Contemporary Indian Television Commercials

Aishwarya Narayan, Sushma Nayak
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Abstract

The famous ‘cultivation' theory proposed by Professor George Gerbner suggests that people are influenced by jingles and catchlines, and a good deal of their conceptions of social reality depends on their exposure to television. The impact of incessant exposure to similar messages engenders cultivation, or the consolidation of a persistent conception, conventional roles and pooled standards, often involuntarily. The present study intends to explore cultivation theory by considering Indian commercials aired on television since 2001 till date and by critically examining and exploring marketing strategies employed by companies from the standpoint of gender-based portrayals and their consequent impact. The conclusion is that assigning particular traits to genders only restricts individuals from choosing who they want to be. It creates boxed expectations, and judges those who step outside them. Gender roles are nothing but an unrealistic expectation, which limits people from being their true selves, an aspect that needs realization by marketers.
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当代印度电视广告
乔治·格伯纳教授提出的著名的“培养”理论认为,人们会受到广告歌和台词的影响,他们对社会现实的观念很大程度上取决于他们看电视的时间。不断接触类似信息的影响产生了培养,或巩固了一个持久的概念,传统角色和汇集的标准,通常是不自觉的。本研究旨在通过考虑自2001年至今在电视上播出的印度广告,并从基于性别的形象及其随之而来的影响的角度,通过批判性地审查和探索公司采用的营销策略,来探索培养理论。结论是,给性别分配特定的特征只会限制个人选择他们想成为的人。它创造了刻板的期望,并评判那些超越他们的人。性别角色只不过是一种不切实际的期望,它限制了人们做真实的自己,这需要营销人员认识到。
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