ADVERTISING & MARKETING

Your Ad Here

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Women in Advertising

Women in advertising is a vast and broad topic. This web page concentrates mainly on the effects of advertising on women as well as the representation of women in advertising throughout the course of history.


Wonderbra:Young pretty blond in twenties wearing airwonderbra

One night in a club I was wearing my wonderbra and was getting quite a lot of attention even to the point of two men came over to tell me what a wonderful chest I had!! But the funniest thing happened, a chap was walking across the room but staring so hard at my chest that he suddenly fell down the stairs much to the amusement of myself and all my friends, but my Wonderbra certainly attracted a lot of attention that evening!!! -- B J (2001-11-28) 







History of Women in Television Advertisements 

There are many different stereotypes of women in advertising. Throughout history there have been many studies that proved women were mainly portrayed on television advertisements as housewives or occupations that are subservient to men. Studies also show the disproportional ratio of women to men in TV advertisements. In the 70’s, it was reported that women were found on camera only 21 % of the time. Allan and Coltrane conducted a study that showed inversely, in the 80’s female appearance on TV advertisement were 5.8% less compared to the 50’s! (Pierce, 1999) In 1996, the Kaiser Family Foundation and Children Now calculated that women were on camera 42 percent of the time. Though this was an increase percentage wise from previous decades, gender inequalities still are rampant. This fact is proved a study conducted by Professors Daniel J. Bretl and Joanne Cantor of the University of Wisconsin (1995) which found that 90% of voice-overs used in advertisements were male, despite some of the products were aimed predominantly to females. (http://www.childnow.org) 

Effects of Advertising on Women 

Two pretty young twenty year old girls with a guy in his twenties in the middle. The girls are laying on him.Advertising has many effects on society as a whole. As a result of not being in as many commercials, at very young ages boys and girls conclude that girls are valued less than boys. The commercials that females are mostly in are ones that portray them as them and thin and beautiful while some how also being subservient to men. The negative effects of advertising on women fall into a huge range of problems. The most common would effect be the constant increase of women’s struggles with dieting and eating disorders. As, Wilson and Blackhurst point out, “…fifty-six percent of all women are on diets (Pipher, 1995) …and eighty percent of girls have dieted by the time they reach eighteen (Brown, 1993).” Unfortunately as girls were raised, they were always taught to be submissive and dainty. It almost seemed like they are told their opinions don’t matter and that they should just sit there look pretty or be fragile like glass dolls. Many ads use this to their advantage. They make girls think that the only thing they should do is work on their appearance, because their opinions don’t matter. This results in several girls falling into depression or developing eating disorders. The inner struggles of keeping the pain in cause some girls to want to commit suicide before wanting to be fat. (Kilborne, 1999 p.132)

How Can We Try to Put an End to the Negative Effects of Advertising on Women? 

There are a billion hypotheses on why advertising is so effective on women. The important question is, what does one do to stop and try to prevent future generations from falling into the struggles women past and present had to face? Start awareness groups - that explain to pre-adolescent teens not to be manipulated by advertisers.




~ To ban pro-anorexia and pro-bulmia sites – many of these teach young girls to practice eating disorder. A campaign perhaps to banning such sites would be beneficial.

~ To place advertisements that have positive effects - ones that get the message across to girls that they should accept themselves the way they are.

~ As Kate Pierce points out “Equal pay and equal portrayals in the media will not by themselves change the status of women in America, but they can be catalyst for further change.” Though it is human nature to care about one’s appearance, it should not be women nature to scrutinize to the point of self-destruction.


a plus size model that looks like a average woman in a bathing suitThe importance of the youth obtaining this knowledge is crucial. Advertiser’s play out sex roles in even children’s programming “The result is a continuum of limiting messages that often tell girls and boys alike that female appearance is central, that boys can do and achieve things girls can¹t, and that boys have more value than girls.” 

The first step toward revolution is awareness, to educate the future generations. It is not really possible for the present to make a substantial change. People are set in their ways and practices they individual beliefs. The fact is that there have been plenty of women in America that strive and have overcome many obstacles but are not recognized at the same stature as men. Hopefully, the future generations will learn and realize that every man and woman is created equal, despite centuries of contradiction. 

No comments:

Post a Comment