Recent Comments
Elaisha Stokes on See for yourself - Conflict goes 2.0
Graham F. Scott on See for yourself - Conflict goes 2.0
Anna on 'Whopper Virgins' campaign leaves a bad taste
Melissa on 'Whopper Virgins' campaign leaves a bad taste
Dayanti Karunaratne on 'Whopper Virgins' campaign leaves a bad taste
elaisha on Chernobyl in the Jungle
Flutrambumuri on Pirates of the Arabian Sea
Luc Mitchell on Queerly Canadian #3: The Pope's queer ideas
Anodayundob on Rinky-dink ink tinkering isn't the answer
evan on Queerly Canadian #3: The Pope's queer ideas
Read more on...
» Aboriginal rights (1)
» Activism (17)
» Advertising (1)
» Africa (1)
» Alternate Routes (4)
» American Politricks (8)
» American Presidential Election (5)
» Atheism (2)
» Book review (1)
» Bushfraud (10)
» Copyright/left (6)
» Cultural industries (18)
» Development (1)
» Ear candy (14)
» Economics (5)
» Edumacation (1)
» Election 2008 (65)
» Environment (5)
» Events (4)
» Feminism (8)
» Film (19)
» Friends of Canadian Broadcasting (2)
» From the intern desk (24)
» From the magazine (5)
» Fundi Watch (4)
» Gender (2)
» Generally Interesting (9)
» Global politics (12)
» Globalization (1)
» Happenings (6)
» Harm reduction (3)
» Harper Index (14)
» Healthcare (8)
» HIV/AIDS (7)
» Hot Docs festival (9)
» Human rights (21)
» Interweb (29)
» Labour (4)
» Labour days (5)
» LGBT (16)
» Listen to This (2)
» Lit (9)
» Media navel-gazing (25)
» On the Hill (14)
» Pharma (3)
» Planet Earth (33)
» Polarized (6)
» Poverty (7)
» Prisons (2)
» Project Smog (2)
» Provincial Politricks (3)
» Queerly Canadian (3)
» Race (1)
» Religion (6)
» Resistance (7)
» Sexual Health (3)
» Signs of the Apocalypse (14)
» Sport (12)
» Terrorism (not the state-sponsored kind) (10)
» THIS matters (27)
» ThisAbility (11)
» Time Wasters (6)
» Toronto (4)
» Vancouver (4)
» Video (1)
» Visual art (5)
» War and peace (17)
» Weekend Links (45)
Previous Entries
Posted by Graham F. Scott at 06:19 AM ET | Comments (3)
This might be old news to some: Burger King's "Whopper Virgins" ad campaign has been running for a while. Here's the promo:
I felt intuitively icky about the whole thing before but couldn't quite define why. Luckily, blogger Evan Calder Williams has articulated that feeling very nicely already, so I'll just let him take it from here:
The core of it seems rather to be: these are ads that hinge on the support structure of those subjects who do not grasp advertising, who are "pure." Encoded in this, then, is the oddly self-aware stance of the corporation: look, we know that your consumption habits are so mediated by advertising — as we want them to be, we're not suggesting that you change that, good God no — that you no longer can even taste things correctly. So we're bringing in a pinch hitter, the global dispossessed, to function as the externalization of the sensual apparatus you all used to have.
[Thanks Steve!]
Blog This Must-Reads
Blog This Archives
January 2009