Friday 3 December 2010

Presentation: -
Representatino of Women








Avril Lavigne: Be your own star

Avril Lavigne: Be your own star

            This is a distinct and well branded perfume that has been advertised and represented by a well known celebrity and idol. The target audience of this product is young to late teenagers, and actual fans of Avril Lavigne, she is promoting a punk-style of life. This can also include the trend of her style ranging to punk and rock teenagers. The Maslow theory includes the needs for prominence and to find the meaning in your own life as the slogan demonstrates ‘be your own star’

            There is no particular setting to this certain advertisement; it has more of a show stopping lighted background with excellent use of full colours to relate back to the black and a mixture of rose and ultra pink perfume bottle and packaging; the lighting is definitely artificial and created by computer. There is a spectacular show of lightening that emanates and shines on Avril. It shines the spotlight on her as she is the main brand promoter; and makes her look like the centre of the advertisement and gives off a wow factor to the audience.  The plush use of colour makes this advert look bright and appealing to the targeted audience; it uses stars in the background to relate back to the perfume name ‘black star’ and the slogan: ‘be your own star’. The stars are in with the whole pink theme and are floating around Avril and in the picture, some of them fading out to black to link with the overall black/pink themed colour. The background has been retouched and Avril has been air brushed.

Everything sticks to the theme of pink and black and Avril seems to look as if she is in power by her strong posture and the way she is looking directly through the advert seems to make it feel as if she is looking at you in particular. She is standing with legs wide apart and arms in the air doing some kind of pose that gives off the feeling of power and down-to-earth effect. This makes the product stand out more because she is linked to the pink and black theme and is holding a black star in her raised hand. She is wearing girly clothes that hint the targeted audience as young to late teens that are both punk and girly; opening the range of the audience to a variety of people.

Female Stereotypes in advertising

Female Stereotypes in advertising
Advert A:
I think Advert A is using ‘the alpha female’ stereotype for its advert. I think this is because they are using a woman who is focused in the actual picture and is definitely in control of her situation. She seems stern and powerful. Her facial expression is that of a serious tone and ‘hard working’ person that she is. She does seem rather scary, as is the portrayal of the actual stereotype. The fact that she is wearing glasses gives of the image that she is an intelligent and smart person, hard working and a business. She is wearing a maroon coloured formal shirt that shows she is in a working environment, you can also see books behind her in the background which further enhances and portrays the business woman image, the alpha female. Dominant and powerful, a career crazed person; someone who only has eyes for their career and that her life is work.
Advert B:
I definitely think that advert B is there is the ‘beauty bunny’ stereotype. This is because the advert that she is in, and the way she has been positioned and propped shows that she thinks that just because there is science used to describe and promote the product, she thinks that it is guaranteed to work. The stereotype of this advert says that the female (beauty bunny) is into every new invention and thinks it will work; she reserves her greatest enthusiasm for the latest shampoo, or cream etc. This is portrayed because she is using the mascara in this advert and smiling out to the audience, she seems to be satisfied with the quality of the product and there is ‘scientifically’ sounding text of information sub-headlined onto the advert. It has details of the science behind the product and models it on the happy ‘beauty bunny’ that is acceptable to any ideas that will let them improve their looks and image.    
Advert C:
Advert C uses ‘The Fashionista’ (Kate Moss is used in this advert a well known clothes model) stereotype. I know this because the fashionista is a female representation of a woman that appears glossy in every magazine, such as vogue, the upper class and more expensive and well known brands; We can see it in this advert because the woman in this Dior advert is well dressed in branded and exclusive clothes and posing in a sitting position. She is wearing a Mac jacket that is tailored for the need of the advert she is staring straight into the camera. She looks like someone who is only interested in how they look and always wants to know about the new clothes and make up etc. She is the woman who is not old enough to care about her skin unlike the beauty bunny. She has neither personality nor intelligence. The woman in this advert is expressionless looking rather blank and lifeless, fitting into the stereotype of no personality or intelligence, just a beauty object. She is promoting a certain type of lifestyle.

Advert D:
This advert uses the ‘perfect mum’ stereotype. You can see this because the mum is seated in a buggy being ‘pushed’ by her small toddler. She is laughing and the infant looks like he is enjoying himself. It demonstrates the perfect mum stereotype by making her caring and nurturing, raising her children well and thinking only of them. It shows her with her child sharing quality time using slight humour since it is she who is being pushed in the pram instead of her child.
Advert E:
The granny stereotype is used mostly in life insurance adverts. The granny is holding a life insurance certificate and smiling, looking happy that she is covered for her death. This is because as an elderly person she is nearing the end of her life and senior people are best used in adverts such as this to emphasize the ‘importance’ of covering yourself. The granny in this advert is smiling and pleased that she is covered and the granny stereotype fits this type of adverts because she has few interests outside her grandchildren since the money from her life insurance will go towards paying for her funeral or to help out with her grandchildren, her own children and family in general.

Representations and Stereotypes in Advertising

Representations and Stereotypes in Advertising
 
This is a positive representations in certain and limited ways. This advert shows and demonstrates the interconnected relationship of heterosexual links between the men and women. You can see a woman and man holding one another, a woman with her hand on another woman’s shoulder and has used an even number of men and woman, three each. Another way that they show the positive attitude is that they have used different races and skin tones; from white to black and Hispanic. 
A negative factor to this advert is that there are some subtle stereotypes being reinforced; showing the audience that all women should be beautiful and fit, as in body and should be voluptuous and shapely ; because all the women in the advert are beautiful and have glossy, lovely bodies and seem to be attracted and enticing to men.
                Also the woman in the top right corner appears to be sexually submissive to the man she is leaning against, another stereotype being displayed. There are no props used in adverts, just pictures of the actual product placed in front of the people by computer. The whole advert had an artificial light that shines onto the models. The background is simple and plain making the main focus of the eye on the people and the product that is in the immediate foreground.
                The image has been retouched and airbrushed; the actual models’ skins have been made glossier and shiny, flawless. The target audience is people who are into this product and have a certain branded taste in perfumes.