Tuesday 11 October 2016

Debbie Klein

Who is Debbie Klein?
The CEO of Engine, a media company that covers digital communications, advertising, direct marketing, data, public relations, brand consultancy and sponsorship. She was a founding partner in the buyout of WCRS in 2004 that eventually led to the creation of the Engine Group. 

What has she achieved?

She took charge of WCRS a year later, and ran the agency for three years before moving on to become Chief Executive of Engine Europe in June 2008. During this time she has welcomed a number of new companies into the group, with head count now numbering more than 850 in the UK alone. They have produced campaigns for a wide range of companies and organisations including Sky, Nestle, Coca-Cola, Warburtons, Unilever, Toshiba, Lexus and The Royal Navy.

What are her views on the impact of NDM on advertising?
She says that The last twenty years have been an challenging time for the media industry because of the emergence of the world wide web, the linking of the every home, and then every mobile phone – and now every TV and car – to the internet, and of course the rise of social media, turning everyone into publishers and creators.


What percentage of the advertising industry is female?
There are very few female creative directors making the adverts that women see. In 2008, just 3.6% of the world’s creative directors were female. Since then it has tripled to 11%; in London.  91% of female consumers feel advertisers don’t understand them. Seven in 10 women go further to say they feel “alienated” by advertising. Men overwhelmingly dominate creative departments and their output, which can’t be good for creativity, audiences or the way adland solves business issues.

What percentage of the advertising industry is an ethnic minority?
Actors from black, Asian or other ethnic minority groups appeared in only 5% of the almost 35,000 TV ads screened in the UK last year, according to a report. 

Who are millenials?
In October 2004, researchers Neil Howe and William Strauss called Millennials "the next great generation," which is funny. They define the group as "as those born in 1982 and approximately the 20 years thereafter." 

Why are they hard to reach for advertisers?
 Millennials are a big and extremely lucrative market, representing one fourth of the entire US population and over $200 billion in spending power.
The bad news is that it’s hard to get millennials’ attention, and traditional advertising no longer works on this generation due to the advances of technology.
What is your favourite online advertising campaign? Why?
My favourite online advertising campaign is Buzzfeed as it is interesting and also mentions celebrity gossip. Furthermore, it is acessible easily on snapchat which I use often.

Tuesday 4 October 2016

Critical Investigation: Project proposal



Working title


To what extent are females represented as sex objects in reality TV shows such as ‘Love Island’?

Angle

What impact are these objectified representations of women having on female audiences? Is this an example of negative role models?

Hypothesis

Reality TV shows are not a good influence for young female audiences as they may assume that they need to replicate their actions and live up to their physical appearances. 

Linked production piece

Music Video- work with Alayna&Ria

MIGRAIN

  • Documentary genre- Reality TV .
  • Women are being represented as sex objects- reinforcing female stereotypes
  • The show was created by ITV and produced by ITV Studios
  • Scheduling: aired at 9pm, after the watershed. 
  • Targeted at mainstreamers, C2DE working class, 16-30+. 70% females/ 30% males
  • The show carries out a linear narrative
  • Editing plays a key role within the narrative because they have to cut down 24 hours into 40 minutes
  • Dominant ideology- men having authority over women- sex objects/patriarchy/feminism
  • Love- makes you value your significant other
  • Relationships- trust issues, boyfriend/girlfriend
  • Sex- in order to be with someone you have to be willing to engage in sexual activities, its acceptable for a man to have sex with more than one women however when a women does shes spoken about 
  • Conveys the dominant stereotype of women in reality tv
  • Denotation: girl in a bikini - Connotation: sexually exploited, showing off their body, 
  • Denotation: smoking - Connotation: bad health, dangerous, not classy
  • Denotation: sex - Connotation: sexual relationship, love, boyfriend/girlfriend
  • Denotation: boy working out - Connotation: showing off their body, getting female attention



SHEP

Social:


  • audiences are now more excepting of the content produced by explicit music videos
  • we are now socialised to except these norms and values surrounding women and their sexuality.    
  • feminism has contributed to this social change as it has meant that women are now considered men's equal and therefore women are liberated and empowered by their sexuality 

Historical:
  • before it was seen as disgraceful to embrace your sexuality as a woman
  • the gaining of rights for women has meant that they are now seen as equal 
  • studies of gender roles on prime time programs suggest that women in the 1980s were portrayed as working individuals. Still under-represented in prime time shows in the 1990s, they appeared to hold lower status positions than men. During that decade, women were portrayed as having a greater focus on domestic issues. 
Economic:
  • media is a product at the end of the day and women are used to sell that product 
  • women's earnings- they are still payed less than men 
  • media institutions 

