Companies
nowadays do an incredible job reaching their target audience through
advertising. After reading several of my
fellow male classmates blogs I noticed a common theme within the majority of
the blogs. They talked about how the
companies exploit the insecurities of the young male population. They recognize the mass desire among the
demographic to be a ‘manly man’ and use manly men in their advertisements to
exploit these insecurities. This tactic
is called hypermasculinity.
In Tyler
Nakamura’s blog, He compared an ad produced by the National Hockey League to an
ad produced by Nintendo, the creators of the video game Joanna Dark. The tagline for the video game was; “Are you man enough for Joanna Dark?” Tyler said, “In the case of the ad for
Nintendo they questioned the manhood of the people that played the Tomb Raider
game and not theirs.” This quotation
perfectly describes hypermasculinty.
Nintendo recognizes the desire to be manly and they use that to their
advantage.
In Adam Tusin’s blog, he reviewed
the “The Man Your Man Could Smell Like” ad produced by Old Spice. Adam discussed the aspect of hypermasculinity
used within the ad. He said, “Throughout
the entire duration of the ad a comparison is being made by how he (the model)
presents himself in such a glorified fashion, while the consumer (myself) is
just referenced as an Average Joe.” What
Adam meant was that during the ad, the model continued to build himself up as
such a manly man while at the same time putting the viewer down so their
insecurity will grow.
In Simon Turkel’s blog, he analyzed
a commercial created by Gillette. He
observed that throughout the commercial there were half-naked, and muscular men
socializing with recognizable female celebrities. He said, “The commercial ends with the head
honcho actor saying “the night is yours”. That last statement relates to
the masculinity discourse, that all masculine men can conquer the world, be
successful, be strong and tough, party all night and get any woman he so
desires.” In other words, Simon was
talking about how manly men can do and get whatever they desire, and that by
Gillette is saying if you use their product, you’ll be well on your way to
manhood.
Hypermasculinity is such an
effective advertising tactic. The insecurities of the male population are well
known by the advertisers and they use that to their advantage. They target the males by using overly manly
men in their advertisements, and by saying that their product is the first step
in becoming a man, and it works. I know
it works because the aspect of hypermasculinity has been used time and time
again in advertisements and will continue to be used.
Blog URLs:
Tyler’s Blog: http://tylersmediaandsocietyblog.blogspot.ca/
Adam’s Blog: http://at12nk.wordpress.com/2013/11/08/what-the-hail/
Simon’s Blog: http://turkelsimon.wordpress.com/
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