Ad Nauseam
by Adam Corner
The more we hate it, the more it agrees with us. How
advertising turned anti-consumerism into
a secret weapon..
In 1796, the English physician Edward Jenner injected an
eight-year-old boy in Gloucestershire with cowpox. Reasoning that absorbing a
small amount of the virus would protect the child from a full-strength attack
of smallpox in the future, Jenner’s bold experiment founded the practice of
vaccination. Two hundred years later, the marketing industry has cottoned on to
Jenner’s insight: a little bit of a disease can be a very useful thing.
If you’re one of the more than 7 million people who have
watched the global fast-food chain Chipotle’s latest advertisement, you’ll have
experienced this sleight of hand for yourself. The animated short film —
accompanied by a smartphone game — depicts a haunting parody of corporate
agribusiness: cartoon chickens inflated by robotic antibiotic arms, scarecrow
workers displaced by ruthless automata. Chipotle’s logo appears only at the
very end of the three-minute trailer; it is otherwise branding-free. The
motivation for this big-budget exposé? ‘We’re trying to educate people about
where their food comes from,’ Mark Crumpacker, chief marketing officer at
Chipotle, told USA Today, but ‘millennials are sceptical of brands that
perpetuate themselves’.
Never mind that Chipotle itself — with more than 1,500
outlets across the US, and an annual turnover of $278 million — is hardly
treading lightly on the world’s agricultural system. The real story is that the
company is using a dose of anti-Big Food sentiment to inoculate the viewer
against not buying any more of its burritos. Chipotle are very happy to sell
the idea that they’re on our side if it helps to keep the millennials happy. If
it’s advertising we don’t like, then it’s advertising we won’t get.
In the UK, the telecommunications giant Orange creates
cinema ads which are spoof scenes from well-known feature films, doctoring the
scripts to include gratuitous references to cell phones. One popular instalment
features the actor Jack Black recreating a scene from Gulliver’s Travels
(2010), in which Gulliver is captured by the tiny Lilliputians and lashed to
the ground with ropes. As the product placements for Orange become increasingly
blatant, Black realises he has been tricked into acting in a cellphone ad,
breaks character and begins a speech about how he won’t be duped by Orange.
‘Don’t let a mobile phone ruin your film’ runs the slogan. It’s annoying, but
they know this. And they know that you know that they know. And ... well you
get the gist.
These ads want to be our friends — to empathise with us
against the tyranny of the corporate world they inhabit. Just when we thought
we’d cottoned on to subliminal advertising, personalised sidebars on web pages,
advertorials and infomercials, products started echoing our contempt for them.
‘Shut up!’ we shout at the TV, and the TV gets behind the sofa and shouts along
with us.
It seems almost quaint, now that popular culture is riddled
with knowing, self-referential nods to itself, but the aim of advertising used
to be straightforward: to associate a product in a literal and direct way with
positive images of a desirable, aspirational life. How we chortle at those
rosy-cheeked families that dominated commercials in the post-war era. Nowadays,
we adopt the slogans and imagery as ironic home decor — wartime advertisements
for coffee adorn our kitchen walls; retro Brylcreem posters are pinned above
the bathroom door. But our reappropriation of artefacts from a previous era of
consumerism sends a powerful message: we wouldn’t be swayed by such naked
pitches today.
Genre-subverting ads started to emerge as early as 1959,
when the Volkswagen Beetle’s US ‘Think Small’ campaign began poking fun at the
German car’s size and idiosyncratic design. In stark contrast to traditional US
car adverts, whose brightly coloured depictions of gargantuan front ends left
the viewer in no doubt that bigger was better, the Beetle posters left most of
the page blank, a tiny image of the car itself tucked away in a corner. These
designs spoke to a generation that was becoming aware of how the media and
advertising industries worked. The American journalist Vance Packard had blown
the whistle on the tricks of the advertising trade in The Hidden Persuaders
(1957), and younger consumers increasingly saw themselves as savvy. Selling to
this demographic required not overeager direct pitches, but insouciant ‘cool’,
laced with irony.
Ads for sports
drinks bemoan the abundance of minutely differentiated sports drinks on the
market, and beers yearn for the day when a beer was just a beer
In subsequent decades, self-aware adverts became the norm,
and advertising began to satirise the very concept of itself. In 1996, Sprite
launched a successful campaign with the slogan ‘Image is nothing. Thirst is
everything. Obey your thirst’. In 2010, Kotex sent up the bizarre conventions
of 1980s tampon adverts (happy, dancing women, jars of blue liquid being spilt)
by flashing up the question ‘Why are Tampon adverts so ridiculous?’ before
displaying its latest range of sanitary products.
‘Companies try to
convince you that they are part of your family,’ says Tim Kasser, professor of
psychology and an expert on consumer culture at Knox College in Illinois. ‘They
want to create a sense of connection or even intimacy between the viewer and
the advertiser. An ad that says: “Yes, I know you know that I’m an ad, and I
know that you know that I’m annoying you” is a statement of empathy, and thus a
statement of connection. And as any salesperson will tell you, connection is
key to the sales.’
This technique of cultivating empathy through shared
cynicism has taken off over the past decade. Today, ads for sports drinks
bemoan the abundance of minutely differentiated sports drinks on the market, and
beers yearn for the day when a beer was just a beer.
