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hello and welcome to my
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easy-to-understand guide to tight which
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is a print advert set text at a level
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for the Media Studies educast
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exam tied could appear in a question in
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component one for one of two sections
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and that is either representation or
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audiences I'm going to do this video
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which is going to be focused on
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audiences so tight but there is a
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separate video about representations so
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if you're interested in the
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representation questions using tied then
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please check that video out as well and
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if it does come up within the audience
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questions they will be stepped questions
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some that require a shorter one word or
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one sentence answers and some that
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require a more in-depth answer as well
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and it is going to require some factual
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knowledge about the product its target
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audience and some understanding of how
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that product the advert targets those
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particular people so you're going to
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need to be able to identify the target
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audience for tight this is reasonably
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simple you can probably tell from the
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advert and the choices of people within
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the advert that the target audience is
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female predominantly probably 18 to 40
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so it's hard to tell the age of the
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women in the advert because they
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illustrate it they're almost timeless
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it's very difficult to tell their age
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and I guess that helps the advert appeal
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to a wider age range of people but in
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the 1950s the kind of people who would
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be on their own shopping for laundry
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products and doing the laundry for
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themselves and their families would have
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been those women who were housewives and
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who had their own families and they
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would have been around eighteen to forty
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years of age the product is likely to be
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targeted mostly at white women don't
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forget in the 1950s immigration and
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diversity was only really starting to
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happen within Britain and predominantly
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the audience's that were targeted by
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products on television and in the print
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media were white women and so perhaps
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that is why there's a lack of other
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ethnicities within the advert and
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because it does mention America within
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the advert we can assume that the target
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audience is predominantly Americans
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although it would also have appeal to
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any woman with
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post-war Allied countries so Britain etc
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as well what you need to be able to do
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is have a think about how it appeals to
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that particular target audience so the
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fact that the choice of characters when
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the adverts are women aged 18 to 40 are
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very beautiful that is a way of
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targeting women who had aspirations to
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be perfect housewives perfect mothers so
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the representations are a good way of
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targeting that audience the use of
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language you know they use the word
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women or women so many times in this
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advert that it is clear that that is who
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they're targeting so it's important to
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be able to see how they've used language
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to target that audience as well they use
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a lot of direct address so the use of
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the word you appears several times
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within the advert so that direct mode of
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address is a good way of drawing in your
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target audience to the images they use
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would have appealed to the target
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audience the image of the lady appears
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to be a kind of subtle intertextual
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reference to perhaps a wartime
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propaganda poster featuring a character
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called Rosie the Riveter this adverts
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might have reminded many audiences in
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the 50s of that advert which home was
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quite famous within the 1940s and so
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that's a good way of targeting those
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audiences in the 50s who may have
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remembered the Rosie the Riveter poster
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from the previous decade the woman's
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dress codes so her outfit her hairstyle
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and the curls with the headscarf
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actually reflects what was fashionable
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in the 1950s there were many famous film
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stars like Betty Grable and Veronica
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Lake who had hairstyles like this and so
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the representations would have reflected
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what was popular at the time the clothes
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hanging on the washing line in the
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cartoon strip at the bottom of the
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advert helped us to identify the marital
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status and family situation of the
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target audience there are men's shirts
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and there are children's clothes on the
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washing line which suggests that the
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target audience are going to be women
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who are married in heterosexual
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relationships with children as was quite
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common for that age group in the 1950s
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there is an image of the washing
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machine in the top right-hand part of
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the adverts and this is also a really
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good way of targeting that post-war
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1950s audience because in the 1950s we
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have this sudden boom of consumerism
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rationing had ended people started to
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get more disposable income consumerism
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went through the roof and people started
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to be able to buy new technologies like
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washing machines that they've never had
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before and so the use of what would have
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been a very new and very fashionable
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item like a washing machine on the
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advert it's really good way of drawing
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in those audiences in the 1950s and in
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particular those audiences that aspired
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to be fashionable or have the latest
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technologies and in order to impress all
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their friends there is a small stamp on
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the advert which says guaranteed by Good
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Housekeeping now Good Housekeeping is
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and was a magazine still exists today
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and obviously at women who are primarily
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based in the home and good housekeeping
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was seen as quite a aspirational opinion
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leader for audiences it was a magazine
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that was very well respected by women of
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this particular demographic and so
