Preview

Young Women Advertising

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1411 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Young Women Advertising
How many times have you seen a jacket in a magazine ad that you just had to have? We both know that we see many things both in print and on television that we want to buy because we want to look like the model that is wearing the particular jacket being advertised. According to Jib Fowles, author of Advertising’s Fifteen Basic Appeals, “The desire to exhibit ourselves in such a way as to make others look at us is a primitive, insuppressible instinct” (Fowles Pg.8). People are made to believe that they absolutely need the item advertised because that is going to make people notice them. Clothing and cosmetic companies strive on people’s need for attention. Advertisements target young women ages 16-30 of Generation Me to buy their products in …show more content…
Women follow this trend because they have been influenced at a young age to believe that outer beauty is everything. Many girls are introduced to Barbie at a young age, and that image of a perfect well rounded female is set in their minds for the rest of their lives. Commercials show Barbie in her three story dream townhouse, driving her convertible, and walking her precious little dog. All of these marketing schemes make young girls believe that Barbie is perfect from head to toe and want to be and look just like her. There is one commercial that really set apart from most; it had Barbie sporting her totally stylin’ tattoos. In the Barbie’s totally stylin’ tattoo commercial, contains a catchy song that sings “B-A-R-B-I-E totally tattoo’s it’s totally me.” Then the young girl says “Perfect tattoos” and it proceeds to show you how the product works, and at the end of the commercial it says “Be who you want to be, Barbie girl.” As Jean M. Twenge mentioned throughout Chapter 3 “You Can Be Anything You Want to Be” on self esteem, this very commercial targets young women to do what you want to do, and to be who you want to be. According to Jean M. Twenge in her book Generation Me, “Tattoo’s are no longer the sole province of bikers and sailors, but a trendy self-decoration employed by large numbers of young people, including the rich and famous” (Twenge Pg.96). Both young …show more content…
According to Jean M. Twenge, author of Generation Me, “We have come to equate looking good with feeling good, and to say that we should do whatever makes us feel good or makes us happy” (Twenge Pg. 94). Most young women are not pleased with their looks, have low self-esteem issues, or feel the need to replicate their favorite celebrities so they end up doing something about it, plastic surgery to auto correct whatever it is that they don’t like. Celebrities in the media are very open to talking about their procedures, they will tell the whole world that they got a certain body part cut and sewed back. For example, Heidi Montag of the MTV show The Hills stated, "For the past three years, I've thought about what to have done, I'm beyond obsessed." Heidi Montag is widely seen in the media, especially in tabloid magazines. Young women, specifically teenagers are being influenced by the media, and may have negative results such as wanting to go through plastic surgery because they want to have the same nose as the celebrity has in the picture. Some magazines have articles about plastic surgery, and some particular magazines will even encourage readers to go out and get work done. The need for attention, mentioned in Jib Fowles article Advertising’s Fifteen Basic Appeals, since

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    There comes a point in every female’s life in which she starts to have insecurities, doubts her opinions, and loses her “voice.” The reason for this state of mind females have is because of the strong correlation with how advertisements make girls feel. These ads, that women see everywhere, tell them that their values and view on beauty need to change. They are now forced to see that having brand names, being thin, and wearing makeup to alter their faces is the only way they will be beautiful. It only adds fuel when a majority of the models that we see in commercials, advertisements, and runways embody and aspire to be what this view of beauty is.…

    • 629 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    According to Akst, people nowadays are becoming more and more obsessed with how they look. Because people care so much about appearances, the beauty and cosmetic surgery industry have been booming. His research shows that the number of cosmetic surgeries have gone up 24% from 2000 to 2012 (Akst 332). Even the media industry profits off of our insecurities, as their ideals of beauty are becoming more and more impossible to attain. People of all ages spend money buying products that are unnecessary in an attempt to live up to the standards the media sets for us. But why do people spend so much time and effort on their looks?…

    • 715 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rhetoric Flawless Women

