Archive for the ‘Advertising Culture’ Category

#388 – Smells Like Mid-Life Crisis

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

it’s like rain on your wedding day: a.o. scott on the ironies (are they ironies?) of the gen x man’s mid-life crisis.

A.O. Scott has a typically intriguing and well-written essay of cultural criticism in which he detects a crisis of the Gen X male’s mid-life crisis. Scott knits together, in a threadbare grunge-flannel tapestry, recent films such as Greenberg and Hot Tub Time Machine and Sam Lipsyte’s novel The Ask to argue that the meta-crisis for Gen X men now arriving in middle age is that they never grew up in the first place.

I think Scott has it backward. The real crisis of Gen X men is not that they can’t grow up in order to have a mid-life crisis, but rather that they were never young in the first place. That is to say, they were never young by the criteria of the baby-boomer definitions of youth (“hope I die before I get old” and all that). These constructions of youth and adolescence—forged in the 1960s and 70s—dominated American middle-class culture in the 1980s and 90s. But they were also imploding as baby boomers clung to youth into their middle years and redefined, along with corporate marketers happy to help them, what young meant.

The need to establish youth as generational difference remained an imperative for Gen X, but it no longer functioned well to establish difference. This was the experience of “vintage postmodernism” that Scott describes in the essay. (As a side note, “vintage postmodernism” a fabulously strange phrase, as if to suggest that now we live in a post-postmodern moment—and perhaps we do; and perhaps therein lies a way out.)

What happened in the 1980s and 90s was that the temporal organization of life stages exploded  across biological ages, thus making it both necessary and impossible for Gen Xers to validate their experiences of youth on baby boomer terms. I think this might well apply for women as for men of this generation.

Gen X was itself a manufactured label born of the 60s impulse to define generational cohorts. This group came of age with the need to talk about their generation, but they themselves had to manufacture both the talk and the generation out of categories that no longer caused a big sensation. And they’ve been uncomfortably numb ever since.

#373 – Indebted to the Federal Government

Monday, March 1st, 2010

when it comes to debt, the federal government remains a valued brand.

You wouldn’t think companies would want to be associated with the federal government in any way these days. But when it comes to debt, the state remains viable as a commodified brand.

Images of the White House and Capitol predominate in advertisements for private, for-profit debt settlement companies. These ads are presented in mock newscast style, as if they were public service announcements.

It’s as if the state, declared dead, cursed for its tax collecting and other infringements, now returns, like a zombie. Only now it’s a puppet government. Corporate CEOs pull the strings. Dollar signs appear in the eye holes of the masks. Interest accumulates on stage.

This phantasmagorical entity dances across the proscenium, casting a mere shadow of actual state power on the backdrop. Nonetheless, the lingering power of even the commodified image of the federal government reminds us that we may yet have witnessed the final curtain for state power.

The debt settlement companies in these advertisements imitate New Deal alphabet soup federal programs in their names. And they echo the Obamanian call for the continued role of government in their slogans. The NMHC—the National Mortgage Help Center—declares, “Let’s get through this together!” after showing an image of President Obama himself and mentioning the federal stimulus act of 2009.

Notice, though, if you log on to the group’s website, an important disclaimer: “The ‘National Mortgage Help Center’ is not affiliated in any way with any government program. The National Mortgage Help Center is a for profit business that educates the general public and works with attorneys and brokers to reduce monthly mortgage payments through loan modifications.”

How American it is, then, to see the federal government at once so trivialized and yet so crucial. The public interest, corporate interests, and plain old interest collide in debt collection.

But there remain bills to be settled yet.

#321 – It Was a Dark Night in the (Crunch) City

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

film noir chip bag.

dorritos

#318 – Little Boxes, Made of Ticky Tacky

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

a strange liberation.

flor

Image: Packaging for Flor modular carpet tiles.

#315 – The People’s Republic of Miller High Life

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

of beer and advertising the proletarian revolution, or, workers of the world, you have nothing to lose but your hangovers!

In CR #301, we explored the spate of new commercials that almost instantaneously incorporated the current economic crisis into their advertising. These commercials — for fast food, cars, and even for financial investment products (!) — seek to absorb the anxieties of the current crisis into the fantastical dreamworld of consumerism.

