Before, I don’t really mind the commercials I’m watching in television. But, not until I’ve witnessed how it could affect people. There are commercials I’m really annoyed at just like this one…
You might be asking why I don’t like this one. You may think that there’s really nothing wrong in this commercial. But for me, it has a bad effect when it comes on molding attitudes to children. Well, let me share to you an experience I had in this commercial….
Well, my cousins came by our house just recently. We were watching a show in television. Then I went in our bathroom just for a moment and as I came back, I found my little cousin, a chubby girl, crying. Then I ask her what happened and why she’s crying. I found out that her older brother teased her and called her “Baboy”. Here’s the conversation…
Me:Bakit mo ginawa yun?
C:Wala lang po…
Me: Hindi nga, bakit nga?
C: E, mataba naman talaga s’ya e. Kamukha nya yung nasa TV na mukhang baboy…
I asked my younger cousin what were they watching and she said after her brother saw the commercial of Super Thin, he began teasing her. I realized that the commercial was silently promoting discrimination. Today, we’re living in an impression that beauty was always synanimous to being sexy. We couldn’t really deny that we’re living in a world full of discrimination and injustice, but this kind of commercial was still adding up to that problem.
As kids, just like my cousins, watch this kind of commercial, they think that all they see in TV is correct. It simply distort the good attitudes they have.Clearly, what they watch in TV manifests in their attitudes.Because of the company’s intention to sell these products , they have never realized how they could it entirely affect people. As we all know, that’s the power of media. Evidently, their commercial presents a biased perspective of beauty. Though they do not intend to affect their viewers negatively, they have unconsiously taken for granted the “value factor” of this ad. It seems that they treat physically-challenged individuals lower than those who were gifted.And since kids treat these things they see in TV as “models”, as a feedback, they create discrimination among themselves.
The study of Gerbner was very evident in the situation I had. In Gerbner’s theory, he emphasized that those kids who have watched violent cartoon shows grew up more violent than kids who were not exposed of violent shows. In the experience I had, I realized how much shows and programs in television could affect a person. It could either mold or destroy one’s values and attitudes. Being a student of Communication Arts, I have realized that it was also my job to guide people about what they see. Sooner or later, I know I would also play a part in media and it is my obligation, so as a hundred more students of CA, to inculcate important moral values to our viewers.
PS:I’m sorry but, I really don’t like this commercial..;(