Transcript For example

Whose voice guides your
choice?
Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
Propaganda techniques in the
media
How do you decide who is the
best candidate…
Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
or which is the
best toothpaste ?
Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
Looking for facts to back
up your choice is an
excellent idea, but find
out who is presenting
those facts.
Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
Are they facts at
all, or is the
advertiser using
propaganda
techniques to
persuade you?
Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
What are Propaganda
techniques?
• Propaganda is designed to
persuade.
• Its purpose is to influence your
opinions, emotions, attitudes,
or behavior.
• It seeks to “guide your choice.”
Who uses Propaganda?
•Military
•Media
•Advertisers
•Politicians
•You and I
What are some of the techniques
used to persuade us?
•Bandwagon
•Name-calling
•Testimonial
•Glittering Generality/Card Stacking
•Plain-folk
•Snob Appeal
•Appeal to Emotions
Bandwagon
•You are urged to do or believe
something because everyone else does
•Everybody is doing this.
•If you want to fit in, you need to
“jump on the bandwagon” and do it
too.
Clipart-Microsoft Office XP 2002
For example:
This technique tries to persuade everyone to join in
and do the same thing.
Name-calling
•saying bad things about the
competition, tries
to make a product or issue seem bad.
•A negative word or feeling is attached
to an idea, product, or person.
For example:
Testimonial
•A famous person endorses an
idea, a product, a candidate.
•If someone famous uses this
product, believes this idea, or
supports this candidate, so
should we.
For example:
An important person or famous figure
endorses a product
Glittering Generality/Card Stacking
•Ads giving only the positive side of a
product or service, ignoring negative
aspects.
•Positive words or phrases with a "feelgood" quality leave a nice impression
without making any guarantee.
For example:
Plain-folks Appeal
•This idea, product, or person is
associated with normal, everyday
people and activities.
•It uses either people unknown to
the general population or someone
well known appearing as a common
everyday person
For Example:
Snob Appeal
•This technique involves
making a claim that one
should act or think in a
certain way because of the
high social status
associated with the action
or thought.
For example:
Appeal to Emotions
• words or images that appeal to
the audience’s emotions are
used
• the appeal may be to positive
emotions , such as desire to
success, or to negative ones,
such as fear
For example: