Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Myth (ideology) in advertising

Holsten Pils - Werewolf (1978, UK)
Lager advert, linked with mythical creatures, such as werewolf's or mommies. In the advert the man who drinks the lager and says to werewolf, "you still taking the pils", this advert has mythological themes in it.











TV advert | Mickey's Magical Party (La Fête Magique de Mickey) | Disneyland Paris
This advert uses magic, which is mythical, millions of helium balloons travel to children and give them invites to Disneyland Paris.


The promotion of desperate house wives season 6. This illustrates how mythical themes are used in advertising, as you can see  in this picture the women in this programme are depicted as ancient warriors.


Wednesday, 13 November 2013


Find an ad of your own and deconstruct it, write about semiotics-semiotics, how signs work together to create differing meanings.

The advert I have chosen is Holidays are coming - Coca-Cola Christmas. It was made in the 1995.

The advert itself is about the Coca Cola Lorries driving along the roads, going past people’s houses and parks in quite a rural area; and lighting up the area as they drive past, giving the place a Christmas feel. The Advert itself is a perfect example of how a Christmas advert should be. The fact the Lorries are red shows how semiotics can be used to symbolize Christmas; as Coca Cola changed the colors of Santa Claus. Furthermore Coca Cola are notoriously known for using red. This shows how they have used semiotics to symbolize the coming of Christmas, by using Coca Colas own colors and combining it with the season to advertise Coca Cola.

Subsequently the advert uses semiotics (the color red) to define the brand and link it with the context of their advertising. Alongside this the advert and brand have a universal demographic as the advert shows children and adults; and as Coca Cola itself is a well known, popular and respectable brand.

Alongside this the trucks are covered in Christmas Lights, this is another good use of semiotics in the advert as the Lights are a good symbol for Christmas, as covering the Lorries in lights and having them drive past areas and covering the areas in lights are symbolic of Christmas. Again this demonstrates how the semiotics in the advert coexist perfectly with the brand it illustrates how both go hand in hand together. Adding to this having an animation of Santa Clause drinking a Coca Cola bottle is a good use of semiotics in the sense that combining the two; Santa Clause and a glass bottle of Coke, it symbolizes happiness and Christmas, which coincide together nicely.
janine.sykes@leeds-art.ac.ukjanine.sykes@leeds-art.ac.uk

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Jaguar In China


                                                      Jaguar in China

Word association

The main word China-Words associated to China, Great Wall, Dragons, Rice, big, crowded, popular, grand, and loud.

Word s which worked, Dragons, Great Wall, these words best represent china,

Animals could work to symbolise china and also England.

The scene opens with the wall of China. You see the Great Wall of China in all its glory from bottom of it to the top. It’s loud with the chatter of tourists and locals along the wall; it’s a busy day on the wall; thousands of people are walking along the wall.

 Suddenly a massive growl echoes the valley and the wall. Birds fly away, horses gallop off, and bulls run along with them.

Another growl erupts in the valley where the Great Wall is silent, still and calm. Everyone is silent, paused and looking around in confusion.  A third growl roars through the scene. A jaguar in all in its swagger leaps on the wall, with a proud stance. It leaps in the shape of the Jaguar logo on cars. It runs along the path of the wall, slick smooth and powerfully. 

All the people rush to the edges of the wall, to clear a path for the jaguar. The Jaguar runs past the people swiftly, looking from side to side at the people. The jaguar passes a British flag and roars once again, more loudly and fierce than the last time. Another roar erupts, however, this one not coming from the Jaguar. The Jaguar stops, looks around. In the sky in the distance you see something swirl around in the wind. Another scream of roars shatters the silence. The people looked confused and slightly scared.

The Jaguar looks back at the thing flying in the wind; the Jaguar looks more closely and sees a dragon. The Jaguar looks directly in to the dragons eyes. The dragon looks magnificent, its coloured gold and red. The dragon sweeps down along the path on top of the wall towards the jaguar.

The jaguar runs, the dragon following, it looks like their racing. They then get side by side. Look into each other’s eyes. The dragon then intertwines with the jaguar, wrapping round the jaguar while they move. A bright spark of light emerges off the two animals as they start combining together. A blast of light and fireworks appear from the two. Smoke covers the entire wall.

Your hear a growl, and the brand new jaguar car emerges from the smoke and drives along the wall, everyone looks along the car, looking at all the details of it

The car smoothly, yet sharply stops, you here the engine rev. Then the car lights flash. All the people stood still burst into applause and start cheering and clapping. Fireworks go off in the background. It then goes black and your here a roar.

Monday, 4 November 2013

Evaluation

Research into the project was quite difficult because Gillette consistently release new razors. However, I overcame this challenge by looking into the model and the year. From gaining the information I was able to get an insight into the razor and the company. This helped me find what information needed to be used and how to sell the product. Adding to this research into the product gave me insight into how to sell the product and what the strengths and weaknesses of the product were.
Strengths of my work are that the product itself is quite easy to sell, as Gillette Razors only have one purpose; and that is to help men shave. This allowed me to explore numerous creative ideas, as the advert did not need to be very factual; simply just to emphasise a smooth shave with no “tugging and pulling”.  This benefitted me, as it gave me the opportunity to use different creative thinking methods, and experiment which worked best. Following this, because a strength was the product itself, I was able to use the Debono hat theory, Word Association and Animal Perspective to create ideas; this assisted me with coming up with ideas as there no need to include facts and figures.
 Strength of my research and advert is that my advert works well for the products demographic. For instance the fact that my advert symbolises the smoothness of the shave; also the fact I used men with beards in the advert so that the advert could appeal to people who don't shave. This is because my advert worked well for the typical norm demographic, which is men shaving. However, I also introduced a new demographic which was men with beards; subsequently this expanded my demographic.
Further strengths of the ad are that it is a moving metaphor. The advert symbolises smoothness. This is strength of the ad because it means that it is not dull, boring or overly factual, especially in comparison to the original. This gave the ad more of an edge and having an advert without words means that people will be more focused on what is happening. In addition to this another strength of my advert is that compared to other shaving adverts I’ve shown a man clean shaven and two men with beards, showing both views of men with beards and men without beards. This meant that my advert can attract all types of men and keep their interest. Adding this using the man to symbolise smoothness still carries across the message of the campaign which is a smooth shave, and having him not talk adds to the smoothness of him.
On top of this demonstrating how shaving helps your image shows strength in my advert. This is because I show the two men with beards not getting in, and this demonstrates the stereotype of smart, posh places. Therefore showing a man with a clean shave sliding in, expresses certain views of how looking smart may help you in ascertaining higher class functions.   
However, the point made in the previous paragraph could be viewed as a weakness, as the  stereotype of a clean shaven man being let into the building me over the two men with beards might offend some people. Therefore this can be seen as a weakness of my advert.
Another weakness of my advert is the fact that I did not mention “no tugging and pulling” which was a key selling point Gillette was trying to enforce. However, as my advert had no speech used, it weakens my advert in the sense that it is less informative.
Furthermore another weakness of my work is that a number of my first ideas were quite typical and cliché of shaving adverts. I found it difficult to break out of the norm for shaving adverts. This held me back at first as the ideas being created were not interesting or creative enough to be completely different to the original.
I do, however, believe the advert works. This is because my message of the Gillette Fusion ProGlide being a smooth shave is portrayed well in the advert as the man symbolizes my message. Subsequently this is why I believe that it works. Alongside this I feel that I have met the objectives. As the objectives were to make an advert which was uninspiring and develop a new proposition; one which is more creative; and after trying out many different creative techniques I achieved this with my new advert. However, the idea of using the man to symbolise smoothness may not come across to everyone; this may weaken the purpose of the advert.
Following this the message may not come across universally. As some may view the ad as me suggesting that shaving is cool and slick; which in one sense is a benefit of shaving. However, I was trying to show how the new razor itself provides the smoothest shave from Gillette. 
If I were to change it I may put a script along the bottom of the advert while it played. This would just inform people of the specialties of the new razor. As it was tested on 30’000 men, it is highly prized by P&G and the fact that Gillette sells 100 million razors in 75 countries each year. Facts like these may have helped the advert be a little more informative. However, doing this would have ruined the point of the advert and made it duller. But, a voiceover perhaps would have helped to describe what is happening and what the advert is representing.    

Overall, although there were certain flaws within my new proposition for Gillette fusion ProGlide; for instance the lack of facts and figures making the advert less informative. I do believe that my proposition worked appropriately for the message I was trying to convey. As although a lack of facts can be a weakness, it makes my new proposition more interesting and memorable as I’ve steered away from the cliché and norms of shaving product advertising. fabio.fragiacomo@leeds-art.ac.uk 

Evaluation

Research into the project was quite difficult because Gillette consistently release new razors. However, I overcame this challenge by looking into the model and the year. From gaining the information I was able to get an insight into the razor and the company. This helped me find what information needed to be used and how to sell the product. Adding to this research into the product gave me insight into how to sell the product and what the strengths and weaknesses of the product were.
Strengths of my work are that the product itself is quite easy to sell, as Gillette Razors only have one purpose; and that is to help men shave. This allowed me to explore numerous creative ideas, as the advert did not need to be very factual; simply just to emphasise a smooth shave with no “tugging and pulling”.  This benefitted me, as it gave me the opportunity to use different creative thinking methods, and experiment which worked best. Following this, because a strength was the product itself, I was able to use the Debono hat theory, Word Association and Animal Perspective to create ideas; this assisted me with coming up with ideas as there no need to include facts and figures.
 Strength of my research and advert is that my advert works well for the products demographic. For instance the fact that my advert symbolises the smoothness of the shave; also the fact I used men with beards in the advert so that the advert could appeal to people who don't shave. This is because my advert worked well for the typical norm demographic, which is men shaving. However, I also introduced a new demographic which was men with beards; subsequently this expanded my demographic.
Further strengths of the ad are that it is a moving metaphor. The advert symbolises smoothness. This is strength of the ad because it means that it is not dull, boring or overly factual, especially in comparison to the original. This gave the ad more of an edge and having an advert without words means that people will be more focused on what is happening. In addition to this another strength of my advert is that compared to other shaving adverts I’ve shown a man clean shaven and two men with beards, showing both views of men with beards and men without beards. This meant that my advert can attract all types of men and keep their interest. Adding this using the man to symbolise smoothness still carries across the message of the campaign which is a smooth shave, and having him not talk adds to the smoothness of him.
On top of this demonstrating how shaving helps your image shows strength in my advert. This is because I show the two men with beards not getting in, and this demonstrates the stereotype of smart, posh places. Therefore showing a man with a clean shave sliding in, expresses certain views of how looking smart may help you in ascertaining higher class functions.   
However, the point made in the previous paragraph could be viewed as a weakness, as the  stereotype of a clean shaven man being let into the building me over the two men with beards might offend some people. Therefore this can be seen as a weakness of my advert.
Another weakness of my advert is the fact that I did not mention “no tugging and pulling” which was a key selling point Gillette was trying to enforce. However, as my advert had no speech used, it weakens my advert in the sense that it is less informative.
Furthermore another weakness of my work is that a number of my first ideas were quite typical and cliché of shaving adverts. I found it difficult to break out of the norm for shaving adverts. This held me back at first as the ideas being created were not interesting or creative enough to be completely different to the original.
I do, however, believe the advert works. This is because my message of the Gillette Fusion ProGlide being a smooth shave is portrayed well in the advert as the man symbolizes my message. Subsequently this is why I believe that it works. Alongside this I feel that I have met the objectives. As the objectives were to make an advert which was uninspiring and develop a new proposition; one which is more creative; and after trying out many different creative techniques I achieved this with my new advert. However, the idea of using the man to symbolise smoothness may not come across to everyone; this may weaken the purpose of the advert.
Following this the message may not come across universally. As some may view the ad as me suggesting that shaving is cool and slick; which in one sense is a benefit of shaving. However, I was trying to show how the new razor itself provides the smoothest shave from Gillette. 
If I were to change it I may put a script along the bottom of the advert while it played. This would just inform people of the specialties of the new razor. As it was tested on 30’000 men, it is highly prized by P&G and the fact that Gillette sells 100 million razors in 75 countries each year. Facts like these may have helped the advert be a little more informative. However, doing this would have ruined the point of the advert and made it duller. But, a voiceover perhaps would have helped to describe what is happening and what the advert is representing.    

Overall, although there were certain flaws within my new proposition for Gillette fusion ProGlide; for instance the lack of facts and figures making the advert less informative. I do believe that my proposition worked appropriately for the message I was trying to convey. As although a lack of facts can be a weakness, it makes my new proposition more interesting and memorable as I’ve steered away from the cliché and norms of shaving product advertising.  

Evaluation


Research into the project was quite difficult because Gillette consistently release new razors. However, I overcame this challenge by looking into the model and the year. From gaining the information I was able to get an insight into the razor and the company. This helped me find what information needed to be used and how to sell the product. Adding to this research into the product gave me insight into how to sell the product and what the strengths and weaknesses of the product were.
Strengths of my work are that the product itself is quite easy to sell, as Gillette Razors only have one purpose; and that is to help men shave. This allowed me to explore numerous creative ideas, as the advert did not need to be very factual; simply just to emphasise a smooth shave with no “tugging and pulling”.  This benefitted me, as it gave me the opportunity to use different creative thinking methods, and experiment which worked best. Following this, because a strength was the product itself, I was able to use the Debono hat theory, Word Association and Animal Perspective to create ideas; this assisted me with coming up with ideas as there no need to include facts and figures.
 Strength of my research and advert is that my advert works well for the products demographic. For instance the fact that my advert symbolises the smoothness of the shave; also the fact I used men with beards in the advert so that the advert could appeal to people who don't shave. This is because my advert worked well for the typical norm demographic, which is men shaving. However, I also introduced a new demographic which was men with beards; subsequently this expanded my demographic.
Further strengths of the ad are that it is a moving metaphor. The advert symbolises smoothness. This is strength of the ad because it means that it is not dull, boring or overly factual, especially in comparison to the original. This gave the ad more of an edge and having an advert without words means that people will be more focused on what is happening. In addition to this another strength of my advert is that compared to other shaving adverts I’ve shown a man clean shaven and two men with beards, showing both views of men with beards and men without beards. This meant that my advert can attract all types of men and keep their interest. Adding this using the man to symbolise smoothness still carries across the message of the campaign which is a smooth shave, and having him not talk adds to the smoothness of him.
On top of this demonstrating how shaving helps your image shows strength in my advert. This is because I show the two men with beards not getting in, and this demonstrates the stereotype of smart, posh places. Therefore showing a man with a clean shave sliding in, expresses certain views of how looking smart may help you in ascertaining higher class functions.   
However, the point made in the previous paragraph could be viewed as a weakness, as the  stereotype of a clean shaven man being let into the building me over the two men with beards might offend some people. Therefore this can be seen as a weakness of my advert.
Another weakness of my advert is the fact that I did not mention “no tugging and pulling” which was a key selling point Gillette was trying to enforce. However, as my advert had no speech used, it weakens my advert in the sense that it is less informative.
Furthermore another weakness of my work is that a number of my first ideas were quite typical and cliché of shaving adverts. I found it difficult to break out of the norm for shaving adverts. This held me back at first as the ideas being created were not interesting or creative enough to be completely different to the original.
I do, however, believe the advert works. This is because my message of the Gillette Fusion ProGlide being a smooth shave is portrayed well in the advert as the man symbolizes my message. Subsequently this is why I believe that it works. Alongside this I feel that I have met the objectives. As the objectives were to make an advert which was uninspiring and develop a new proposition; one which is more creative; and after trying out many different creative techniques I achieved this with my new advert. However, the idea of using the man to symbolise smoothness may not come across to everyone; this may weaken the purpose of the advert.
Following this the message may not come across universally. As some may view the ad as me suggesting that shaving is cool and slick; which in one sense is a benefit of shaving. However, I was trying to show how the new razor itself provides the smoothest shave from Gillette. 
If I were to change it I may put a script along the bottom of the advert while it played. This would just inform people of the specialties of the new razor. As it was tested on 30’000 men, it is highly prized by P&G and the fact that Gillette sells 100 million razors in 75 countries each year. Facts like these may have helped the advert be a little more informative. However, doing this would have ruined the point of the advert and made it duller. But, a voiceover perhaps would have helped to describe what is happening and what the advert is representing.    
Overall, although there were certain flaws within my new proposition for Gillette fusion ProGlide; for instance the lack of facts and figures making the advert less informative. I do believe that my proposition worked appropriately for the message I was trying to convey. As although a lack of facts can be a weakness, it makes my new proposition more interesting and memorable as I’ve steered away from the cliché and norms of shaving product advertising.