Perhaps the most fascinating recent advertising campaign of this type is the Miller High Life “Delivery Guy” series, which features a delivery man re-appropriating bottles of Miller High Life from elites who are out of touch with the common man. The beer is taken back from a luxury box at a sporting event, from the fancy-hats crowd at a Kentucky Derby-like race, and from the hip elites behind the velvet rope and bouncer at a nightclub.

The message of the ads, delivered by a working-class delivery guy, is a strangely sublimated version of disaccumulation, of redistributing private property from the top to the bottom. But instead of smashing the state, or smashing the machines of capitalist alienation, here proletarian revolution is merely bottled and redistributed in a consumer fantasy of working-class reappropriation.

As such, the advertisements speak in the realm of leisure (and of beer, which has a long history of involvement in class struggles — just think of all those German socialists in the 19th century U.S.) to class resentments and fantasies of class resistance. So too, the ads keep those feelings and ideas bottled up and puts them on ice, then pours them out into humor and intoxication rather than actual revolution.

The true high life remains for some, but not for all.

Miller High Life “Delivery Guy” Ad Campaign

#310 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

a reminder from bygone days.

Commerce must serve society or it is not commerce, but piracy. – “Progress” advertisement, N. W. Ayer & Son Advertising Headquarters, circa 1900

Special thanks to Charles McGovern, Sold American.

#301 – Buying Into It By Buying Out of It

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

advertising the recession.

Remarkable to see how quickly the current recession is surfacing in television advertising.

Perhaps it marks how much of a challenge the economic crisis is to the existing order of things. Where once advertisers urged us to spend conspicuously, since happiness was “priceless,” now ads caution us against profligacy. Turns out there is a price tag. The debt is coming due.

But, these ads insist, just because we misled you before does not mean that you should question the larger logic and system of consumerism. Instead, these ads seek to contain the new mood of thrift and anxiety within the old consumer order.

Various fast food commercials, car rebate ads, and other ephemera from the consumer spectacle interpellate us: “Quick! You, Consumer, you can buy your way out of this mess by buying into it even more!”

At this juncture, there is no space within the ads to address the deeper problems and issues we now confront. All they do is associate (brilliantly) their products with the new desires, regrets, and urges of our times. The affective economy of consumerism remains intact even as the affect changes.

Yet, it remains to be seen where these new emotions, desires, angers, loathings, and worries will carry us. Can we see glimpses of alternative worldviews and ideologies through the cracks of the consumer dream machine? Or just new ways of authorizing the same old orders and charges?

Most stunning of these ads is Fidelity’s “Turn Here” campaign, which urges us — against all other evidence — to trust our money to the very financial system that screwed things up so badly in the first place.

Addendum: “The Hard Sell: How Mad Men Spin the Recession,” Mother Jones

#289 – Afterthought

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

from the corner of the local whole foods market.

takeactioncenter

#287 – Souped Up

Friday, February 20th, 2009

the problem with louis menand’s “ambidextrous” postmodernism.

The point of Warhol’s Campbell’s soup-can paintings was not that a soup can is like a work of art. It was that a work of art is like a soup can: they are both commodities.

[Robert Rauschenberg] would buy paint cans whose labels had come off, so that he wouldn’t know the color before he used it, in order to let the materials dictate the products.

- Louis Menand, “Saved From Drowning: Barthelme Reconsidered,” New Yorker, 23 February 2009

big-torn-campbells-soup-can-c1962

Louis Menand has a typically marvelous essay about a new biography of Donald Barthelme in this week’s New Yorker. In the piece, Menand uses Andy Warhol to distinguish between an understanding of postmodernism as the continuation of modernism — we are all modernists now — and a use of the term to signal that modernism is dead and what follows is something new, something even antimodern.

The definitions come down, for Menand, to one’s view of art as something similar to, or different from, commerce: highbrow-lowbrow-middlebrow kinds of categorizations of art.

As many do, Menand uses Warhol to symbolize postmodernism as the effort to extinguish art, to destroy its status, to render it (or reveal it) as nothing more than another commodity, another soup can. Barthelme has often been associated with this Warholian understanding of the postmodern. But in Menand’s reassessment, he should in fact be grouped with the other definition of the postmodern: Barthelme was, in Menand’s interpretation, exploring the modernist obsession with form and process (which focused on the how rather than the what of representation) that he found and loved in authors such as Beckett.

