Deadly Persuasion Why Women and Girls Must Fight the Addictive Power of Advertising.Breaking our deadly addiction to advertising. As an activist in the girls' movement and father of two girls, I've always known that far too many advertising images were bad for girls. In a brilliant and logical argument, author Jean Kilbourne Jean Kilbourne, Ed.D. (born January 4, 1943) is a social theorist known for her video documentaries on the subject of alcohol and tobacco advertising, and the representation of women in advertising. She is a graduate of Wellesley College. makes the connection between the premises of advertising and the scourge of addiction. Denial is the most intractable symptom of addiction, and Deadly Persuasion: Why Women and Girls Must Fight the Addictive Power of Advertising is among the most potent interventions available for our addiction to advertising, consumerism, and the immoral ways in which our commercial culture so often undermines our integrity. For years, Kilbourne has taken her powerful, funny, and life-changing presentations to college campuses, businesses, and the federal government. Now she has combined this huge mine of information, insight, and critique into one outstanding book. As Kilbourne shows, we are what's for sale. Media outlets aren't selling products to us so much as they are selling us to the products' manufacturers. It works--what industry would spend $200 billion annually on something that doesn't work? All we have to do is read the pages of advertising's trade journals, where we see media ads proclaiming "Buy this 24-year-old and get all his friends absolutely free," or "We deliver Gen-X," or "One magazine delivers an audience spending $38 billion annually on American Express American Express (NYSE: AXP), sometimes known as "AmEx" or "Amex", is a diversified global financial services company, headquartered in New York City. The company is best known for its credit card, charge card and traveler's cheque businesses. cards." It's easy to see the underlying attitude that suggests that we use people as products and objects. This is the same mindset mind·set or mind-set n. 1. A fixed mental attitude or disposition that predetermines a person's responses to and interpretations of situations. 2. An inclination or a habit. as pornography, and we are harmed in the same way by it. So is Deadly Persuasion a source of despair? Only if you stop reading before the last chapter, where Kilbourne proposes a number of attitudinal and behavioral steps we can take. For example, therapists can begin to consciously weave cultural context into their treatment and use cultural activism as a therapeutic tool. We can begin to understand--and get our officials to understand--the addictive power of advertising as a public health problem. We can remember that free commercial speech is often the enemy of free civic speech (Oprah Winfrey “Oprah” redirects here. For the show, see The Oprah Winfrey Show. Oprah Gail Winfrey (born January 29, 1954) is the American multiple-Emmy Award winning host of The Oprah Winfrey Show, the highest-rated talk show in television history. was sued for millions by Texas cattlemen). We can get out there and raise some hell ourselves! BELIEVE IT OR not, raising hell works. For example, my organization, Dads and Daughters, organized a letter and e-mail campaign against a Jewelry jewelry, personal adornments worn for ornament or utility, to show rank or wealth, or to follow superstitious custom or fashion. The most universal forms of jewelry are the necklace, bracelet, ring, pin, and earring. .com magazine ad showing a shirtless man and a nearly naked woman (with jewelry), apparently engaged in a sexual act. The ad's slogan read: "Trust us, a food processor won't get you there." We told the company how we objected to the message that women's bodies were for sale (and that men ought to buy them), but only if the price is right. After one day of our protest, the company's CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. e-mailed us to say they were dropping the ad. In a similar vein, a coalition of women's groups convinced Maiden-form to drop its outrageous bra ad that read "Inner beauty only goes so far." If we want our culture to value our children's souls more than their breast size, we have got to act up. There are dozens of resources available to help in this fight. The Web site About Face (www.about-face.org) and organizations like the Center for Media Education (www.cme.org) have hundreds of ideas and resources. A new book by Margo Maine, Body Wars: Making Peace with Women's Bodies, contains a long list of activist steps we can take to reclaim our personal integrity. We need those tools because, as Maine says, "Loving our bodies is a revolutionary act!" A revolution is required. The remedy for addiction is freedom from the addiction. In the newspeak newspeak official speech of Oceania; language of contradictions. [Br. Lit.: 1984] See : Hypocrisy Newspeak - A language inspired by Scratchpad. [J.K. Foderaro. "The Design of a Language for Algebraic Computation", Ph.D. Thesis, UC Berkeley, 1983]. of advertising, words like freedom permeate permeate /per·me·ate/ (-at?) 1. to penetrate or pass through, as through a filter. 2. the constituents of a solution or suspension that pass through a filter. per·me·ate v. ads for cigarettes and alcohol--our society's most addictive drugs. Kilbourne names this big lie for what it is and challenges us to "redefine freedom, liberation, and rebellion in our own terms Our Own Terms was the first full-length by Subterfuge and it was released on Pride Recordz. After its release on January 28, 2001, this CD helped propel Subterfuge to the top of the LIHC scene. Tracks 1. Intro 2. The Way It's Always Been 3. Til The End 4. . We can turn these advertising messages inside out. We are free when we are not addicted, when we can be our real selves, when we are as healthy as possible in body and soul, when we are authentically sexual (which means loving and treasuring our imperfect bodies, as well as each other). We can and must unhook ourselves from the lure, the bait of advertising." My only quibble QUIBBLE. A slight difficulty raised without necessity or propriety; a cavil. 2. No justly eminent member of the bar will resort to a quibble in his argument. with Kilbourne's book is its subtitle sub·ti·tle n. 1. A secondary, usually explanatory title, as of a literary work. 2. A printed translation of the dialogue of a foreign-language film shown at the bottom of the screen. tr.v. . As a man, I came away from Deadly Persuasion with my eyes opened to the incredible price all of us pay for today's advertising. The book is a call to arms ! a summons to war or battle. See also: Arms for anyone who values the survival of anything from our planet to our individual souls. Media permeates every aspect of social action, and media exists to serve advertising. We cannot adequately seek justice without understanding this. Deadly Persuasion shows how. Deadly Persuasion: Why Women and Girls Must Fight the Addictive Power of Advertising, by Jean Kilbourne. Free Press, 1999. JOE KELLY Joe Kelly is a common name that can refer to different people:
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