Propaganda Techniques
Автор работы: Пользователь скрыл имя, 29 Марта 2013 в 03:52, контрольная работа
Краткое описание
These persuasion devices are often used in advertising and political campaigning. Be critical readers and listeners by being alert to these attempts to mold your choices and viewpoints.
Bandwagon: Using the argument that because everyone is doing it, you should, too.
“Last year 30 million winners switched to Nike athletic shoes. Isn’t it time you did, too?”
Card Stacking: Telling only one side of the story as though there is no opposing view.
Содержимое работы - 1 файл
Propaganda
Techniques
These persuasion devices are often used in
advertising and political campaigning. Be critical readers and
listeners by being alert to these attempts to mold your choices and
viewpoints.
- Bandwagon: Using the argument that because everyone is doing it, you should, too.
- “Last year 30 million winners
switched to Nike athletic shoes. Isn’t it time you did, too?”
- Card Stacking: Telling only one side of the story as though there is no opposing
view.
- “This diet pill will make you
lose 20 pounds in two weeks” (nevermind that the pill will make you have a heart attack).
- Exigency: Creating the impression that your action is required immediately
or your opportunity will be lost forever.
- “Saturday and Sunday only!
It’s your last chance to get a really good deal on ’99 Hondas!”
- Flag Waving: Connecting the person, product, or cause with patriotism.
- “Me drink foreign beer?
Never! I drink Budweiser—American all the way!”
- Glittering
Generality: Using positive or idealistic words based on a detail or minor attribute to create an association in the reader’s mind between the person or object and something
that is good, valued, and desired.
- “Ron’s been on the varsity team
for all four years. You couldn’t find a better team player
or more sportsmanlike young man.”
- Innuendo: Causing the audience to become wary or suspicious of the product,
person, or cause by hinting that negative information may be being kept
secret.
- “Other products claim they
can handle the big, grimy, once-a-year cleaning jobs like a garage floor. Think what they will do to the no-wax finish
on your kitchen floor where your baby plays.”
- Name Calling: Using negative or derogatory words to create an association in the
reader’s mind between the person or object and something
that is bad, feared, or distasteful.
- “Barack Obama knows William
Ayers, a domestic terrorist.”
- Plain Folks: Using a person who represents the “typical” target of the ad to communicate to the target audience
the message that because we are alike and I would use/buy/believe this, you should, too.
- “If you’re a sinus sufferer like me,
try extra-strength Claritin. It helps me. It will help you,
too.”
- Prestige
Identification/Endorsement: Showing a well-known person with the object, person,
or cause in order to increase the audience’s impression of the importance or prestige of the
object, person, or cause.
- “Michael Phelps likes to play
Guitar Hero. You should, too.”
- Red Herring: Highlighting a minor detail as a way to draw attention away from
more important details or issues.
- “The new Chevy Camaro—the only sports car available
in 32 eye-catching colors.” (Nevermind that the car will
stop running before you are finished paying for it.)
- Snob Appeal—Associating the product, person, or cause with successful,
wealthy, admired people to give the audience the idea that if
they buy or support the same things, they will also be one of the “in-crowd.”
- The luxury car commercials
where the wife finds car keys under the tree and goes outside her mansion
to find her brand new car.
- Testimonial—Using the testimony or statement of someone to persuade
you to think or act as he or she does.
- “I’m a doctor, and I take Advil
when I have a headache.”
- Transfer: Linking a known personal goal or ideal with a product or cause in
order to transfer the audience’s positive feelings to the product or cause.
- a textile manufacturer wanting
people to wear their product to stay cool during the summer shows people
wearing fashions made from their cloth at a sunny seaside setting where
there is a cool breeze.
- Avante
Garde: The suggestion that using this product puts the user
ahead of the times
- a toy manufacturer encourages
kids to be the first on their block to have a new toy.
- Facts and Figures: Statistics and objective factual information are
used to prove the superiority of the product
- a car manufacturer quotes
the amount of time it takes their car to get from 0 to 100 k.p.h.
- Weasel
Words: “Weasel words" are used to suggest a positive
meaning without actually really making any guarantee
- a scientist says that a diet product might help you to lose weight the way it helped him to
lose weight. (Remember conditional language?)
- Magic Ingredients: The suggestion that some almost miraculous discovery
makes the product exceptionally effective
- a pharmaceutical manufacturer describes a special coating that
makes their pain reliever less irritating to the stomach than a competitor’s.
- Bribery/Something
for Nothing: Bribery seems to give a desirable extra something. We humans tend to be greedy.
- Buy a burger; get free fries.
- Wit and
Humor: Customers are attracted to products that divert the
audience by giving viewers a reason to laugh or to be entertained by
clever use of visuals or language.
- the Geico caveman commercials.
- Simple
Solutions: Avoid complexities, and attack many problems with one solution.
- Buy this makeup and you will
be attractive, popular, and happy.
- Heart Strings: Commercials often create an emotional ambience that
draws you into the advertisement and makes you feel good.
- The McDonald's commercials featuring father and daughter eating out together, or the
AT&T Reach Out and Touch Someone ads are good examples. We are more
attracted by products that make us feel good.
- Scale - is when advertisers make a product look bigger or smaller than
it actually is.
- A Burger
King burger looks enormous on the commercial or billboard but not so
great when you get one
- Put Downs - are when you put down your competition's product to make your own
product seem better.
- Bounty
paper towels are much more absorbent that the competitor’s
- Repetition: Product names are repeated at least four times
- “Head On, apply directly to
the forehead.”
- Fear: Exploiting people’s fears to make them want to buy a product or subscribe
to a cause
- “Vote for Saxby Chambliss,
because Jim Martin will raise your taxes.”
Информация о работе Propaganda Techniques