    • 529 Words
    • 3 Pages

    6. Regardless of what people might claim, most individuals care about their appearance and self image. Advertisements with what looks to be flawless women are widely used across the advertisement industry. Women’s beauty and clothes commercials in particular use rhetoric to convince women they need to look like these models to be beautiful.…

    • 529 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    15 Basic Appeals

    • 502 Words
    • 3 Pages

    According to Fowles, humans have a number of needs that appeal to their psyche. For example, the need for sex, affiliation, nurture, guidance, and physiological needs. He states that these basic needs, along with many others, are what influences society’s decision making. Fowles states, “ by giving form to people’s deep-lying desires and picturing states of being that individuals privately yearn for, advertisers have the best chance of arresting attention and affecting communication” (Fowles, 1998, p.1). Advertisers try implementing messages, both hidden and apparent, in these needs in hopes of trying to manipulate our decisions. For example, when Calvin Klein used Brooke Shields to model their clothing line, they were trying to target a young female audience. The advertisers were promoting the need for attention by using a sexual figure as a tool to target this particular audience.…

    • 502 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Women In Advertising

    • 3497 Words
    • 14 Pages

    I believe women are misrepresented due to their lack of power in the media industry. Males want power, they will always want the dominant role over women and I think as long as men rule these industries women will never have a fair shot to be viewed equally if not higher then men in society. The cultural norms today blind society in recognizing these issues. This “ideal” woman has been engraved in the American pop culture and has now become a cultural norm.…

    • 3497 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Each individual has a different social identity than the next. Social identity is described as “the individual’s knowledge that he belongs to certain social groups together with some emotional and value significance to him of this group membership” (Tajfel, 1974). As humans we have 3 basic needs that have to be fulfilled; inclusion, the desire to be accepted and respected within a certain group, control, the desire to impact the environment to get others to pay attention to us, and finally affection, the desire to receive intimacy and civility from others (Donohue 65). Plastic surgery and morphing the body’s physical appearances would be the desire to be accepted and respected in that particular social group meeting their required interest and criteria. These women are using their newly founded physical attributes to gain fame as well as to prosper financially by being featured in music videos, featured in men’s’ magazines, appearing on reality TV, dating men in the spotlight and winning Urban Modeling Awards which would be control, the desire to impact the environment to get others to pay attention to us. Studies have proven that the enlarged rear and wide set hips are more attractive to the male gender because it symbolizes fertility this impacts affection, the desire to receive intimacy and civility from others. In otherwise, “b?#*@$! trying to get choose” and they do this by enhancing their womanly curves that their mother wasn’t able to provide them…

    • 1315 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The media puts an overwhelming amount of pressure onto females, in magazines and on television to look, act and dress a certain way essentially for the male gaze which Gauntlett discusses. In each teen magazine there are a number of advertisements about plastic surgery, dieting and fashion which could lead to depression, eating disorders, suicidal thoughts and negative labeling of other girls in society…

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In comparison to how starting from a young age women are idolizing TV models who portray the ideal body image that every woman should have, but because celebrities are constantly updating what happens in their daily lives and create unrealistic body images that causes young women to admire them and aspire to be like them. Dsymorphia, a condition in which there is dissatisfaction with body appearance, is on the rise as young women struggle to reach perfection. Because they go through body changes, young women feel dissatisfied and embarrassed with their body causing them to resort to social media where they portray the ideal body image that they should have. In the article, “Celebrity influence on your teen’s body image” by Dr. Gail Gross discusses…

    • 335 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The average girl does not easily fit in to society’s view of women. It isn’t supermodels who watch reality television and read the articles on “getting a guy and dropping 20 pounds”(70). Media has become a partial cause to young girls getting eating disorders or plastic surgery just to become “prettier”. They want to become perfect.…

