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	<title>The Representation of Elderly People in Prime Time Television Commercials</title>
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	<description>University of South Florida School of Mass Communications Masters Thesis by Meredith Tupper November 1995</description>
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		<title>Introduction</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Nov 2009 16:30:58 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Background of the Problem &#8220;Where&#8217;s the beef?&#8221;    &#8220;Clap on! Clap off!&#8221;    &#8220;Help! I&#8217;ve fallen and I can&#8217;t get up.&#8221; Few phenomena penetrate the American social psyche quicker than television commercials. Ever since Wendy&#8217;s Hamburgers&#8217; own Clara Peller complained about the competition&#8217;s skimpy sandwiches, older people have established a memorable presence in American television commercials. However, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p><strong><em><span style="color: #666600;">Background of the  Problem</span></em></strong><br />
<span> &#8220;Where&#8217;s the beef?&#8221;    &#8220;Clap on!  Clap off!&#8221;    &#8220;Help! I&#8217;ve fallen and I can&#8217;t get up.&#8221;</span></p>
<p><span>Few phenomena penetrate the American social psyche quicker  than television commercials. Ever since Wendy&#8217;s Hamburgers&#8217; own Clara Peller  complained about the competition&#8217;s skimpy sandwiches, older people have  established a memorable presence in American television commercials. However,  one need look no further than the father of cultivation theory, George  Gerbner, to confirm that a memorable presence in television may not always  be an accurate one. Gerbner (1993) discusses the powerful impact that television  makes on our culture: <em>Mass media are the most ubiquitous wholesalers  of social roles in industrial societies. Mass media, particularly television,  form the common mainstream of contemporary culture. They present a steady,  repetitive, and compelling system of images and messages. For the first  time in human history, most of the stories are told to most of the children  not by their parents, their school, or their church but by a group of distant  corporations that have something to sell. This unprecedented condition  has a profound effect on the way we are socialized into our roles, including  age as a social role &#8230; The world of aging (and nearly everything else)  is constructed to the specifications of marketing strategies (p. 207).</em></span></p>
<p><span>The world of aging portrayed in the mass media has not  traditionally been an enjoyable or positive one. Dail (1988) states that  elderly populations suffer from negative stereotyping more than any other identifiable  social group. She argues that preconceived notions about cognition, physical  ability, health, sociability, personality, and work capability perpetuate  these negative stereotypes. Indeed, in American culture, increasing age  seems to portend decreasing value as a human being. Mass media scholar  Joshua Meyrowitz (1985) offers some insight into this devaluation. <em>Old  people today are generally not appreciated as experienced &#8220;elders&#8221; or possessors  of special wisdom; they are simply seen as sometimes remaining competent  enough to be included in the unitary role category of &#8220;active citizen.&#8221;  Old people are respected to the extent that they can behave like young  people, that is, to the extent that they remain capable of working, enjoying  sex, exercising and taking care of themselves (p. 153).</em></span></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><span>How did the American culture develop such blatant  disregard and disrespect for the elderly? Gerontologists Butler,  Lewis and Sunderland (1990) suggest the following causes:</span></p>
<p><em><span style="color: #666600;">A number of  factors have  had a negative influence on U.S. attitudes toward old age:</span></em></p>
<ol>
<li><em><span>A history of mass immigration, still ongoing, mostly  consisting of the young leaving the elderly behind in Europe and  Asia.
<p></span></em><em></em></li>
<li><em><span>A nation founded on principles of individualism,  independence, and autonomy.
<p></span></em><em></em></li>
<li><em><span>The development of technologies that demand rapid  change and specialized skills.
<p></span></em><em></em></li>
<li><em><span>A general devaluation of tradition.
<p></span></em><em></em></li>
<li><em><span>Increased mobility of the population within a large  continental space.
<p></span></em></li>
<li><span><em>Medical advances that have relegated most deaths  to later life, producing a</em> <em>tendency to associate death with old  age.</em></span></li>
</ol>
<p><em><span>All these have made it difficult to embrace old age  itself as a valued and contributory phase of life (p. 30).</span></em></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><span>A medium like television, known for its emphasis  on youth and beauty, fast motion and quick edits, condensed time and simplistic  portrayals, is bound to exacerbate a potentially negative or even non-existent  image of the elderly on television. According to the U.S. Bureau  of Census (1990), the number of elderly Americans has grown measurably  since 1970; in 1988, 12.7% of the U.S. population was 65 years old or older,  up from 9.8% in 1970. Yet even as the wave of graying baby boomers swells,  recent studies (Swayne and Greco, 1987; Dail, 1988; Vasil and Wass, 1993;  Bailey, Harrell and Anderson, 1993) show that purveyors of mass media continue  to misrepresent or underrepresent elders. Both Moore and Cadeau (1985)  and Swayne and Greco (1987) examined the portrayals of elderly in  television commercials, and both found underrepresentation of elderly  persons and significant underrepresentation of elderly women  in proportion to elderly men. Advertisers ignore older consumers  or perpetuate negative stereotypes, thereby alienating a large market segment  with powerful economic clout. According to Ken Dychtwald, author of <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Age  Wave: The Challenges and Opportunities of an Aging America</span> (1988),  ignoring the elderly market is an expensive mistake. <em>&#8220;Although  they represent only 25 percent of the total U.S. population, Americans  over 50 now have a combined annual personal income of over $800 billion  and control 70 percent of the total net worth of U.S. households &#8212; nearly  $7 trillion of wealth&#8221; (p. 268).</em></span></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><span>Yet for all this power, Dychtwald points out  that, <em>&#8220;Madison Avenue has constructed a smoke screen of myths about the  older consumer that have kept most businesses away from this potentially  powerful market. We have been led to believe that all older people are  poor and cannot afford to purchase new products or services, even if they  want to.&#8221;</em> </span></p>
<p><span>Further, he states,<em> &#8220;And we have been told over and over  that older men and women are fanatically loyal to their brands and too  set in their ways for advertisers to bother marketing to them&#8221; (p. 270).</em> Clearly, to capture this market, both advertising strategy and portrayals  of the elderly consumer will have to change. Beyond the realm of  economics, however, lies a deeper concern: the social effect that such  advertising stereotypes have on television viewers. Mass media effects  theories provide ample cause for concern that repeated exposure to commercials  which carry a negative subtext may lead to the overall devaluation of the  elderly. By representing elders as feeble, absent-minded, stubborn,  and helpless, or by simply not representing elders at all, the subtle effects  may accumulate and add to the estranged social conditions many older Americans  face today.  Swayne and Greco state, <em>&#8220;Television advertising, because  of its ability to influence and shape attitudes, can play a major role  in the socialization of the elderly and in influencing younger audiences&#8217;  view of older persons. By featuring active elderly spokespersons,  commercial messages should, over time, provide positive role models and  cues to the elderly and also help to reduce the negative stereotypes  of the aged&#8221; (p. 47)</em>.</span></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><strong><em><span style="color: #666600;">Statement of the  Problem</span></em></strong><br />
<span>Studies on portrayals of elderly in the mass media  abound in academia.  Some report a negative stereotype of the elderly (Aronoff, 1974; Northcott, 1975; Harris and Feinberg, 1977; Gerbner, Gross,  Signorielli and Morgan, 1980; Bishop and Krause, 1984). Others report no  specific negative images but a consistent underrepresentation of elderly in proportion to total population, and underrepresentation of elderly women in proportion to elderly men (Cassata, Anderson and Skill,  1980; Elliot, 1984; Swayne and Greco, 1987).  Moore and Cadeau (1985)  also examined the issue of race by measuring frequency of appearance of  visible minorities, and found significant underrepresentation. To this  end, Butler, Lewis and Sunderland (1990) point out some interesting statistics  cited here for purposes of comparison. <em>&#8220;Florida has the highest population  of elderly, with 17.7% of its population comprised of older (60+)  residents&#8221;</em>(p. 15).   <em>&#8220;Elderly women outnumber elderly men three to two. In 1986, for every 100 women aged 65-69, there were only  83 men in that same age group. The ratio continues to widen with age, with  only 40 men per 100 women in the 85-plus category</em>&#8221; (p. 11). <em>&#8220;Although  they comprise more than 12% of the total population, African-Americans  make up only 8% of the older age group&#8221; </em>(p. 12). The authors go on  to explain that  African-Americans suffer a higher mortality rate  during the beginning and middle of the life span, leaving fewer of them  to include in the 65-plus population. &#8220;The Hispanic population totaled  19.4 million, accounting for 8.1% of the total population, by March 1988.  By the year 2000 their numbers will reach 30 million, or 15% of the total  population. Currently, 5% of the  Hispanic population is 65 years  or older&#8221; (p. 21). While Moore and Cadeau (1985) examined the image of  the elderly in television commercials including the element of race,  their study was limited to Canadian broadcast television. Swayne and Greco&#8217;s  1987 study is the most recent one conducted in the U.S., but the authors  did not code for racial or cultural differences.</span></p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p><span>This study will update previously published research  regarding the image and representation of elderly in television  commercials, and will examine the following research questions:</span></p>
<ol>
<li><span>What is the percentage of  elderly people in prime time television commercials compared to the percentage  of elderly in the U.S. population?
<p></span></li>
<li><span>What is the ratio of elderly females to elderly males in prime time television commercials as  compared to previously cited   ratios of elderly females  to elderly males in the U.S. population?
<p></span></li>
<li><span>What is the percentage of  elderly African-Americans presented in prime time television commercials?
<p></span></li>
<li><span>What is the percentage of  elderly Hispanics presented in prime time television commercials?
<p></span></li>
<li><span>What is the percentage of  visible non-Anglo minorities (such as Asians, American Indians, or Middle  Easterners) presented in prime time television commercials?
<p></span></li>
<li><span>What types of negative, unflattering  or stereotypical images of elderly people (feeble, absent-minded,  slow, stubborn, etc.) appear in prime time television commercials?</span></li>
</ol>
<p><span>In the complex American society, the dissolution of the  nuclear family leaves the elderly alone, abandoned and sometimes  abused. As federal funding for Medicare and Social Security benefits is  slashed to new lows, many older Americans have nowhere to turn for help,  and society offers very few alternatives. Americans are not taught to respect,  revere and care for the aged in our society; in fact, we are taught that  age is something to ridicule, avoid and ignore whenever possible. Television  advertising certainly plays a part in this learning process; Vasil and  Wass note, <em>&#8220;Negative stereotyping of the elderly circumscribes  their potential by placing emphasis on the unproductive and unsuccessful  older person and may become a self-fulfilling prophecy limiting capacities  and experiences of aged persons. Negative stereotyping and ageism  not only affect the elderly but also create negative expectations,  fear, and dread of aging in the young&#8221;</em> (p. 71).</span></p>
<p><span>The images of elderly people on culturally-focused  networks such as <strong>Telemundo, Univision,</strong> and <strong>BET (Black Entertainment  Television)</strong> warrant further investigation regarding cultural differences  in the portrayals and percentages. Due to language barriers and difficulties  in drawing an appropriate sample, however, only <strong>ABC, CBS, NBC</strong> and  <strong>Fox</strong> networks will be monitored during prime time weekday programming.</span></p></blockquote>
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