Culture Corruption: Edgy Advertising

A constant question from my business students is “Why are some ads so bad?” Bad content and in bad taste.

It does seem odd. Why would marketing managers (Budget? What budget?) spent millions for what seems to be a bad impression—or simply to shock the public.

At times marketers will deliberately make an awful advertisement to make it memorable. So that a consumer walking down a grocery store aisle will remember a product. 

But sometimes marketers have gone too far.

So Your Business Blogger(R) has assembled two sets of ads:  Good and Bad.

Let us start with the good.  The motto in my business is Delectare et Docere, To Please and To Instruct. 

The first set of advertisements—or edu-tainment—is To Please and To Remind. The Georgia-Pacific paper company did a series of Brawny Man ads a few years ago, still alive on YouTube.  A bit longer at some 120 seconds on the web which is a destination that viewers tune in and view with a purpose, which is to please. Even a novice will notice that the target market is women.  Alert Readers will notice the early ‘product placement’ in the ad.

There’s a lot more Brawny Man—but let us begin our descent from good to bad.

Some marketing gurus have crossed over to the dark side with dark ads.  Ancient Jewish tradition commands the faithful to imagine no evil.  “As a man thinks in his heart, so he is.” And “Guard your heart, it is the wellspring of life.”

It is a sound life strategy to permit only good inside your circle of friends, your house, your head.  Imagine world peace, as the new-agers would say. 

But some ad messages put darkness on display.

Charmaine recently appeared on Fox to debate shock advertising.  (Your Business Blogger(R) married way over his head...)

Charmaine_Yoest_Fox_News_Live060306.jpg


Charmaine on an earlier FOX appearance
Charmaine Yoest, Ph.D., appeared on Fox News on March 1, 2008 to debate the issue of edgy ads and to discuss the prevalence of shock-style advertising in the media.

Charmaine debated Greg Muehler from Serve Marketing who produced some of the shock ads. 

FOX, fair and balanced is a family network and showed only those mildest of ads—Steve McQueen’s Bullet had more violent car chase scenes.  Or The French Connection.  The examples are not too bad.

But bad is coming at the end of this post.

Click here for the FOX video clip.  Please forgive the extra click thru to the FRC site.

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Thank you (foot)notes:

These ads have been edgy or funny, but not false.  See a Planned Parenthood ad courtesy A Catholic View at Planned Parenthood Ad Blasting John McCain on Contraception is False

Has some advertising crossed the line?  Shock ads linked below.
Caution:  Might be safe for work—but not for kids.

From Newsweek, This Is Your Brain on Scary Ads—Are these graphic PSAs inspiring or offensive? You decide.,

The image is meant to shock: a little girl’s face atop a woman’s body, cleavage spilling over a low-cut cocktail dress. ...The ads are disturbing, to put it mildly. But more disturbing, its creators say, is what they’re trying to combat: 71 percent of teen pregnancies in inner-city Milwaukee are the result of statutory rape. ... But industry experts say the campaign represents a genre of public-service advertising that’s becoming more lurid than ever.

Shock advertising is an age-old gimmick. But compared with milder fare from years past ("This is your brain on drugs"), today’s imagery is “like a sledgehammer to the face,” says Steve Hall, founder of the industry blog Ad-Rants. For instance: the ad displayed above-an anti-drunk-driving spot for Arrive Alive-featuring a scantily clad girl collapsed in a men’s bathroom. Experts have called it muddled and pointlessly provocative.

Alert Reader Dr. Kalynne Pudner, at Auburn University and who teaches Biz Ethics, points us to this analysis by By Jeffrey A. Tucker at Mises, as in Ludwig von,

But why must it be tacky and unbearable to so many of us? Well, let’s be blunt: business is trying to reach the masses. Mises explains:


“Business propaganda must be obtrusive and blatant. It is its aim to attract the attention of slow people, to rouse latent wishes, to entice men to substitute innovation for inert clinging to traditional routine. In order to succeed, advertising must be adjusted to the mentality of the people courted. It must suit their tastes and speak their idiom. Advertising is shrill, noisy, coarse, puffing, because the public does not react to dignified allusions. It is the bad taste of the public that forces the advertisers to display bad taste in their publicity campaigns. The art of advertising has evolved into a branch of applied psychology, a sister discipline of pedagogy. Like all things designed to suit the taste of the masses, advertising is repellent to people of delicate feeling.”

A sister discipline of pedagogy? Yes indeed it is, and it is also art, and those with “delicate feeling” need to learn to appreciate it for what it is. They don’t have to believe a word of it. Decline to drink the potion to make you thin. Refuse the breakfast that will make you concentrate. Eschew the hand cream that will restore moisture. Be as skeptical as you want and, instead, save every penny. Turn off the television if you hate it and sit in your perfect environment and listen to Gregorian chant.

Newsweek magazine continues,

Still, deterrence by disgust can work. In 2006, a series of Volkswagen safety ads drew attention for showing its cars in heart-stopping traffic accidents; within weeks, sales inquiries were up. A more recent ad for Canadian workplace safety features a glowing young chef describing her fiancĂ©, whom she’ll never marry, she says, because she’s about to be in a “terrible accident.” She then slips and scorches her face with a cauldron of boiling water. ... “Some small amount of discomfort is worth it if it creates positive change,” says Gary Mueller, founder of Serve, the agency behind the statutory-rape ads. The small discomfort, though, is getting bigger.

Danger:  gallery of shock ads on Newsweek.

See:  Reality, Marketing and Aristotle.  Your Business Blogger and Charmaine were extras background artists in a movie.  But The Dude was the star.  And gave us a lesson in marketing.

Ludwig von Mises.  Mises is pronounced “MEE-zus.” Charmaine told me.

Kalynne Pudner earned her Ph.D. at the University of Virginia.  Auburn was lucky to get her.  She blogs at The Philosopher-Mom: Plato argued that philosophy and parenthood don’t mix. I’m here to prove him wrong. Or maybe right.

For more on the ads click here.

Please watch the video and let us know what you think or comment below.

Cross Post from Management Training of DC, LLC:  click here Advertising: The Good and The Bad and Reasoned Audacity.

Posted by on 07/29 at 09:51 AM
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