
This advertisement also contains a fashionably implied woman. She has nothing to do with the TV, but somehow she makes the TV more glamorous than it actually is. With her in the picture and the silky blue dress she is wearing, it convinces me to personify the TV as something of elegance and class.
The skateboard image [on the right side] implies that sport fans can enjoy sport events on this extremly clear upgraded HDTV. On the right, crystal clear drama can be provided by LG [logo on top]
Another crafty way LG presents this TV is to have it display the company logo on the screen, but in two different settings. To me it also shows the company itself is an upgrade because it is seen at sports venues and at the top of city buildings as advertisements. It can also be seen as versatility, LG can cooperate in sports events as well as drama, tv shows, and so forth. LG itself is becoming a beast because it is becoming too good for competitors to compete.
LG also takes advantage of the the trend to upgrade. Many people upgrade from Ipod Shuffles to Nanos, The Playstation 3 60gb to the 80gb, and so on. Thus, the notion to upgrade to a newer, slimmer, "beast" televison is not out of the ordinary and within reach.
1 comment:
Overall, this is a great post. I most appreciate that you still focused on the image, rather than wandering off into general comments about "culture" and "society." That tendency (not just in you) is something I have wanted to break in this class, so I am happy to see you avoiding it here. My concern is that you still rushed through the reading of the image. I like the analysis you have done, but I want to know more. Why is there a split screen? Why not have different ads for different target audiences? Why have so many different elements in one image? How does this saturation reflect back to the tag line?
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