We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

Media Literacy Part 5: Behind the Ads 283 Views


Share It!



Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:05

Media Literacy

00:07

Behind the Ads

00:09

a la Shmoop

00:12

So, Deb, what is subtext? This is stuff below the text, right?

00:16

That's exactly what it is.

00:18

Subtext is basically the implied meaning of a text,

00:22

instead of the literal meaning.

00:24

Give us an example.

00:25

So in advertising,

00:30

a woman eats a Dove chocolate

00:34

and then suddenly her hair starts blowing in the wind

00:37

and she leans back and men are looking at her.

00:40

[ wolf whistle ]

00:41

Chocolate's an aphrodisiac, right?

00:43

- It's got oysters in it. - That's the subtext.

00:46

The subtext is that

00:48

Dove chocolate will make you more attractive and men will want to date you.

00:52

The text is this woman ate chocolate

00:55

and then her hair started blowing in the wind.

00:56

That's the text.

00:58

The subtext is it makes you more attractive.

01:01

So basically, it's anything that's implied by the text.

01:05

And texts can be actual written text,

01:07

or it can be an image. It can be a show, anything.

01:11

But it's anything that's implied.

01:12

It's that -- When we read between the lines,

01:15

what we're reading is subtext.

01:17

[ ohh ]

01:19

Can advertisers use subtext to lie?

01:23

There was a time when we didn't know

01:25

that cigarette smoke was bad for you.

01:27

Newports Fresh Menthol

01:30

keeps it that way. Smoother...

01:33

Now we know and that's why there are

01:36

things plastered all over it saying, "This is gonna kill you."

01:38

Like, literally those words.

01:40

So that's what subtext is all about.

01:45

Advertisers are not allowed to lie. They can't lie.

01:49

They can mislead all they want,

01:52

but they can not lie.

01:53

And that's why subtext is there.

01:55

You can't say...

01:57

That's like the Oreo tagline

02:02

used to be, "America's Favorite Cookie."

02:04

And they had to change it to "Milk's Favorite Cookie"

02:06

because there was no study done saying that Americans

02:10

liked Oreos the best. So, things like that.

02:12

You can not make stuff up.

02:14

- So you couldn't -- - I wanna know who the fifth dentist is

02:16

- who doesn't recommend Colgate. - Exactly.

02:19

[ eww ]

02:21

Yeah, I mean, you can't say -- Going back to that Dove commercial.

02:24

You can not say, "If you eat this Dove chocolate,

02:28

men will love you."

02:30

Because that is not true.

02:31

But you can imply that it's true.

02:33

So that's where the line is drawn.

02:35

You're allowed to mislead; you're allowed to imply,

02:37

but you're not allowed to lie to the audience.

02:39

And that's why you'll see tons and tons of fine print.

02:43

Try Folger's. The mountain grown coffee.

02:46

Mountain grown for better flavor.

02:49

[ dramatic music ]

02:53

- Yeah, it's like a game of chicken with the law. - Right. Exactly.

02:55

Definitely. Oh, yeah.

02:56

If anyone is butting up against the law every second, it's advertisements.

03:00

[ siren ]

03:04

[ whoop ]

03:05

What is subtext?

03:07

Can advertisers use subtext to lie?

03:13

[ aww ]

Related Videos

Careers: Real Estate Broker (Residential)
279 Views

What's the difference between a real estate agent and a real estate broker? Is the latter just, uh... out of cash? Quite the opposite, in fact. Jum...

TSA Agent
259 Views

So... what's a TSA worker, and what do they do? Oh, we thought maybe you knew. Okay, okay... so TSA (or Transportation Security Administration) wor...