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Christina Aguilera Video: Frontline: The Merchants of Cool
Video Frontline: The Merchants of Cool |  |  | | List Price: $29.98 | | Label: PBS (Direct)
Salesrank: 25640
Released: October 4, 2005 | | Our Price: $16.73 | | Used Price: $20.44 | | MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD | |
Editorial Review: Studio: Pbs Release Date: 05/04/2009 Run time: 60 minutes Frontline: The Merchants of Cool Reviews: good, but graphic  2009-05-09 - The info was very good, thought provoking. A true picture of the culture we live in. I feel it could have been less graphic in some of the imagagery. It would of been a real benefit to show this to the youth of our generation. Made for pbs I expected it to be a little more toned down.
Another attempt to disguise sex  2008-11-22 - This program doesn't deserve a positive rating of any kind.
80% of the program was dedicated to marketing techniques and research on the media and their efforts to advertise to the teen market and what the teen market demands from them. The other 20% was dedicated to gratuitous sexual and vulgar footage in the disguise of support for the research done.
It is inappropriate and feeds the growing problems of our youth today by supplying them with more images and behavior that has no moral value.
The program would have been acceptable for a marketing or research class on the college level IF it didn't have the unnecessary video footage. As it stands right now, it is crude, vulgar and not suitable for any age.
Marketing to kids.  2008-06-15 - This film exposes some of the marketing techniques used on young people.
I'm glad to read that another reviewer shows it to his students each year.
Another teacher who showed it to her class was less impressed with the response it received from some students who thought it was dated. There are some more recent documentaries on this issue from the Media Education Foundation, but this Frontline presentation is a good place to start.
I learned in the film The Corporation that some psychologists hired by the corporate world work to achieve a high "nag factor," that is an intense pressuring from kids on parents to purchase particular items for them. The techniques are many, and are constantly used on adults as well. Another related field to marketing is public relations. PR's founder, Edward Bernays, wrote a book called Propaganda, that was utilized by Joseph Goebbels during the rise of fascism. Bernays, a nephew of Sigmund Freud, boasted that "If we understand the mechanism and motives of the group mind, it is now possible to control and regiment the masses according to our will without their knowing it."
To counter all of this propaganda, I'd suggest the following resources:
Adbusters - Adbusters also offers items for teachers to use in the classroom.
Can't Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes the Way We Think and Feel
So Sexy So Soon: The New Sexualized Childhood and What Parents Can Do to Protect Their Kids
New Moon: the Magazine for Girls & Their Dreams This commercial free magazine written by and for girls, includes a lot of insightful comments on media manipulation from the girls.
Teen Voices This magazine is for young women.
Hopefully there will someday be magazines that aren't manipulating boys and young men in the service of corporate interests.
Manufacturing Consent - Noam Chomsky and the Media This documentary has become something of a movement, inspiring a new level of media criticism and countless efforts to create grassroots media.
Chomsky's work has been a big influence on Amy Goodman of the independent news hour, "Democracy Now!." Standing Up to the Madness: Ordinary Heroes in Extraordinary Times
Good, but not great  2008-05-10 - I purchased this title to show to my senior high school Economics students thinking it would fire up a lot of discussion about how teenagers are manipulated. Instead it elicited yawns and many comments about how the material was dated and didn't apply to them. I'm still deciding whether or not to include it in next year's curriculum.
Please enter a title for your review  2008-02-15 - the part about the underground marketing to make Sprite hiphop was interesting but didn't cover the campaign beyond one promotional event so i didn't really learn anything about how successful it was. this film is mostly propaganda for people with no style who think anyone who likes something they don't must be braindead and feel clever telling others "you only like that because it was marketed to you". if you're willing to accept the equation that if 1> a product is marketed, and 2> someone buys that product, then 3> that person bought the product because the marketing is so successfully insidious, then you'll enjoy this film. if you require the question of whether marketing makes a product cool (i.e. brainwashes people into liking it) or merely makes people aware of a product which they then make up their own mind about to be addressed you might find a lot of the conclusions the narrator reaches prejudiced.
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