Discussion and Peer response - Dancer
Prof. Elio L. Arteaga VIC3002—Visual Design for Media Module 5 Lecture Notes Shock Advertising The ASPCA’s animal‐cruelty prevention campaign incorporates a new logo, as well as new print, outdoor and online elements. Saatchi & Saatchi Copywriter Jake Benjamin and Art Director Mark Voehringer were faced with a challenge: how to portray animal cruelty without showing suffering animals? A literal representation of animal cruelty, although accurate, might repel some visitors, but avoiding graphic details means a weaker message. Their solution was to let the viewers’ imaginations fill in the blanks. The result is a strong message, without relying on the kinds of images that nauseate readers.
Visit the ASPCA website at http://www.aspcaspeak.org “The reality of animal abuse is worse than anything that could ever be shown in an ad,” says Benjamin and Voehringer. “But that’s exactly what we realized needed to be communicated. Anything less would be candy‐coating the issue.” What about giving ideas to lunatics? “We were never worried that these ads might give someone twisted ideas. The truth is that these horrific things are happening every day — the ideas were given to us. And, disturbingly enough, the examples we chose to feature weren’t even the worst scenarios we encountered. There were
times when we became physically nauseated from researching case files for this campaign. But the client realizes that people are numb to many of the traditional approaches of raising awareness of animal abuse, so we decided to steal a little trick from horror movies. Sometimes the most frightening moments happen as a result of the things you don’t see — when it’s left up to the imagination to fill in the blanks.” Many of the shocking ads shown in Chapter 6 of your textbook and the accompanying slides (see Module 4 Resources, Chapter 6 Slides) and in the AIGA Journal Article “Shockvertising: A Poke in the Brain” are examples of campaigns where the agencies allowed adrenaline‐charged young creatives unrestrained leeway to push the bounds of taste and appropriateness, utilizing shock imagery as a replacement for smart and sophisticated creativity. It is my contention that shocking communications repel more people than they attract. They grab attention by presenting the worst side of human nature. They may be used successfully to bring attention to a subject that people have become numb to—such as drug abuse or the AIDS crisis—but they do so ham‐handedly. Shocking imagery is a lazy excuse for not coming up with a creative idea. Visual communicators should take a hint from Benjamin and Voehringer’s ASPCA campaign and treat shocking subjects tactfully, calling viewers’ attentions and engaging them on an emotional level, but without being offensive or repulsive.