Advertisements Car safety is an issue that concerns people across the Nation. Millions of Americans die each year due to fatal car accidents. The demand for safer automobiles is ever increasing. The Saturn Corporation recognizes this demand and has begun focusing its advertisements on America's need to feel safe. Saturn brings together setting, color, and a main focus to create the image of a safe car company.
In one particular Saturn ad, a Saturn worker stands in a room surrounded by crash test dummies. The dummies in the background are stacked in a cluttered way. The piles of test dummies in the are meant to symbolize bodies. Saturn knows that the reader won't see inanimate objects, but actual human beings, because
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This is precisely what Saturn expects the reader will do. By seeing the test dummies, people will assume that safety testing is important to Saturn.
The usage of color in the advertisement is very simple. The objects in the picture are either shaded black, or have a light crème color. In the center of the ad is the worker with the child-sized dummy. He has on dark clothing and everything around him is shaded. This diverts the reader's attention to the light, crème colored crash test dummy in the worker's arms. The reader will see the test dummy as a child that is being held in a protective way by the worker. When the reader sees the small test dummy in the worker's arms, they will think Saturn must care for their safety.
The obvious focus in the ad is the small crash test dummy in the worker's arms. This is obvious because of the way everything in the picture focuses on the small test dummy. The entire picture is shaded to enhance the lightly colored dummy. The small test dummy is meant to symbolize a child, and there is nothing more tragic than the death of a child. Saturn uses the child to warn the reader. Children die in car accidents everyday, therefore it is essential that cars be built to protect the consumers and their families. The caring and sheltered way the worker is holding the child, shows that Saturn has everyone in mind while doing safety tests on their cars.
Safe
There a drunken wine glasses that are being stacked in a row while the car is moving. After the 4th glass is stacked the car makes a turn and crashes with an incoming vehicle. I believe this ad was mildly effective. We had wine glasses and a car crash, so it does present the point of drunk driving, but besides that there is not much of a shock factor or silly humor to it.
One of the very first people we met at the beginning of the advertisement is a girl, later we learn her name to Pheeyo Aung, talking about living in a garage. This specific part of the video shows how logos is being used. By telling us about her living conditions before by showing us pictures of her family. She even tries not to cry while trying to talk about wanting to have a real living space and get out of the garage she was in. Although she was very emotional during this section of the advertisement, the audience see what she was really living like. We get a feel of how she was living, and it was not something she was just told to say.
This ad has a lot of meaning and can really make people aware of dangerous driving. The woman shown being punched can transfer into a person hitting their head on the steering wheel or being hit by another car. To make people more aware Ecovia has used real people and paintings to persuade the audience to be safe and be careful. This ad has used many ways to convince the audience it's a better world with safer
Over 17 million cars and trucks are sold around the world every year. Amongst the plethora of car companies aiming to convince shoppers that their car is paramount, marketing teams ought to go the extra mile. By developing a persuading advertisement, companies are more likely to sell their products. On February 6, 2011, Volkswagen aired a Superbowl commercial for the first time in over ten years. This commercial would be one that awakens the inner child of millions. By employing pathos, ethos, and logos rhetoric techniques, Volkswagen is able to appeal to consumers in order to sell their new car.
For this Ad logos is used to show that people need and should pay a higher cost for their tires because of the trustworthiness built into the tires. Logos gives the ad a meaning to care for it. Michelin makes it seem like they really want you to buy their tires because nothing bad could happen to you and your family if their tires are the ones that are on your car. In the sincere paragraph printed on the ad they give reasoning’s as to why their tires are more expensive than others. This advertisement suggest that their tires will last longer than the cheaper tires.
When someone looks at an advertisement there is more that meets the eye than just pictures
The United States require every driver to have car insurance in order to drive legally in the United States. The problem, however, is choosing the right one. Two of the major companies today are Allstate and State Farm. In the Allstate commercial, a man portrays “Mayhem” to show drivers the risks they experience while driving on the road. The man says he is modeling a blind spot, explaining that drivers may not see what hides in them, resulting in an accident. In the State Farm commercial, two situations are on display, one of which a teenage girl getting her first car, and the other a grown man getting his car broken into, demonstrating that State Farm is there for everyone. To endorse their product effectively, both of these brands apply pathos, ethos, and logos to their commercials.
This ad is laid out in such a way that your eye follows the script right down the page. If you first look at the ad you are immediately drawn to the picture of the bottle of Hennessy. The backdrop of the ad is all cool colors such as navy blue, Carolina blue and white, but the bottle of Hennessey on the other hand stands out due to the fact that it is a warm dark orange
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company’s Super Bowl advertisement, “#makesafehappen” released on February 1st, 2015, has received negative attention because of its morbid yet practical depiction of a young boy who has passed away due to a “preventable accident” before experiencing the life in which a teen or young adult would otherwise. The advertisement also uses the death of a young child to appeal to parents; especially the mothers, largely using pathos to raise awareness of deadly accidents which could otherwise be preventable. Logos and ethos, although weak in this advertisement, also raises awareness on preventing avoidable accidents.
Each year numerous lives are lost due to careless and irrational driving. The disregard for safe driving has been a predicament to the United States of America for years. Many years Police have relied heavily on speed cameras, breathalyzer tests and heavy fines as a deterrent against unlawful drivers. Over the years fatality rates have increased, so the Department of Transportation and Highway Safety has composed a series of safe driving campaigns. On many occasions the Transportation Department informs and advises the public about the importance of responsible driving. They propagate safe driving through the various channels of the media and
It is important to realize the basic facts that are associated with cars and with BMW in particular, and that different demographic are attracted towards different types of car, to later understand that even though the product in the ad may be amazing but the ad itself is not. Did you know that in 2010 the number of cars in the world reached a billion (Noël)? Today’s culture is highly surrounded and based on the use of cars. They are such a prominent part of our culture today that if an alien were to visit our planet right now they might just consider cars to be the dominant form of life (The Hitchhiker 's Guide to the Galaxy). There are so many different types, and makes of cars that they can suit any personality in the world.
up about two thirds of the A4 sized advert. The picture is of a woman
This ad violates social and cultural norms by replacing beautiful women who normally would advertise cars with sumo wrestlers, a reference to the origin of the cars manufacturer. In an article published in Motor Authority it was quoted that "Unlike the bikini-wearing models in other ads, you're not left wondering where the car is…If anything your eyes seek out the [car], if only for aesthetic relief." (Lienert 2011)
The advertisement features someone texting and driving through a neighborhood while there’s a shadow figure of a child in front of the car. Through the windshield, it can be inferred that the car is driven in a quiet residential area with houses on both sides of the road. The houses have very neat front yards with nicely trimmed trees and cut grass. The individual driving the car is holding up his phone with his right hand while his left hand is on the steering wheel. The driver appears to be texting messaging and there’s a phantom of a child playing with a football displayed on the phone screen. The phantom of the child is intended to give the viewer who, in this picture, has the
The background of the ad has a color scheme of white and blue, a large portion of the background is white and the blue color is fading. I think they chose these two colors because of the BMW logo which is blue and white for simplicity. To the left side of the ad shows someone’s legs, below the knee which fills up the majority of this ad; the left leg is normal, while the right side is an artificial leg. To the right of the ad there’s a black colored vertically aligned text saying:” Spare parts for humans are not as original as those for cars.”. Under that text is also vertically aligned with the text above saying “Don’t Drink and Drive”. Below that there’s a small text saying, “Issued in Public Interest by”, following with a small BMW logo underneath