7/18/2011 1:15:31 PM
Reposting since nobody reads the last post on a page:
7/18/2011 1:16:59 PM
Assymetric information? What's that?
7/18/2011 1:40:28 PM
7/18/2011 1:47:12 PM
7/18/2011 3:25:28 PM
7/18/2011 3:46:01 PM
I'd actually argue that many of the prescription drugs advertised on television cause more harm than good, but that's another discussion for another time.I guess I'm trying to delve deeper into your core philosophy here. Do you think marketing on the whole is bad, or what?
7/18/2011 3:49:18 PM
Depends, are you talking about marketing as it actually occurs in the real world or the fantasy version that occurs inside the heads of Capitalists?
7/18/2011 3:50:58 PM
I'm talking about marketing, the process of familiarizing target demographics with your product/service, in hopes that they will purchase that product/service. I understand that you have a problem with dishonest marketing.
7/18/2011 3:54:59 PM
7/18/2011 3:56:50 PM
Let me put it this way: The incentive in a free market is to get consumers to consume your product. Whether you are honest and include useful information is entirely incidental to that goal. In fact, the incentive is to lie when you can get away with it, or in most cases avoid meaningful information altogether. That's how a commercial for heart medication can consist entirely of heart-warming scenes of grandpa enjoying life and a list of possible side effects (required by law). If you want truthful, accurate information about a product, I don't know why you would trust the company itself, as it has a massive incentive to mislead, distract, or just plain lie.
7/18/2011 4:03:08 PM
Ahaha Loneshark comon, now you're just trying to add a bunch of "only"'s to my assertions to make them seem like outrageous blanket statements. You can do better than that.
7/18/2011 4:03:51 PM
7/18/2011 4:05:11 PM
7/18/2011 4:22:36 PM
7/18/2011 5:12:53 PM
7/18/2011 5:51:26 PM
7/18/2011 6:06:47 PM
7/19/2011 4:11:59 AM
7/19/2011 7:05:16 AM
7/19/2011 11:15:01 AM
7/19/2011 11:17:17 AM
7/19/2011 11:25:55 AM
A tv commercial that consists of nothing but images and sounds and emotional narratives is not the same thing as having a conversation with a representative. If those tv commercials, that consist entirely of emotional affect, had no bearing on whether a customer bought the product or not, why do they keep doing them, loneshark? Is every single Coca Cola commercial since the 70's actually a failure and they've been selling so well because of Coke's inherent goodness? Do companies pay millions of dollars for Superbowl slots in order to air completely non-information commercials just for fun? Are you really so full of yourself that you think you're completely uninfluenced by those emotional appeals in commercials (option 1)? That advertisers are just wasting their time and money (option 2)? Or do you think you're better than everyone else in this regard (option 3)? Which is it?[Edited on July 19, 2011 at 11:33 AM. Reason : .]
7/19/2011 11:33:21 AM
Fine, let me yet again say it:"A tv commercial that consists of nothing but images and sounds and emotional narratives is not the same thing as having a conversation with a representative"Wrong, they are exactly the same thing. I saw a new product commercial a week ago, it seemed like a nice product and I am more likely to try it because of it. Does that make me brainwashed? Heck no.
7/19/2011 11:40:13 AM
What about when the commercial has nothing to do with the product at all. What if the commercial consists of a polar bear drinking a soft drink and being satisfied, then going for a swim, followed by a logo? Does that make you more likely to purchase the product after viewing?[Edited on July 19, 2011 at 11:43 AM. Reason : .]
7/19/2011 11:41:37 AM
Sure, just as when I attend a political rally and the speaker speaks nothing but platitudes and wraps himself in the flag of whatever cause I support (Ron Paul, woo! End the Wars!). Does not make me brainwashed. I still retain all the objections I have to Ron Paul, his idiotic views on the monetary system. After the coke commercial I similarly still retain all the objection I have to coke, namely my sensitive teeth and my aversion to the cost.[Edited on July 19, 2011 at 11:48 AM. Reason : .,.]
7/19/2011 11:47:10 AM
Shotgun advertising like coke commercials plays on emotions because idiots make choices based on emotional appeals. shotgun advertising for coke is smart because the goal is to expose as many possible eyes to coke.shotgun advertising for politicians is smart because the goal is to use talking points to emotionally charge your base. shotgun advertising for cars is fucking awful because even idiots spend time researching and test driving cars. They still do it because advertisers are either A) morons or B) lazy, but most businesses dont hold them to any metrics and write them off as a cost of doing business.
7/19/2011 12:00:54 PM
7/19/2011 12:23:36 PM
7/19/2011 12:32:43 PM
7/19/2011 12:34:40 PM
You guys seem to be taking great offense at the idea that you might be susceptible to powers of suggestion and manipulation, like all human beings on planet Earth.
7/19/2011 12:40:33 PM
7/19/2011 1:04:26 PM
I think we're just laughing at the fact that you and McDanger seem to think you're above it all, when you're really just products of the exact same system, making feeble attempts to bite the hand that feeds, but not making a compelling case for how things should operate or how that change would ever come about. Or maybe you're admitting that you're just as dumb as anyone else. Again, I think you're just a cynic. You look around and see people that are, for the most, very unintelligent. I see the same thing, but when looking for solutions, I don't hold my breath for some worker's revolution bullshit to take place, because it's never going to happen.
7/19/2011 1:18:41 PM
7/19/2011 1:23:58 PM
Brainwashing just isn't the correct term to use here. Conditioning is a lot more appropriate. Brainwashing suggests that patently false beliefs are imposed by marketing on the whole, which I don't believe is true. That's a lot different that a subtle manipulation of the audience's desires.I recognize that all humans have flaws, myself included. Speaking of staying on topic, what does any of this have to do with socialism?[Edited on July 19, 2011 at 1:39 PM. Reason : ]
7/19/2011 1:37:16 PM
7/19/2011 1:47:16 PM
7/19/2011 2:07:52 PM
7/19/2011 2:14:59 PM
7/19/2011 2:29:04 PM
7/19/2011 2:41:32 PM
7/19/2011 2:55:36 PM
7/20/2011 5:52:43 PM
7/20/2011 7:03:05 PM
I couldn't have picked a more perfect example.And as for the study...well, I believe in capitalism so I'm retarded by default.
7/20/2011 9:53:00 PM
7/21/2011 9:46:44 AM
7/21/2011 9:46:52 AM
Nobody's arguing they can market literally anything; what they do market, however, is utter shit. They've managed to minimize the quality of what their customers will buy, subject to competition against each other.
7/21/2011 9:49:18 AM
7/21/2011 9:51:07 AM
7/21/2011 9:52:20 AM
Accepting that some meats have higher fat contents than others, yes. Your body will break it down into proteins, fats, sugars, and various vitamins as present. As all animals require the same vitamins and minerals to survive, they all contain them.
7/21/2011 9:56:27 AM