Saturday, March 12, 2011

    Advertisements drive people crazy. It's a fact. There in no one who will stand up and say "I like ads". A few may make us smile and feel warm inside, but the vast majority are designed to hammer a message into our heads. In the time between the 50's and the 70's advertising companies would use "jingles" and like LSD never completely disappear. Since the dot-com explosion advertising has become both better and worse. Programs such as google have made ads unobtrusive, even helpful; Spam is the counterbalance. Ads in magazines have been around almost as ling as the magazines have, such as the one I am going to comment on. This is an ad from Parenting, on why people should buy Nutella. It makes use of stereotypes, image identification and logical and pathetic appeals.


   This advertisement uses the stereotypes of the (single or stay-at-home) mother making breakfast, happy smiling children and healthy "balanced" breakfast. The single or stay at home stereotype is identified in this ad by 1. The hair colour 2. Clothing 3. Lack of cleavage 4. Holding a child 5. Spotless kitchen. This stereotype is used to target other single/stay-at-home mothers and to say that Nutella makes breakfast easy. The second stereotype is the happy smiling children. This ad uses this stereotype in order to portray Nutella as the cause of the happiness. The last stereotype is the myth of the "Balanced Breakfast." The reason for using this is to create the illusion that Nutella is a part of a balanced breakfast or even that Nutella can be a part of one.

Advertising companies create connections between one  (negative) product and one (positive) product. Nutella is obviously unhealthy, but it is put on whole grain bread, thereby making it "healthy." It is implied that Nutella is good for you. Plates of fruit cover most of the table, the rest being covered by cups of milk and orange juice. Nutella is also used to signify that making breakfast can be simple and easy. The image of a clean kitchen seems to be connected the fact that using Nutella on bread does not require cooking: no cleaning. The woman's hair and makeup are styled perfectly, as are the children's. Hence the fast part of making breakfast.

This ad makes use of strange mental links called "keywords." It makes use of several words: unique, wholesome, roasted, nutritious, delicious flavor, tasty, good. These all try to paint Nutella in a positive light. A few of the other text tricks are the use of numbers to confuse the reader and the ingredients are "high quality" ingredients. It also mentions a lack of artificial preservatives.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

A book review on The Fellowship of the Ring

                                                     All that is gold does not glitter,
                                                       Not all those who wander are lost;
                                                       The old that is strong does not wither,
                                                       Deep roots are not reached by the frost.
                                                       From the ashes a fire shall be woken.
                                                       A light from the shadows shall spring;
                                                       Renewed shall be blade that was broken,
                                                       The crownless again shall be king.

The Fellowship of the Ring was a book written by J.R.R. Tolkien. It is the first of a trilogy describing the history of the war between Sauron and the rest of middle earth. My mother had been telling me about The lord of the Rings my entire life. So ever since I first turned the pages of the prequil, The Hobbit, I have been hooked. The Fellowship of the Ring is no different, it is entertaining and an epic.

As England had very little mythology of it's own Tolkien tried to invent it. His effort was a triumph! The story was completly origional (which is more than you can say for books written now) and is the greatest epic since Homer. The story is about a young hobbit named Frodo who is given a quest to take the one ring (a ring made with the greater part of the power of the dark lord Sauron) and destroy it in the crack of doom. It sounds easy enough, unless you consider that the dark lord does not want the ring destroyed and sends armies to recover it or that the crack of doom is in the heart of the enemy teratory.

Frodo is not alone on this journey, he is joined by eight faithful companions such as the wizard Gandalf or the elf Legolas. Frodo is a hobbit. He is brave, selfless and the most unlikely person to be chosen for the task. Representing the Hobbits are Frodo's friends Sam, Merry and Pippin. Sam is fiercely loyal to Frodo. Merry is the son of the master of Bucklandand cousin to Frodo. Pippin is the of the Thain in Tookland and also a cousen of Frodo. Hobbits are smallish relatives of men that are between two and four feet tall. Hobbits like the unadventrus lifestyle of farming and eating. They have at least seven meals a day and live in underground houses in hillsides. Gandalf the Grey is a wizard. He wields emmence power and is very knowlagible about many things. He also leads the fellowship. The wizards were sent by the Valar (gods) to help the peoples of middle earth in their fight against Sauron. Legolas is an elven prince who wields a bow and is chosen as one of the represet the elves. The elves are an imortal race created before men and have become estranged from men by this time in the history of middle earth. Gimli represents the Dwarves as one of the nine companions. Dwarves are a sturdy and strong race that are skilled in mining and metalwork, but too often succumb to greed after what they mine for. Representiong men are Boromir and Aragorn. Boromir is the proud son of the steward of Gondor (The last city defending middle earth against Sauron). Aragorn is one of the central charicters of the story. First introduced as Strider, Aragorn desteny is bound up with the story of the one ring.

Tolkien has created a new world, complete with its own extensive history and its own languages. Unlike most books today, Tolkien put a large effort into describing the distintcion between good and evil. He states it is impossible to be both good and evil or to use evil against evil. Several times Frodo tries to give the ring to those that are stronger than him and they return it to him saying that they would be more powerful, but they would also become corrupted.