Thursday, December 12 2024

The family has always been one of the most preferred and widely-used subjects in advertising because it is one of the best commercial vehicles to represent standard and multi- target consumer models.

More often than not, the stereotypes portrayed of an average family are ideal and unreal models: mother, father, and children (strictly one boy and one girl) or a couple of newly-weds who are young, attractive and content with a bright future ahead. No one is angry, poor or in a precarious job situation or even unemployed. Everyone has a role and seemly social status recognised by society.

No negative or conflicting aspect seems to be part of the family who eats, drinks, buys and consumes continually and who is always happy and full of energy. If one adds to this classic format some wholesome sentiments (an expectant mother or a parent working away from home) then the product is ready to be sold on a large scale.

At times, fantasy meets with real life. Real families and “TV ad-families” become part of a perpetual mechanism of reciprocal influence where real families are fascinated by the TV advert-families who are non-conflicting and well-off. Conversely, many advertisements modify the stereotypical perfection to the socio-cultural changes in the average family in order to keep at pace with the times so as not to seem too distant from real life.

However, the figure of the family is not only used for commercial purposes. It is often at the centre of social or institutional campaigns to promote values, themes and services dedicated to the family. Public and private corporations and institutions promote the family in campaign awareness themes. The family becomes the protagonist of communication rather than a vehicle for seher than a stereotype format where the family talks about itself (but not to celebrate itself) to  have a better understanding of the real problems and needs in daily life (ranging from mortgage payments, utility bills, pensions, job safety and accidents, illnesses, or even pain, tragedy and death). This is a small victory so to speak in favour of the family. Once the stereotype is set apart or disregarded, the family becomes a strategic asset and fundamental creative element in public and institutional corporations. Moreover, it becomes the founding premises with which social communication cannot do without.

Certainly, the vision of a selection of international advertisements would show more clearly the fine but substantial difference in the use of the family in advertising. I believe that comments on individual adverts are not needed to facilitate the  ubdivision of commercial and social adverts. The images and the story accompanied by music (music is the fundamental and creative ingredient for this format as it creates an emotional bond with the message) speak for themselves. In somecases, it might seem pure rhetoric and rather cliché (being seated round a table for supper or Sunday lunch, the mother who reigns in the kitchen while the father with the young   lay the table or the parents’ goodnight kiss with the child holding his cuddly toy all content). We might well be far away from modern times where it is a feat to have everyone sat at the same table for more than five minutes or not having the television bellowing out while ebut I believe we all like to dream at least for a moment that our family is a large, extended one with grandparents, aunts and uncles with grandchildren and nephews all around. We are all joined together for a big lunch under the secular oak tree at the start of the summer in the country. The sound of the cicada yields to the crickets as night starts to fall, the first stars begin to appear. Happy viewing!

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