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featuring it's kind of seal of approval
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or endorsement on the advert would help
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to attract women because they would
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think well if Good Housekeeping thinks
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this product it's good quality then it
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must be the advert uses a variety of
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written language in order to try and
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encourage the audience to take that
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preferred reading they use words like
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miracle trust like no other and they're
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constantly using those words to build up
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this idea that tide is brilliant
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and that is very different to all other
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watch products on the market at the time
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so the use of the words is there to try
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and encourage the audience's to take
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that preferred reading that tide is a
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great product some audiences in the
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1950s and some audiences in modern-day
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periods may have reacted in more of a
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negotiated or oppositional way to this
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advert for example those women who was
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starting to develop more feminist ideas
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as was happening in the 1950s and going
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into the 60s may well have seen this
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advert and felt that perhaps it was a
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little sexist old-fashioned and they
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didn't want to be seen as
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Housewives loving their domestic chores
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some women may have felt it
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oversimplified their lives
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certainly modern audiences often look
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adverts like this and responding quite
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an oppositional way feeling as though is
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an incredibly sexist old-fashioned
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advert but the way audiences respond
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will entirely depend on their gender for
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example whether they're male or female
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men might respond very differently to
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this advert and the cultural context
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they come from whether they do a lot of
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housework and the historical time period
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which the audience originates from as
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well if you're looking for audience
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Theory gerbner and his cultivation
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theory could be applied to this advert
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with the idea being that many women
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would have been exposed to a lot of
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adverts like this in the 1950s and so
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the effects of this advert and the
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effects of the media language and the
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representations might have built up and
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up and up over time as they'd seen more
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and more adverts of women enjoying
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housework of perfect lifestyles of tide
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and so perhaps the effects on an
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audience could be seen to cultivate or
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develop over time depending on if
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they've seen a lot of other adverts that
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are similar gerbner might also believe
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that this advert is trying to cultivate
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or develop particular ideas and
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viewpoints so if you have a look at the
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advert there are lots of messages that
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are repeated several times there's three
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separate bullet points where they
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reiterate over and over again that this
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is going to be the cleanest wash the
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whitest wash there's lots of repetition
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within the advert about how this is
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exactly what women want this is giving
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the audience giving women what they
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desire and so repeated messages
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throughout the advert hopefully in from
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Procter and Gamble's point of view are
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going to cultivate the idea in the
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audience's mind that tide is the best
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product on the market you can see that
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these messages might have cultivated
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over time as well if you look at some of
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tides other adverts from the same decade
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the styles the messages the images are
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all very similar and so perhaps the
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effects and the meanings from these
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adverts might have cultivated over time
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to really enforce the idea with the
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audience that tide was the greatest
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product on the market for long
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another thing that you might want to
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know for this audiences section is how
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audiences might use media products
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differently you might want to look at
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the users and gratifications theory for
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this it's not a set theory but it does
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come in useful for working out how
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audiences use products differently many
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audiences would still have looked at
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adverts for entertainment value it still
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would have seen quite quirky they
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haven't really got to the stage in the
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1950s of being really bored by
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advertising as we often are now and so
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many audiences would have quite liked to
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look at these adverts and been quite
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entertained particularly in this advert
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by the kind of nice brightly coloured
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images the cartoon strip lots of writing
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and it would have seemed perhaps quite
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exciting to some audiences other
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audiences might have used adverts like
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this for information about products
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there were very few places where women
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could get information about products to
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buy a lot of people didn't have
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televisions yet it wasn't very
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commonplace in the 1950s it was still
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quite a new technology and there was no
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internet obviously so if you wanted to
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get information about new products that
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were out on the market or what different
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products might do for you then looking
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at the adverts and reading all this
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information and the small print would
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have been a good way to get information
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for an audience in the 1950s many
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audiences might also have looked at this
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product and been able to identify with
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the people in it so being able to
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identify maybe with their lifestyles or
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with what they wanted to achieve and
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they may have seen it as escapist and
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aspirational something that you know
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perhaps perhaps audiences at the time
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would have looked at adverts and and
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used it to dream about having a better
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life some people may not have had a lot
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of money after the war and may have seen
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adverts like this and really enjoyed
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looking at them to dream of what they
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could buy when they had more money in
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the future