The Swedish brewery
Kopparberg has done more than any other company to promote the idea that cider
can come in many delicious fruity flavours, so if anyone is to blame for the
difficulty in buying plain old apple cider, it is Kopparberg. Yet their most
recent invention is ‘Naked’ apple cider. As the company’s UK managing director
Davin Nugent told The Morning Advertiser:
Innovation through fruit is not enough. The bigger picture
is apple cider and we’re opening the back gate into the category. The apple
taste in cider has been lost and become bland… we’re on to something exciting.
Corporate advertising is the ultimate shape-shifter; the
perpetual tease. No sooner had the virulently anti-capitalist ‘Occupy Wall
Street’ movement begun than the American rapper Jay Z’s clothing label created
and marketed an ‘Occupy All Streets’ spin-off T-shirt. But as citizen cynicism
has advanced, the space in which advertising can operate without tripping on
its own rhetoric has become ever more restricted, and ever more bizarre.
Feeling jaded and cynical about samey scripts in ads?
Commercials such as 2012’s Old Milwaukee Super Bowl spoof, in which Will
Ferrell’s formulaic endorsement gets cut off mid-sentence, might still speak to
you. Getting a vicarious thrill from viral videos? Ads can mimic that
excitement, with carefully coordinated campaigns to capture the grassroots
feel, such as the ‘amateur footage’ of a man hacking the video screens in Times
Square, New York, in fact promoting the film Limitless (2011). Cynical about
the lack of spontaneity in advertising messages? ‘Real-time’ news-led marketing
can make even the most hackneyed of products seem cutting-edge — although
American Apparel’s attempt in October last year to launch the #SandySale off
the back of the worst Hurricane to hit New York in living memory was not the
blast they had hoped for.
The ambiguous,
semi-disguised adverts of today would appear to be the commercials we deserve:
self-cynical sales pitches for a jaded generation
At the same time, Magazine content, musical and theatrical
entertainment and, in particular, online media are often entirely integrated
with the commercial messages that bankrolled them. This probably wouldn’t have
been possible if advertisers had not made the strategic move from the blatant
salesmanship of yore to the subtler, more oblique arts of modern industry. As
consumers cottoned on to the tricks of the trade, ads have stayed one step
ahead.
There have, of course, been attempts to kick back. An entire
lexicon has flourished around the idea of subverting the advertising industry —
from acts of ‘brandalism’, which distort or undermine corporate iconography, to
‘culture jamming’ (satirical analyses of the business world). Adbusters, the
long-running Canadian magazine, has dedicated itself to exposing and
challenging the the corporate world generally, not just advertising. But a 2011
report for the Public Interest Research Centre about the cultural impact of
commercial messages argued that:
The public debate about advertising — such as it exists —
has also been curiously unfocused and sporadic. Civil society organisations
have almost always used the products advertised as their point of departure —
attacking the advertising of a harmful product like tobacco, or alcohol, for
instance — rather than developing a deeper critical appraisal of advertising in
the round.
So what would a deeper look tell us? Perhaps it is that the
‘cynical distance’ inherent in knowing, self-immolating, empathetic adverts not
only perpetuates brands, but is at the foundation of advertising itself. By
‘factoring in’ dissent, the ad neutralises it in advance, like the stock market
inoculating itself against future shocks by including their likelihood in share
prices. The advertising industry anticipates and then absorbs its own
opposition, like a politician cracking jokes at his own expense to disarm a
hostile media.
And the industry’s seemingly endless capacity to perpetuate
itself matters. Marketing is not simply a mirror of our prevailing aspirations.
It systematically promotes and presents a specific cluster of values that
undermine pro-social and pro-environmental attitudes and behaviour. In other
words, the more that we’re encouraged to obsess about the latest phone upgrade,
the less likely we are to concern ourselves with society’s more pressing
problems. That’s a reason to want to keep a careful tab on advertising’s
elusive and ephemeral forms.
Encouragingly, there is some evidence that young people are
quietly developing their own defence mechanisms — the ‘click-through’ rate for
online advertising has plummeted from a heady 78 per cent for the world’s first
banner ad in 1994 to a meagre 0.05 per cent for Facebook ads in 2011.
The Beetle adverts at the tail end of the 1950s picked up on
the growing media smarts of the post-war generation, and Sprite’s ironic
critique of image-led branding could almost have been lifted from the arguments
of the 1990s anti-globalisation movement. The ambiguous, semi-disguised adverts
of today would then appear to be the commercials we deserve: self-cynical sales
pitches for a jaded generation. Instead of questioning the economic mechanisms
that lead to the homogenisation of town centres, we shop and drink coffee in
commercial spaces disguised in the stylishly-frayed aesthetics of the
counter-culture.
Satire has long been acknowledged as a paradoxical crutch
for a society’s existing power structures: we laugh at political jibes, and
that same laughter displaces the desire for change. As such as Chipotle's —
which express our concerns about the failings of globalisation in a safe space
before packing them away — are surely an equivalent safety valve for any
subversive rumblings. We all like to think that we’re above the dark art of
advertising; that we are immune to its persuasive powers. But the reality is
that, though we might have been immunised, it is not against ads: it is against
dissent.
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