Super Bowl Ads and sinners

by Dogpatch 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    Why does the advertising industry spend millions to make a 30-second ad to remind us we are animals?

    http://www.fannation.com/si_blogs/super_bowl_blog

    How would it be different if Al Gore talked about the global warming instead? What would it do to feed the "animal nature" in us?
    The following Super Bowl ads are a must watch, especially #3 and note the appeal to the inner animal and contempt for lame "societal control mechanisms."

    Why will this always remain in top seller category?

    Because most of us get the point, even the alpha male jerks. Few, relatively speaking, like to be abused/controlled by other animals.

    If they dress up in cloth outfits and sound intelligent or powerful, we listen. Yet in the end, we may realize that, in spite of how others appear, no matter how noble, they are animals like us. That is pretty scary. What it often means is, "I don't trust myself to make those super-decisions about government, law, and social behavior, but I've found some other dog I can trust who can. " We routinely allow others to make all kinds of important life decisions, and we allow them to USE CARNAL FORCE on our behalf, if necessary, to "make it so." WAR.

    We know we have to rise above the fur and the sweat. Most of our cultural societal control mechanisms teach that man is a sinner, or he is imperfect, flawed, like Klingons, etc. It is the "beast within us," and whether it is condemned as beastly, inhuman, selfish, egocentric, or evil, it is universally recognized as a struggle between the higher mind and the beast within us. A failure to seriously take this into account will smack us down in the end, since others will take advantage of our naivete' . Is religion that stupid, after all? Does eliminating religious thought solve the problem? Well, we have several regimes that have tried and failed, the Communists being an interesting example. Atheistic societies are more keen than others that they are really animals, once the thin veneer of humanity collapses. Humanism, in contrast, is merely another religion where "man" has replaced "god," with the result that they have a flawed view of man in the universe. Other animals, as well as the rest of life on this planet, are not fond of humanism. :-)

    These Super Bowl ads WORK because...

    1. everyone knows what it is like to "let your hair down" and chill, versus the tendency to FIGHT.
    2. "putting on airs" is ATTACKABLE as artificial elitism
    3. Humor is the BEST teacher nowadays
    4. They establish a common ground, then motivate us to action, namely purchasing something that is useless but memetically significant (sugar water vs. a power attitude)

    Three main classic character-types are seen in the classic Star Wars universe: Klingons, Vulcans, and humans (Romulans are a kind of hybrid meme).They simplistically represent the struggle in the human sphere between forces seen as animal (Klingon), versus intellectual (Vulcans), and the mess (humans) that occur when they combine genetically. The dissonance between the animal and the intellectual is always a paramount theme in Sci-Fi, religion, advertising, work, politics, and everything else touching our lives. It can't be eliminated by education or intelligence, and has to be heavily taken into account by any efforts of ours to get along with others.

    Any thoughts on how media reveals the animal within?

    Randy

    re: Klingons: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klingon

    . In the original television series Star Trek, Klingons were typically portrayed with bronze skin and facial hair suggestive of Asian peoples, and possessed physical abilities similar to humans (in fact, Coon's only physical description of them in his "Errand of Mercy" script is "oriental" and "hard-faced".) The swarthy look of Klingon males was created with the application of shoe polish and long, thin moustaches; budget constraints would not allow any further creativity.[3] The overall look of the aliens, played by white actors, suggested orientalism, at a time when memories of Japanese actions during World War II were still fresh.[4] The production crew never came to an agreement on the name "Klingon"; Coon was adamant about keeping the name, and it persisted because no one else offered up a better name.[5]
    The Klingons took on the role of the Soviet Union in opposition to the United States' future counterpart, the United Federation of Planets.[6] As such, they were generally portrayed as inferior to the crew of the Enterprise.[7] While occasionally capable of honor, this depiction treated the Klingons as close to wild animals.[5] Overall, they were shown without redeeming qualities—brutish, scheming, and murderous

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    to me, ad #3 is amazing.

    It starts off by apealing to the anger that resides, ever so hidden or not hidden, in each one of us. Animal instinct, that tells the creature he is in danger of a primal meltdown. The creature ignores this, for whatever reason. Usually "socially responsible" reasons. Since anger cannot be intellectualized away, it simmers like a brew.

    Many of the audience have this "brew" very fine tuned and it often has a hairpin release. That makes for headlines the next day, as an entire family is killed by the father because the simmering anger has reached meltdown stage. Society understands, and that's why they create laws. To limit the beast and its anger.

    By a clever use of the annoying repitition of the woman screaming at the steering wheel, yet the ed-meister speeding each sequence up a bit to carefully to avoid loss of interest due to dull repetition, and adding ONE MORE ghastly or annoying meme to the soup with each repetition, the TV audience is revved up to almost animal proportions in a few seconds! Although humor, it has the equivalent punch of Ad-Min-Job getting on TV and saying Isreal will be wiped from the face of the earth. In 30 seconds, he can arouse the most beastly of thoughts in millions of viewers. In 30 seconds, because of our animal nature, we can be aroused to feel almost anything in strong proportions. Ad people, con artists, salesman, fortune tellers, gypsys and shockingly enough, NATURE ITSELF is scheming, deceptive, and often unknowable due to its propensity to disguise itself at all costs, a survival mechanism millions of years old.

    R

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    Save me from inanity!

    Well I'll assume someone may be irritated, and thus I'll proceed. :-))

    They just played ad #3 on the Super Bowl. I noticed how almost all except the trailer for Transformers 3 (extremely primal) had an animal as a costar. And that was really a future animal, with major testosterone traits. Rather contrary to progressive thought, perhaps? Will we ever emasculate the animal?

    I'll assume that since there is no disagreement, you all accept this nonsense.

    Randy

  • stillajwexelder
    stillajwexelder

    In this economy 3 million is just crazy money - screw the animals

  • poppers
    poppers

    By far the worst crop of Super Bowl ads ever - really pathetic.

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    I agree poppers, although I got a kick out of the LMAO commercial.

    edited to add: So many commercials for things like monster.com and whatever those other job searches are.

    Kind of hard to stomach I think when you are trying to enjoy yourself and when thousands of jobs are being lost daily.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Ad agency people generally just throw ideas against the wall and see what sticks. "Clever" is not always "effective", but more often than not it is. So they test.

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    ok, the Coke ad was nice and the one about harnessing wind power was cute, real cute, and I think effective.

  • UnConfused
    UnConfused

    I was actually offended by the Talking Flowers. Did you catch some of the things they said?

  • jws
    jws

    Three main classic character-types are seen in the classic Star Wars universe: Klingons, Vulcans, and humans (Romulans are a kind of hybrid meme)

    Um, that would be the Star Trek universe, not the Star Wars universe...

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