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Propaganda techniques

Propaganda techniques. Or How the media gets Americans to buy, think, and vote. What is propaganda?. Persuasive techniques applied by politicians, journalists, television personalities, and others to accomplish their desired ends.

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Propaganda techniques

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  1. Propaganda techniques Or How the media gets Americans to buy, think, and vote

  2. What is propaganda? • Persuasive techniques applied by politicians, journalists, television personalities, and others to accomplish their desired ends. • These techniques persuade us not through the give-and-take of argument and debate, but through manipulating symbols and basic human emotions.

  3. Testimonial • Use of a celebrity (athletes, musicians, actors) or authority figure (doctors, auto mechanics, plumbers) to endorse or promote a product, cause, idea. Products • Examples: Troy Polomalu and L T anwswering mother’ call; meeting at end of tunnel • Michael Jordan and Hanes • Dentists and tooth pastes • Jessica Simpson and Pro Active Acne medication

  4. Testimonials Use of causes • Sarah MacLaughlin—ASPCA • Presidents Bush and Clinton –Tsunami relief • P Diddy- Vote or die campaign • Lance Armstrong- Live Strong, cancer

  5. Plain Folks • Use of a common man, the • Scenes of family, blue-collar workers, Products Oil-man, T-Bone Pickins-- energy plan Brawny—lumberjack—paper towels

  6. Plain Folks Use with Causes (lofty purpose) • Ordinary families using CHIPS (health care for children) • Joe the Plumber—ordinary citizen used to show values of all

  7. Bandwagon • Use of threat of not being one of the crowd, being left out is substituted for evidence of the quality of the product • Use of appeal to the subject to follow the crowd, to join in because others are doing so as well.

  8. Bandwagon Products such as the Verizon Network Walmart ad-everyone tries to rush into store at same time Gatorade-Everyone follows Sidney Crosby’s lead in drinking gatorade Nike-Just do it

  9. Card-stacking • Providing only information that is positive to an idea or product and omitting information that is negative to the idea or product Ex: Warnings given at end of drug commercials

  10. Card-stacking Use of technique to sell products • Lipitor ads—positive information given at first; negative side effects rushed at end • Alcohol ads—pleasant setting—pretty people, warnings about drunken driving and dangers to pregnant women • Trident—4 out of 5 dentists recommend

  11. Card-stacking Use to promote causes or ideas (Lofty purpose) BP—clean energy, environmentally friendly; do not address fact that it is not available in near future

  12. Glittering generalities • Use of words that have different positive meanings but are linked to highly valued concepts. • Ex: patriotism, loyalty, green, environmentally friendly, low fat; no carbohydrates, organic

  13. Glittering generalities Used to sell products • “New And improved” Tide, Windex etc. • Chevy—”American built; solid as a rock” • Room deodorizer—”smells like the great outdoors”

  14. Glittering generalities Used for lofty purposes Examples:

  15. Hasty generalization Use of small group to represent the position of the whole group. • Ex: Even though it is the first day, I can tell this is going to be a boring course. • E-Harmony commercials “I found my soul-mate. You can too. ” • I lost 50 pounds on Alli, you can too.

  16. Red Herring • Use of change in subject to distract the reader from topic under discussion. • BP commercial displays windmills in background to distract us from the real issue of oil prices

  17. Transfer Transfer is a device by which the propagandist carries over the authority, and prestige of something we respect and revere to something he would have us accept. Use of feeling of respect or reverence to something advertisers want public to accept or buy. Ex: White lab coats to sell pain relievers and make up. • Names of cars –Impala, mustang, Taurus (bull)

  18. Transfer Used to sell products Example: Bridgestone—official tires of the NFL MM’s official candy of the Olympics Used for lofty purposes: Save theChildren Network—authority of valued institution therefore give to the charity

  19. Political ads using transfer • What is the purpose of the transfer? • Is it effective?

  20. What is going on here? • What is the propaganda device used here? • What is the purpose? • Is it effective;why or why not?

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