    • 540 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In Joan Brumberg book The Body Project he states, “Today, many young girls worry about the contours of their bodies especially shape, size and muscle tone because they believe the body is the ultimate expression of the self.” That is true when people meet you for the first time they don’t see your personality they see your outer appearance. They do not automatically see how much of a good person you are, or how much of a horrible person you are. They see what you allow them to see. "The media markets desire. And by reproducing ideals that are absurdly out of line with what real bodies really do look like...the media perpetuates a market for frustration and disappointment. Its customers will never disappear," writes Paul Hamburg, an assistant professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. Truer word have never been spoken. They bait women with these ideal of the “perfect” body, showing woman, the girl you could be. Then they sell you their products which are used to help you get that perfect body. Within these magazines are unhealthy diets that are not always safe for you to use and does not give you the results you wanted. Which causes more frustration for young women. They strive to have these bodies that they can not possess. This can lead to anorexia and bulimia. 47% of girls in 5th-12th grade reported wanting to lose weight because of magazine pictures, Michael Levine of USA Today proposes.…

    • 1317 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Likewise, Fashion magazines like Vogue with their glossy advertisements covering page after page represents the thin archetype. Many argue that the fashion industry has gone lengths to enhance their products, using models and excessive editing features. Mike Madrid, a well-known author, continues the argument stating, “…many feel the ultra-thin models used in fashion present the women with an unattainable, unhealthy body type” (Madrid 298). Many fashion magazines are full of advertisements of stick-thin women, portrayed in a sexual manner. Conversely, who is to say the consumers looking at these ads may not even be focused on the product but the models, themselves? Another study was conducted, where women ages 18-30 were told to look at five different fashion advertisements in magazines for a period of 15 seconds each. Using eye-tracking technology, they saw that many of their eyes focused on the slim figures of the models and body dissatisfaction greatly rose. Though there are limitations to these studies because of the homogeneity of the samples, there is evidence due to eye-tracking equipment that there is a greater focus on the model’s body features from skinny waists to large breasts, causing a surge in body discontent (Bury, Tiggermann, Slater 8). Marketers’ goal is for consumers to buy the product they are trying to promote through advertisements. However, if their…

    • 1713 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    References: Markey, Charlotte N., 2012, “Emerging Adults ' Responses to a Media Presentation of Idealized Female Beauty: An Examination of Cosmetic Surgery in Reality Television”, Psychology of Popular Media Culture, viewed on 27 July 2012, <http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&id=2012-10791-001>…

    • 3731 Words
    • 15 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Beauty Myth

    • 1163 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Humans seem to be obsessed with beauty, at least in our western culture. Thousands of advertisements are created and put into publication everyday and then distributed to communities all over the world. As we flip through our magazines and newspapers, turn on the TV, or glance at the billboards high above us, we can't help being influenced by what we see. Advertisements can be successful at selling their product to their audience by manipulating the consumers' fears. Advertising surrounds us and creates a world that we only wish existed. They focus on sending out a message that informs women what they need to do in order to become accepted by society. We will never see an ad that is labeled the perfect woman or man because if society gives us evidence that such as person or image is real, it can be easily manipulated and their role as the decision maker of beauty is now questioned.…

    • 1163 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Unrealistic Body Image

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages

    For years the media has portrayed the body images of many women and men as unrealistic in comparison to society. They have depicted the current body image as flawless skin, slim waists, enlarged muscles, exotic features, large chests and butts. The image that the media has sold to society has changed the culture of the youth, especially for young women. Magazines, television shows, movies, and clothing ads, have convinced the younger generation to have bodies like celebrities or digitally edited models. The media has contributed to a false sense of body image due to sociocultural factors, such as unrealistic media images of flawless beauty.…

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    More often you see young girls wearing short skirts, tight pants and cut shirts. They want to be noticed and do whatever they can to achieve that. They know that if they show enough of their body and make themselves look desirable enough they will succeeded. This is a tactic used by advertisers everywhere. If a woman believes she needs a man to succeed in life and the only way to get a man is to look good, that is what she is going to try. This is one of the accepted ideas about our culture which certainly pops up everywhere in advertisements to sell products. When a man sees a woman as desirable in an advertisement while she does or wears a certain thing, you will be able to sell that product to women because she will believe that if she wears or does what the advertisements says she will be a desirable woman and maybe that one new product that she buys will be the one thing that attracts the attention of a guy and gets him to notice and accept her, thereby wanting her.…

    • 905 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays