Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Media Literacy Strategies Part 1
2
Bandwagon A psychological phenomenon whereby people do something primarily because other people are doing it, regardless of their own beliefs, which they may ignore or override. When someone adopts a popular point of view for the primary purpose of recognition and/or acceptance by others. The suggestion that everyone is using or doing something: “Gatorade: Canada’s #1 bestseller”
3
Cartoon/Cute Characters
Creates sensitivity, emotional appeal Use of comics and cartoons to grabs attention and increases marketing response. Many of the most successful brands relied on the attention-grabbing power of cartoons when promoting their products Cartoons can convey a message far more quickly than a written notice, for example. For one thing, you don’t need to be able to read to understand a cartoon Cartoons also have childhood associations with humour, happiness and fun
4
Celebrity Endorsement
Also referred to as testimonial. Using well known person or organization to promote a product. We tend to pay attention to famous people. That’s why they’re famous! Ads often use celebrities to grab our attention. By appearing in an ad, celebrities implicitly endorse a product; sometimes the endorsement is explicit. Many people know that companies pay celebrities a lot of money to appear in their ads (Nike’s huge contracts with leading athletes, for example, are well known) but this type of testimonial still seems to be effective.
5
Emotional Appeal
6
Emotional Appeal (continued)
7
Facts and Figures The implication that figures and statistics prove a point beyond dispute: “No-ache pills. A guaranteed 100 mg of pain relief.” Fools audience into thinking their headache will be gone, but really it is only referring to the mg in 1 tablet Lexus GS Hybrid 120 Heartbeats commercial: /watch?v=Ht-_CxBB-kc
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.