Political: 
  • laws have been passed to help women gain rights, however, that doesn't mean that women in society are seen or treated equally, despite the laws that have been passed 
  • the feminism movement has contributed to the change in laws and has enabled women to be empowered by their sexuality 



Issues/Debates

Representation and stereotyping:
Studies have shown that women have been underrepresented and stereotyped in TV programs. The representation on Love Island is accurate in some aspects due to the fact that female celebrities usually exploit themselves in the sense that they dress quite revealingly or openly engage in sexual relationships and since its a reality TV show its expected since similar behaviour is seen on other shows, e.g. Geordie Shore, Towie, Big Brother etc. The major values in this text make the audience assume that relationships are all about sex, being physically attractive and having trust issues. There is also friendship values shown which show the contestants being fake to one another and not being loyal.

Reality TV:
In reality TV women presented as dependent and subordinate to men, as well as vain. The women are generally young and physically attractive displaying them as sex symbols.This stereotype is not only confining but offensive to female progress. Women are also judged against men who serve as the norm in television and society. This is seen on the show Love Island when fellow contestant Zara Holland was stripped of her Miss GB title after having sex on-screen.



Moral Panics:
Feminists who oppose sexual objectification are generating a "moral panic".Feminists who organise against pornification are not arguing that sexualised images of women cause moral decay; rather that they perpetuate myths of women's unconditional sexual availability and object status, and thus undermine women's rights to sexual autonomy, physical safety and economic and social equality. The harm done to women is not a moral harm but a political one



Ownership and control:
ITV determine what they broadcast on their platform therefore meaning that they control the way women are being stereotyped in reality TV shows they produce. Rather than subverting these stereotypes they are reinforcing them in shows such as Love Island where women are being represented as sex objects, they are all standing in a line wearing bikinis while single men look at them and pick one. This is objectifying them along with making the men seem superior to them since they are the ones picking and not the girls. Furthermore, throughout the show the male contestants only speak about engaging into sexual activities with the female contestants which once again portrays them as sex objects. 




Theories

Marxism:
The sexist representation of women in the media, advertising and popular culture is no longer limited to the presentation of women as dutiful wives and mothers. It now encourages women to be seen, and aspire to be seen, as sexually available and attractive to men at all times. At work, women continue to earn less than men and tend to be concentrated in lower paid, female-dominated and highly casualised industries and jobs. In no small part because of this, women continue to be more likely to be the primary carers of children, dependent at least in part on the wages of male (and less often female) partners or struggling to make ends meet as single parents.

Feminism:
Feminists have spoken out against the objectification and stereotyes of women and male domination of society/patriarchy.They also argue that sexual objectification can lead to negative psychological effects including eating disordersdepression and sexual dysfunction, and can give women negative self-images because of the belief that their intelligence and competence are currently not being, nor will ever be, acknowledged by society. Some have argued that the feminist movement itself has contributed to the problem of the sexual objectification of women by pushing for an end to the so-called oppressive patriarchal 


Theories:
The Male Gaze- Laura Mulvey: 
Mulvey claimed that women are turned into sex objects through how they are shot in the media. By showing only body parts they are turned into objects for male pleasure. She called this fragmentation that leads to objectification.

Hypodermic Needle Model:
Younger girls may be influenced by the content they see on reality TV which could manipulate them.

Uses and Gratifications:
Diversion: escape from everyday problems
Personal Relationships: using reality TV for emotional interaction
Personal Identity: finding themselves reflected in texts and learning behaviour- (negative role models for young girls)


Main stereotypes of women:
  • the dumb blonde
  • the bitch
  • the mother
  • the housewife
  • the femme fatale
  • the cougar


Research plan (media texts, academic texts and websites)

Media texts
Love Island 

Other media texts
Geordie Shore
Celebrity Big Brother
Power
Americas Next Top Model
The Real Housewives



TV documentaries

-Reality Television: Portrayal of Women and Beauty

-Reality TV and Women's Self Esteem


Academic texts/books
  • The Surveillance of Women on Reality Television: Watching The Bachelor and The Bachelorette (Critical Studies in Television) by Rachel E. Dubrofsky

  • Reality Bites Back: The Troubling Truth About Guilty Pleasure TV by Jennifer L. Pozne

  • Feminism and Pop Culture: Seal Studies by Andi Ziesler
  • Better Living Through Reality TV: Television and Post-Welfare Citizenship by Laurrie Ouelette and James Hay
  • Real Sister: Stereotypes, Respectability, and Black Women in Reality TV by Jervette R. Ward


Internet Links

Articles: