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  • "I'm a Barbie girl in a fabulous world."

  • I recently spent some time watching afternoon cartoons on Nickelodeon and the Cartoon Network, and look what I found.

  • Nerf’s N-Strike arsenal has a specialized blaster for any mission

  • “4 Ever Kidz pets. It’s snap on fashion play

  • Dirt, mud, we don’t care. These trucks go almost anywhere

  • “…Barbie girls and were making the scene. Our jamminjeep wrangler is one glam machine

  • Holy crap! What is going on here!?

  • Clearly it’s been a while since I’ve raced home after school to watch cartoons but I

  • was amazed how highly gendered these commercials were.

  • Have they changed or did I just not notice them before?

  • The messages being promoted in these commercials are deeply restricting and

  • severely limit the development of boys and girls in different ways.

  • The ads are actively demonstrating that boys and girls have different social roles and skills

  • that are highly stereotyped and just outright sexist.

  • So let’s take a closer look at ads targeted directly at boys.

  • Battleground. Prepare to attack. Fire

  • Whose gonna win? Whose gonna win? YA

  • Arc light powered up. 3 in 1 repulser. Ready for action.”

  • Close combat pistol. Rapid fire blaster

  • Always ready for action, G.I. Joe. Are you in?”

  • Defend the castle! Imaginx Adventure

  • Boys have power and get to be active and destroy things, YA!

  • These commercials directed at boys value competition, being in control,

  • having power, and conquering and commanding.

  • Those values restrict the acceptable options for what boys are allowed to express emotionally,

  • I’ve yet to see a commercial where boys are nurturing or caring.

  • They are limited in examples of how to react to problems and how to solve conflicts.

  • They are taught to fight, to be competitive and to be aggressive.

  • I noticed that there are also a few other reoccuring messages embedded in these ads targeted at boys.

  • Bat cave building power. Trio building system lets you build the ultimate Trio bat cave. YA!”

  • You can build the massive Neptune sub.”

  • You can build up and customize your heavy duty truck with tons of parts

  • You decide how much firepower to arm your ships with then build your fleet and battle your way to victory.”

  • These ads encourage boys to build new worlds, use their imaginations and be creative.

  • They are actively making and constructing.

  • These are the training blocks for creative and fulfilling adult lives.

  • The confidence that is fostered through the act of making and building and doing is

  • something that is almost entirely lacking in girls toys commercials.

  • The Liv girls have a flair for hair

  • “I can make my own magic snow

  • Change the colour, change the style, add the gel and look at the glitter

  • The easy way to make designer cakes. Bake your cake in the microwave in 30 seconds.”

  • “… beauty of the bride, share the gown and light up ring, handsome groom and everything

  • Go Go and me were walking round, Go Go and me weve hit the town.”

  • Baby alive is so real, you can feed her. ‘I made a stinky.’

  • And then she leaves an uh-oh in her diaper.”

  • So girls get to play with sparkly glitter and bake cakes and changing stinky diapers,

  • how fun!

  • Commercials targeted at girls heavily focus on teaching child rearing, homemaking,

  • domestic work, popularity, self image and an obsession with beauty.

  • This restricts their imagination of what women are capable of and prioritizes appearances over intelligence.

  • They are not encouraged to be creative, to build and construct and really take control of their environments.

  • Girls toys are generally unimaginative and lack the creative element of play

  • that is critical in the development of young people.

  • We can see this even in the way the same basic product is marketed differently to boys and girls.

  • Moon Sand is the amazing moldable, squishable, buildable, demolishable sand that never dries out.”

  • Moon Sand is the amazing moldable, holdable, decoratable sand that never dries out.”

  • Clearly this isn’t a coincidence since advertisers spend $17 BILLION dollars a year marketing to youth.

  • That’s billion, with a ‘B’.

  • Young people are seeing more than 25,000 advertisements a year on television alone,

  • and that doesn’t even include product placement which is so common on popular television shows.

  • The enormous amount of money advertisers are spending isn’t just on producing and airing ads,

  • it’s also spent on the latest neuroscience research to find out EXACTLY what images,

  • feelings and representations will appeal the most to developing minds.

  • Although many factors influence our socialization such as families, peer groups,

  • churches and schools, the media plays a highly critical role.

  • Advertising aimed at youth is especially dangerous because young children are

  • unable to differentiate between television programming and commercials,

  • they are still developing the necessary critical skills.

  • Youth may have a hard time recognizing that these commercials are teaching them what is

  • expected, what is desired and what is possible for their genders, for their careers,

  • for love, relationships and creative endeavors in the future.

  • These messages are so manipulative, deeply embedded and carefully crafted

  • that it’s even hard for us as adults to recognize them.

  • As someone whose really interested in promoting and encouraging the use of technology in young women,

  • I found a stark difference in the way technology is marketed to boys and girls.

  • Girls get a fun little purple computer that’s “hot

  • or a program that can help them cook and look pretty.

  • It’s the Bratz laptop with over 100 games, you can have fun learning.

  • It’s fun, smart and hot.”

  • In my fashion mall, make pizzas, do makeovers and more,

  • and throw the ultimate pajama party.”

  • Whereas boys get to go online and play adventure games.

  • Become a pirate and join thousands online.

  • Captain your ship and command the seas.”

  • Now you can be the hero and join your friends in an epic online adventure.”

  • One of the reasons that the gender specific marketing of technology is so concerning is

  • when we look at the statistics of adult women in technology fields.

  • Only 3% of open source programmers are women

  • and only 11.5% of video game developers are women.

  • Although as I stated, there are many factors that affect the jobs and careers people enter,

  • it is not hard to connect gendered advertising at such a young age

  • to the socialization of women who don’t feel confident or supported in

  • heavily male dominated and male identified tech fields.

  • I was originally going to say thatWe need to hold the media accountable for what they are teaching our young people

  • but no, really...

  • advertising directed specifically at young people needs to STOP altogether, no exceptions.

  • A precedent has already been set to implement these types of restrictions.

  • Quebec has banned print and broadcast advertisements for youth under the age of 13

  • and Sweden has banned advertisements for youth under the age of 12.

  • In the mean time we need to encourage critical media literacy skills in people of all ages.

  • I’ll leave you with an amazing remix created by some female youth at Reel Grrls during a workshop with Jonathan McIntosh.

  • They were able to actively resist these harmful media messages and really begin to talk back to the media

  • by simply swapping the audio and video of gendered commercial.

  • The results are hilarious and very illuminating.

  • Nerf’s N-Strike arsenal has a specialized blaster for any mission.

  • You can improve your blasting speed with the maverick rapid fire blaster.

  • While the night fighters light beam targeting system allows for pin point accuracy.

  • And you can nail targets from long distance with Nerf’s long shot blaster.

  • Two blasters in one, quick fire clips and detachable scope, everything you need to blast your skills to the next level.

  • N-Strike, blaster sold separately, batteries not included. Nerf.”

"I'm a Barbie girl in a fabulous world."

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おもちゃの広告と学習のジェンダー (Toy Ads and Learning Gender)

  • 80 8
    Hhart Budha に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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