Postal service facilitates Secret Santas in French villages
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[image: Postal worker in a Santa hat hands a gift to an older women
outside her home]
In a twist on traditional Secret Santa exchanges, La Poste is trans...
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Macabre fashion ads sell the product
Women’s fashion magazines are chock full of ads, some featuring bizarre and
grotesque images. According to a new study in the Journal of Consumer
Research, these ads are effective at grabbing consumers’ attention.
“Why do we see such bizarre imagery in ads for clothing that cost several hundreds or even thousands of dollars?” ask authors Barbara J. Phillips and Edward F. McQuarrie. The researchers interviewed 18 women who regularly read fashion magazines to examine their reactions to macabre ads.
They found that in addition to expected modes of engagement with ads, some women approached fashion advertisement as a type of fiction. “These women would be transported into the story world set in motion by the ad’s pictures, asking themselves, ‘What is happening here?’ and ‘What will happen next?’” the authors write.
Still others sought out imagery that could be approached like a painting in a
gallery. “These women would immerse themselves in the images, examining its lighting, colors, lines, composition, and creativity,” the authors explain. Overall, the researchers found that in many cases, the key to constructing an engaging fashion ad was not to make it likeable or conventionally pretty, but to make it engaging.
“The merely pretty was too easily passed over; grotesque juxtapositions were required to stop and hold the fashion consumer flipping through Vogue,” the authors write. “For the brands that choose to use grotesque imagery—roughly one-fourth, according to a content analysis—the promise is that greater engagement with ad imagery will lead to a more intense and enduring experience of the brand.”o