’
    creates a conceptual binary opposition
    between audience perception of Paralympic
    athletes and the reality. It challenges how
    language is used set against the reality of the
    positive images in the advertisement. It is this
    opposition that the audience is encouraged to
    reflect upon. ‘The juxtaposition between being
    a Paralympic athlete at the peak of your powers
    and being unable to get in a cafe for a drink is
    pretty shocking. And tells the story in a very
    simple way.’
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9
Q

Product context:

A

Super. Human. is the third of Channel 4’s advertising
campaigns for the Paralympic Games. It will be
useful to look at the other two campaigns and
consider the different approaches that have been
taken by the channel in their representation of
disability.
Launching the campaign, Lynsey Atkin, 4Creative’s
Executive Creative Director, said: ‘Following the
last two Paralympics adverts was no small task –
they exploded attitudes around disability …..Yet we
spotted an opportunity to present Paralympians in a
way they hadn’t been shown before – by pointing a
camera at the realities of their lives, and, as with any
elite athlete, the sacrifices they make in pursuit of
greatness….. collectively these choices paint a story
of mental determination, not of disability.’

The decision was therefore made to change the focus
of a previous campaign ‘Meet the Superhumans’
and instead in the 2020 campaign to emphasise the
‘Human’ rather than the ‘Super’ and to juxtapose
the images of the training regime with those of the
everyday lives of the athletes, with the intention of
making them relatable to audiences.

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10
Q

social
groups may be under-represented or
misrepresented.

A
  • Dominant groups in society largely control what
    is produced and as a result, minority groups tend
    to be marginalised, creating an unrealistic view
    of the contemporary world. This advertisement
    attempts to address the marginalisation of
    certain social groups, in this case, those with
    disabilities. Its aim, reflecting the ideology and
    ethos of Channel 4, is to give a voice to those
    who are not usually represented positively in
    other areas of the media.
  • The positive representation of disability in the
    advertisement and the coverage of the games
    changed attitudes. According to YouGov
    research, 65% of viewers felt that the coverage
    of the Paralympics had a positive impact on their
    perceptions of disabled people. 82% of viewers
    agreed disabled athletes were as talented as
    able-bodied athletes
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11
Q

processes of selection
and combination:

A
  • Choices have been made by the producers of
    the advertisement to create representations that
    challenge accepted ideas regarding disability and
    disabled athletes in particular.
  • The advertisement actively avoids negative
    stereotypical representations of Paralympians as
    victims to be pitied, or heroes, ‘superhumans’,
    to be viewed in awe. Instead, the representations
    create a realistic, ‘blood and guts’ feel to the
    advertisement. The representations cover both
    genders and give a different view of the world
    of disability to that of ‘having something wrong
    with you’.
  • The narratives are centred around real people,
    but through re-presentation, a representation of
    reality is constructed focusing specifically on
    the challenges that the athletes face. The filming,
    editing and audio codes combine to construct
    a representation of this social group, raising
    awareness and creating positive representations
    of the Paralympians as athletes first, rather than
    disabled people ‘doing their best’.
  • In constructing the representations as they have
    in Super. Human., the producers have aimed
    to avoid the stereotypes of disabled athletes as
    having to ‘overcome’ their disability in order
    to achieve success, instead celebrating them as
    high-performance athletes in their own right.
  • Consider how the representations are constructed
    through media language. Close-up shots of the
    athletes and their challenges during training and
    their home lives create positive representations
    of ordinary people who eat their breakfast,
    give birth, and play the drums, with whom the
    audience can positively associate. The fastpaced editing enables the advertisement to
    highlight a range of narratives and athletes with
    different disabilities, disciplines, and challenges.
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12
Q

Hall’s theory of representation

A

According to Hall, meanings are communicated
through signs. This is very true of the advertising
form where easily recognisable signs rapidly
communicate meaning to an audience in a short
space of time. For example, expressions of endurance
and struggle are easily recognisable and understood.
This advertisement goes some way to address Hall’s
assertions that stereotyping occurs when there are
inequalities of power, and that excluded groups,
such as the disabled, are constructed as different.
In the advertisement, the focus is on the athletes as
ordinary sports men and women striving to achieve a
goal. The athletes are three dimensional and distinct
from each other; therefore, the advertisement avoids
simplifying their representations.

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13
Q

David Gauntlett’s theory of identity

A

In addressing an under-represented social group,
the advertisement gives visible recognition to those
with disabilities and allows disabled people to see
themselves represented positively in the media.
Super. Human. offers audiences a more diverse and
inclusive range of identities and broadens general
understanding of what it means to be disabled as an
athlete and in everyday life.
However, many would argue that the Paralympics in
itself is not enough to redress the balance and indeed,
many disabilities are not featured in the games.

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14
Q

Audiences

A

The target audience for this advertisement is a
relatively broad demographic, including Channel 4
viewers who largely fall into the 16–34 age bracket;
fans of sport; and those who desire to see more
inclusive representations of social groups, of which
they may be a member, from a channel whose remit
states that it ‘appeals to the tastes and interests of a
culturally diverse society’

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15
Q

Consider how the advertisement targets,
reaches and addresses its audience.

A
  • The use of personalisation will reach the
    audience. Super.Human. deals with real, human
    stories focusing on the day-to-day struggles
    of being an athlete in training and disabled.
    The individual narratives are constructed to
    encourage the audience to identify with the
    athletes and their lives.
  • The technical codes include a lot of closeup shots, some of which are uncomfortable,
    for example, the popping of the blister. It also
    gives the audience access to views with which
    they may be unfamiliar, such as the attaching
    of a prosthetic blade, all of which hold their
    attention. The editing cuts between the athletes’
    gruelling routines and clips of cartoon moments,
    lightening the mood and engaging the audience
    through humour.
  • The audio codes address the audience. The
    soundtrack is a recognisable song from the
    musical Bugsy Malone, So You Want To Be
    a Boxer. The choice of this upbeat, stirring
    tune grabs the audience’s attention with its
    connotations of struggle and hard work paying
    off. Older audiences will be familiar with the
    film from which it is taken. Other audio codes
    suggest struggle, heavy breathing and grunting
    and these are juxtaposed with sounds from everyday life, such as a woman in childbirth and
    a baby crying.
  • The unique selling point is the ‘showing’ of
    the athletes’ stories. There is no voice-over
    and no graphics moralising on the plight of the
    disabled. Instead, there is an attempt to give
    a realistic portrayal of the lives of disabled
    athletes. The audience are left towards the end
    of the advertisement with the words ‘To be a
    Paralympian there’s got to be something wrong
    with you’, encouraging them to examine their
    own misconceptions of disability in the light of
    what they have just viewed.
  • The advertisement was successful in reaching
    its audience. Channel 4’s Paralympic coverage
    was viewed by 20 million people, a third of the
    UK population, 22% of whom were 16-34 years
    of age. The marketing campaign reached 81%
    of the UK population. The Paralympic Games
    attracted 2.6 million viewers accounting for the
    biggest Channel 4 weekly share of TV viewing
    since 2016 and the largest daytime share since
    2012
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16
Q

Consider how audiences may interpret this
advertisement in different ways.

A
  • The Super. Human. advertisement sets out to
    challenge audiences’ perceptions of disability.
  • Regular audiences of Channel 4 may be familiar
    with the approach taken by the broadcaster when
    promoting the Paralympics as the other two
    campaigns were successes in their own right.
    Alex Brooker, co-presenter of The Last Leg, who
    has disabilities himself, said: “For me, waiting
    for the Channel 4 Paralympics advert every
    four years is like waiting for the John Lewis
    Christmas advert.”
  • Audiences would expect the advertisement to
    raise the profile of the event. Zaid Al-Qassab,
    chief marketing officer of Channel 4, said of the
    thinking behind the campaign, ‘The Paralympics
    has always been an afterthought of the Olympics.
    It was the first time that any broadcaster was
    making a meaningful attempt to elevate the Paralympics on an equal footing. And the
    only way of doing that was to land it in public
    consciousness through something that would
    make you sit up and think totally differently.’
  • The advertisement may make some audiences
    feel uncomfortable as it uses shock tactics to
    make audiences aware of the issues facing
    disabled people in their sport as well as in
    their everyday lives. For example, time lapse
    photography is used to show a bruise developing
    and there is a close-up shot of a blister being
    popped. Audiences may also be affected by
    seeing disabled rugby player Kylie Grimes
    unable to enter a café as her wheelchair cannot
    get over the step.
  • The advertisement also challenged audiences to
    examine how they may use outdated language
    to categorise disabled people by the on-screen
    slogan at the end of the advertisement ‘To be a
    Paralympian there’s got to be something wrong
    with you’. The aim of this is to encourage
    audiences to see this as something positive and
    that being a Paralympian is something of which
    to be proud.
17
Q

Social and Cultural

A
  • Advertising campaigns, whether for consumable
    products, events or charities, reflect the concerns
    and issues of the society that produces them.
    In promoting the Paralympics and creating
    the trailer, Channel 4 is seeking to address the
    under-representation or misrepresentation of a
    particular social group.
  • The advertisement seeks to focus on the fact
    that these are real people – ‘Human’ rather than
    ‘Super’ – which makes them more accessible to
    the audience.
  • The representation of disability in this
    advertisement is affected by social and cultural
    circumstances. Channel 4 has taken the active
    decision to present the athletes neither as victims
    or as heroes, but just ordinary sports men and women facing extraordinary challenges. This
    constructs a more compelling social narrative
    reflecting the appetite of the time for success
    stories that are accessible. This is evident at
    the beginning of the advert when the dream
    sequence is shattered, and real life begins.
18
Q

Consider theoretical perspectives: Reception
theory – Stuart Hall

A
  • The upbeat soundtrack, use of personalisation
    and positive representations of the event and
    the athletes as both ‘Super’ and ‘Human’,
    encourages an audience to accept the ideologies
    and intended meaning of Channel 4, the
    encoder, in creating the advertisement. The use
    of real people creates a preferred reading that
    the audience should invest in their narratives and
    subsequently watch the Paralympic Games.
  • Some audiences may adopt a negotiated
    position, acknowledging the legitimacy of the
    encoder’s position, but may feel more distanced
    from the sporting theme of the event. However,
    this audience may be more open to the positive
    approach of the advertisement and examine their
    misconceptions about disabled people and their
    lives more generally.
  • Oppositional responses may come from those
    who are not supporters of Channel 4 and its
    ethos of giving voice to those who are underrepresented. They may be older, not regular
    viewers of Channel 4 or not interested in sport of
    any kind.
19
Q

Cultivation theory – George Gerbner

A
  • This theory suggests that audiences may have
    become used to the conventions of this subgenre of advertising which raises awareness of a
    particular social group. Due to the repetition of
    certain codes and conventions, for example, the
    focus on the specific disability accompanied by
    a voice-over with serious mode of address, they
    may accept this view of the world and perhaps be
    somewhat ‘immune’ to their purpose.
  • Alternatively, this advertisement can also be
    said to challenge Gerbner’s assertions. As a
    result of viewing advertisements whose aim is to
    raise awareness and give a voice to previously
    under-represented groups, audiences may question their assumptions and be more open
    to the representations in advertisements like
    Super. Human., which offers a refreshing and
    more realistic perception of what it means to
    be disabled and one that challenges common
    preconceptions and mainstream values