Thursday, November 7, 2013

What The Hail?

What The Hail?
           
Our society today is filled with corporations surrounding the people with their products through advertisements.  With so many ads, it is impossible for people to process or remember them all.  The challenge for corporations is to make an advertisement that stands out in the audiences mind, and stays there. 

            In 2010, Snickers produced an advertisement for the Super Bowl that stood out in the minds of many people.  The tagline at the end of the commercial was, “you’re not you when you’re hungry.”  The ad proved to be effective through the use of an iconic actress, humour, hypermasculinity, tagline and a relation to the target audience by addressing a need.

            Having a celebrity icon in a commercial immediately grabs the attention of the viewer, especially when that icon is as universally loved as Betty White is.  At the time of the advertisement, Betty White was seemly everywhere; she reeled in high ratings for Saturday Night Live when she hosted, winning an Emmy for her performance.  She was the star of the new sitcom Hot in Cleveland.  All of Betty White’s success in turn helped the commercial to be successful.

            Another effective way for corporations to increase the awareness of their advertisements is to instill humour.  Humour is arguably the most important piece of what makes an advertisement memorable.  The benefit of humour in advertising is that when something is funny, it is talked about and shared on social media.  These corporations have their ads viewed without having to pay for extra television airtime.  During the Snickers commercial, on multiple occasions, I exhibited sidesplitting laughter.  During the 30-second ad it displayed multiple funny ideas.  The first was Betty White running the route at turtle speed.  The second was Betty getting absolutely crushed by an opposing player into the mud.  The third was a sexual comment.  We see sexual comments in almost everything, but when it came from the mouth of a 90-year-old woman, it was truly hilarious. The fourth was the overall premise; a never-done-before sketch is always funny.  The fifth was how they used an old lady in an ad targeted at younger men and was still funny.

            A tactic corporations use to produce an effective ad is sadly exploitation.  They have their target audience and they pinpoint their insecurities.  “In our identity we internalize particular ways of thinking, feeling and behaving, we take on a relation to identity” (Barthes 1973, pp. 65-6).  Snickers use the concept of hypermasculinty to appeal to the common man.  In today’s society, men aren’t feeling like real men because of corporations using overly manly men in their ads to make the audience think if they use the product they will become a real man.  “Advertisements exist as a means of selling products by creating an association between a brand a desirable lifestyle or identity.” (O’Shaughnessy, M., Stadler, J. 2012, p. 162).  In the Snickers commercial, it uses hypermasculinity to perfection as it implies that you will play like an old lady without eating Snickers.

            A catchy tagline or slogan also contributes to a successful ad.  In the Snickers commercial, the tagline is “You’re not you when you’re hungry.”

            The commercial also addresses a need.  All men have experience hunger while playing sports, and we’ve all felt drowsy and subpar.  Snickers brilliantly addresses this issue and says if you eat their product, you can be yourself and play to your full potential.

            Through the use of an iconic actress, humour, hypermaculinity, tagline and the addressing of a need, The Snickers commercial was extremely successful and won the award for best super bowl ad.

Reference

Barthes, R 1973, Mythologies, Paladin, London

O’Shaughnessy, M., & Stadler, J.. (2012). Media and Society. 5th Ed. South Melbourne,             Oxford University Press.


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