Breaking Up America: Advertisers and the New Media World
Joseph Turow. University of Chicago Press, $25 (256pp) ISBN 978-0-226-81749-1
Target marketing-the practice of pitching a narrow sales appeal to a specific demographic audience-is like a gated community: both are designed to appeal to an affluent few and to snub everyone else. In Breaking Up America, author Turow painstakingly details how target marketing exploits growing social divisions to maximize profits, and how, in doing so, it exacerbates these divisions. Utilizing data culled from books, interviews and trade journals, Turow spins a sobering tale of media manipulation. The rise of cable channels and niche magazines led to increased competition for audiences and, subsequently, to narrower ""formats"" designed to appeal to specific demographic profiles, primarily society's upper 20%, and to repel the remaining 80%. The result is a marketing strategy which consciously promotes and reinforces cultural divisiveness. Integral to these marketeers' strategy are stereotypes of race, gender, income and age. Turow is justifiably concerned; however, he does not adequately explain how, if advertisers deliberately rebuff the vast majority of consumers, this fractionalization pervades society as a whole. The intelligence and free will of the consumer are underplayed also, as if no one can see beyond the media's blatant button-pushing techniques. Breaking Up America is a well-researched, if depressing, look at the important phenomenon of target marketing and its impact on society. (Apr.)
Details
Reviewed on: 05/12/1997
Genre: Nonfiction
Other - 254 pages - 978-0-226-81751-4
Paperback - 256 pages - 978-0-226-81750-7