All well and good. But there is one problem. I do not think upon closer inspection that Warhol’s art holds water, or better said, holds condensed soup, as a container for the kind of postmodernism that Menand describes.

Pictured in multiple forms — as serial repetitions, stuffed with dollar bills, in mutated colors, in various poses — Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans did not reduce art to a commodity so much as artfully explore the nature of the commodity.

That is, Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans are still lives turned into history paintings. They explore the material of the postwar consumer world, including the invisible, just-add-water materials of marketing and advertising, in order to grasp at representing the experiences — emotional, sensorial, intellectual, ideological — of the historical moment.

In this sense, Warhol’s soup cans are just like Rauschenberg’s paint cans — they start with the material reality of the world as it is and not in the representational mode of what it might be. They refuse to fake it, but in doing so seem like they are rejecting verisimilitude, when in fact, they long to discover, embrace, and capture the real. Or, as Menard quotes Barthelme writing about Rauschenberg: “The confusing signals, the impurity of the signal, gives you verisimilitude.”

What’s fascinating about Warhol’s soup cans (I am working on a longer article about this) is not that they empty out meaning, that they reduce art to the blank form of the commodity, but rather that they are flooded with meaning: these representations continually return to the multiple meanings of the commodity and the labels of marketing, advertising, and consumer desire in which the commodity gets wrapped up.

You can never quite keep the lid on Warhol’s art of the Campbell’s soup can. From drawings by his mother of Campbell’s soup cans followed by a scribble that “soup is gut” (the immigrant Julia Warhola’s effort to write that soup was good) to all the iterations of the soup can that Warhol explored to the rich commercial afterlife of his Campbell’s soup imagery, which was quickly reabsorbed into the mediascapes of postwar American consumer culture (including my favorite example, from a 1969 cover of Esquire, in which Warhol is drowning in a soup can), Warhol’s representations never simply became commodities.

Instead, they are either materially located in his real life (his mother Julia served them as part of Warhol’s lunch for decades) or they can serve as symbols of the perplexing nature of democracy in postwar American consumer culture (in which dreamlives increasingly derived from the same symbols, but never in precisely the same way) or they speak to anxieties about the status of art in the modern world (as on the Esquire cover, which contains the title, “the final decline and total collapse of the American avant-garde” or the soup can erupts out of being merely a commodity in some other manner.

warhol drowning in soup

So this second definition of the postmodern grows increasingly suspect in Menand’s article. Which is where Menand seems to be taking us as he reconsiders Barthelme.

Menand poses a binary of postmodernism as an “ambidextrous” term that at once refers to the continuation of modernism and the abandonment of modernism. In this dichotomy, Barthelme has always been lumped in with Warhol as examples of the rejection of the modernist approach. But Menand notices how  Barthelme’s writing was in fact an elaboration and extension of modernism (quite similar to other writers of the day — Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, and Kenneth Koch — who attempted to import methods from postwar American painters such as Rauschenberg into their use of language, so that they created poems that were “combines” of lingustic detritus, incongruous sentences and phrases brought together to produce the pleasures of systems on the very of coherence and incoherence).

This would seem to demand a reassessment not only of Barthelme, but also of the entire dichotomy with which Menand started out his essay. But he does not propose how Barthelme’s writing (or Warhol’s art for that matter) forces us to rethink this binary.

Maybe this is because the distinction does not matter so much. Perhaps, a pragmatist might say, it’s not the theoretical categorization that matters, it’s the result that counts.

In this line of thinking, being a new kind of art or nothing more than a commodity is immaterial. What’s important, as Menand argues Barthelme believed, is pondering and trying to access the ineffable. And that might be worth doing, Warhol’s art seems to suggest, even when it’s material for sale all around us. Maybe especially then.

“The aim of literature is the creation of a strange object covered with fur which breaks your heart.” So declares — in mock-ironic tones of grandeur — one of Barthelme’s early short story characters (Baskerville in “Florence Green is 81″). It sounds like it could be a particularly hirsute incarnation of one of Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans.

#279 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

If the market, say through advertising, shapes people’s desires, is it right to speak of free choice without some measure of qualification? – Robert Rydell and Rob Kroes, Buffalo Bill in Bologna: The Americanization of the World, 1869-1922