Tide Flashcards
1
Q
Who handled P&G accounts?
A
- DMB & B advertising agency handled P&G accounts throughout the 1950s
- Uniquely, DMB&B used print and radio advertising campaigns concurrently in order to quickly build audience familiarity with the brand
2
Q
Historical context
A
- Post WW II consumer boom of the 1950s included the rapid development of new technologies for the home
- This included vacuum cleaners, microwaves etc
3
Q
Cultural context
A
- Print adverts from the 1950s conventionally used more copy than today
- Consumer culture was in its early stages of development
- With so many ‘new’ brands and products entering markets, potential customers typically needed more information about them
4
Q
How media language influences meaning: fonts
A
- Headings, subheadings and slogans are written in sans-serif font, connoting an informal mode of address
- More technical details written in serif font, connoting the more ‘serious’ or ‘factual’ information that the ‘1,2,3’ bullet point list includes
5
Q
How media language influences meaning
A
- Z line and a rough rule of thirds applied to its composition
- Bright, primary colours connote the positive associations
- Informal lexis (‘sudsing whizz’)
6
Q
Semiotics, Ronald Barthes
A
- Suspense is created through the enigma of ‘what women want’ (hermeneutic code) and emphasised by multiple exclamation marks (proairetic code)
- use of hearts and the woman’s gesture codes have connotations of love and relationships
- Hyperbole and superlatives, as well as tripling are used to oppose the connoted superior cleaning powder of Tide to its competitors
7
Q
Structuralism, Claude Levi-Strauss
A
- ‘Tide gets clothes cleaner than any other washday product you can buy!’ and ‘There’s nothing like Procter and Gamble’s Tide’ reinforces the conceptual binary opposition between Tide and its commercial rivals
- It’s also ‘unlike soap’ gets laundry ‘whiter than any soap or washing product known’ and is ‘truly safe’ all of which connotes that other inferior product don’t offer what Tide does
8
Q
Social and political contexts
A
- Women were the primary market for the technologies and products being developed for the home
- Stereotypical representations for domestic perfection, caring for the family and servitude to the ‘man of the family’
9
Q
How representations are constructed
A
- Dress code includes a stereotypical 1950s hairstyle incorporating waves, curls and rolls made fashionable by stars like Veronica Lake and Betty Grable
- Headband/Scarf worn by the woman links to practicalities of dress code for women developed during this time
- Having her hair held back connotes she’s focused on her work, though this maybe binary opposed to the full make-up she’s wearing
10
Q
Theory of representation, Stuart Hall
A
- Images of domesticity form part of the ‘shared conceptual road map’
- The scenario represented is familiar to the audience as representation of their own lives
11
Q
Theory of identity, David Gauntlett
A
- Women represented in the advert act is role models for domestic perfection that the audience may want to construct their own sense of identity against
12
Q
Feminist theory, Lisebet Van Zoonen
A
- The advert contradicts the theory as women’s role socially and politically had changed in the proceeding war years
13
Q
Feminist theory, bell hooks
A
- Lighter skinned women are considered more desirable and fit into the western ideology of beauty
- The advert only represents ‘modern’ white women
- Linked to Gilroy’s ethnicity and post-colonial theories that media texts reinforce colonial power
14
Q
Social contexts
A
- Despite women having seen their roles in society change during the war, domestic products of the 1950s were still aimed towards female audiences
- Supposed need for innovative domestic technologies and products
- Increasing popularity of 1950s supermarkets stocking wider ranges of products led to increased focus of unique selling points
15
Q
Industries targeting audiences
A
- Likely audience demographic is constructed through the advert’s use of women
- These young women are likely to married and with young families (clothing on washing line)
- Endorsement from ‘Good Housekeeping Magazine’ makes them an opinion leader for the audience