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Current
Cooperatives Activist
Women Global
Food Resources
"Today five mega-companies are responsible for selling
most all of youth culture. These companies are the real merchants of
cool taste: Rupert Murdoch’s Newscorp, Disney, Viacom, Universal Vivendi,
and AOL/Time Warner. Think of it this way: This is, if you will, the new
'coolonialism'."
Cashing in on Cool:
How Corporations Exploit Kids
And How We Can Stop It
By Roar Bjonnes (PNA)
To be cool is often crucial to the teenage image of self. To avoid being
branded “a looser,” you must know which trends and fads are in. Trends
like baggy pants and Sprite soft drinks. But what most teenagers don’t
know is where these trends come from. Yes, how did these trends become
so linked to their self-esteem that teenagers simply can’t live without
them? How did the taste of cool become so hot?
According to the PBS Frontline program “The Merchants of Cool” by
Douglas Rushkoff, advertisers have become the anthropologists of
capitalist culture. These “cool hunters” research what the coolest kids
eat, wear and talk about, and then use that information to design
products which they sell right back to the same kids. Millions of kids
with billions of bucks.
In 2000, America’s 32 million teens spent 150 billion dollars on goods
that, for the most part, are generationally engineered. Brian Graden, a
television
programming executive explains: “I think one of the great things about
this information age is, with so many channels, you can say my business
is 12 to 15, or my business is 21 to 24. As a result, you have the most
marketed-to group of teens and young adults ever in the history of the
world.”
A typical American teenager will process over hundreds of discrete
advertisements in a single day, and millions by the time he or she is
18. Mamie Rheingold writes in Whole Earth magazine that “MTV produces
hip-hop concerts where popular rap artist perform for free because MTV
will showcase videos that promote the artists’ CDs. Meanwhile, large
advertisements for Sprite, an MTV sponsor, are displayed in the
background of the telecast concert... It is a perpetuating cycle, and we
as teenagers are the instigators. We are involved in a symbiotic
relationship with consumerism and media that shapes our opinions and
influences our buying decisions--whether or not we are aware of that
influence.”
The culture of cool is actually not a real culture. It’s a
pseudo-culture. It’s a culture created in corporate advertising offices
for the sole purpose of increased consumerism. The corporations’ cool
hunters seek teenagers out, hip teenage culture trends that may have
arisen spontaneously on the streets, for the sole purpose of turning
these folk expressions into profit. Thanks to this trend, Sprite and
hip-hop are today almost synonymous. Hip-hop, which began as a folk
culture amongst blacks, is
now in cahoots with the most popular and profitable youth drink in the
world. Thanks to the merchants of cool.
Today five mega-companies are responsible for selling most all of youth
culture. These companies are the real merchants of cool taste: Rupert
Murdoch’s Newscorp, Disney, Viacom, Universal Vivendi, and AOL/Time
Warner. Think of it this way: This is, if you will, the new “coolonialism.”
The minds and the hearts of today’s teenagers are the Asia and the
Africa of the past colonial wars. These few media conglomerates--who own
most of the film studios, TV networks and TV stations, and most of the
cable channels--have colonized both the subjective and objective realty
of today’s teens. They tell them what to think, what to say, and what to
buy. All with only one purpose in mind: to make more profit.
The merchants of cool combat this criticism by arguing that they are
only reflecting the real world. The media is just a mirror. A mirror of
cool. But is that really so?
Douglas Rushkoff cites the example of spring break. “For the past
fifteen years, MTV has packaged spring break into a staged television
performance, and then repackaged it through the year on show after
show...Kids are invited to participate in sexual contest on stage or are
followed by MTV cameras through their week of debauchery. Sure, some
kids have always acted wild, but never have these antics been so
celebrated on TV. Who is mirroring whom?”
Currently there are two popular, media-created characters that are sold
to teens: the “mook” and the “midriff.” Neither the mook nor the midriff
really exist. They are both creations designed to capitalize on teens.
Who are they? The mook is the perpetually adolescent male. He is loud,
obnoxious, and indulges in less-than-honorable male feats. He is on MTV,
the Tom Green Show, South Park, and on The Man Show. He is Howard Stern
himself. Britney Spears is the archetypal midriff. She is incarnated in
millions of 13 year old girls flaunting their sexuality without really
understanding it. The midriff message: your body is your best asset;
your body sells.
The merchants of cool have created a very profitable feedback loop: the
media watches kids and then sells an extreme image of themselves back to
them. Millions of teenagers then aspire to emulate that distorted image
of themselves. In his documentary, Douglas Ruskoff asks: is there a way
to escape this feedback loop?
The Merchants of Cool is a film about the colonization of the interior
landscape, of our psyche, of our culture, and our art. It’s a film about
the pollution of our internal environment. In the name of freedom of
expression and profit, this colonization and pollution is destroying the
finer fabric of the ecology of the human mind and soul. Is there a way
to stop it? Yes, I think there is. But not without radical changes in
our business and political culture.
A new breed of activists -- culture jammers -- have started doing just
that. They are taking legal action to open up the airwaves. According to
Adbusters magazine (www.adbusters.org),
“they want the right to practice social marketing; to use the public
airwaves -- not only to sell products and corporate images -- but to
sell ideas, stir public debate and empower people to set their own
agendas.”
“Arguing for fundamental social change on commercial TV
may be our last great hope of social engineering ourselves out of the
economic, ecological and psychological mess we're in,” claims the
Adbusters activists.
Personal lifestyle and value changes are also necessary. But without
economic and political change, we cannot expect to check the negative
influences of the mass media. Here are two suggestions for long term
change:
1. The control of the mass media must be turned away from corporate
shareholders and over to the people; to the hands of those who produce
art, music and journalism, and to those who want to receive information
and cultural experiences. Commerce must not be allowed to colonize the
cultural landscape. Culture is not just a sales-product. Culture is a
process, a way of being, a state of mind, and a set of collective
expressions. In order to have freedom of expression, our culture must be
free from the colonization of commerce.
2. We need to limit advertising to its fundamental function: to educate
and inform us about new products, services, and ideas--nothing else. In
addition, advertisers must be required to live up to high ethical
standards. What we will loose in creative advertising through these
measures, we will gain in creative art and culture. After all, the
function of commerce is not to exploit and enslave people? The function
of our economy is to enable people to live enriching and free lives.
The above suggestions are sweeping in scope and, of course, not very
favorable to the corporate media. Nor to capitalism as we know it.
Indeed, if implemented, the traffickers of teenage trends would no
longer be able to cash in on cool.
Let’s start this transformation by changing public opinion. Let’s
encourage and join kids and teenagers in becoming adbusters and culture
jammers. Let’s turn off commercial TV and radio and tune in to PBS, NPR
and Pacifica Radio. Or, even better, we can start our own media. Many
independent media activists are doing just that--launching their own
media outlets and thus rewriting the rules of journalism. And, instead
of watching TV, we can read, write, paint, meditate, sing, run and play.
Over time, we will make the merchants of cool--you guessed it!--totally
uncool. [END] Copyright
The author 2003
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