6.02.2008

politicians and laptops.

I'm disappointed in you, New York Times. I don't care if this is a product of the ad department. I don't care who did it, it disgusts me. This sidebar places politics within the discourse of popular culture, degrading (or should I say elevating?) political figures to the level of consumer items. Our politicians are not celebrities. They are not mass marketing tools. They aren't even symbols. They are there to serve us. They are there because we are supposed to listen to them and they are supposed to listen to us, and we are supposed to all get what we want in the end. Instead, the media treats them like untouchable figures. Or, worse, the media uses rhetoric to identify them with a mass marketed product. If we aren't careful, we can come to think of public figures in this way: bought and sold, created in marketing meetings and focus groups, disposable. They assume a brand identity. They become a part of our already consumer-saturated mindsets, furthering the consumerist ideology that so many scholars have fought to disband (or at least demystify). I usually think of The New York Times as above these things. This is just disappointing.

And, by the way, I do think Clinton is a PC and Obama is a Mac. They are simply actors. They are this way because this is all we know how to digest anymore. It's our own fault. And it's our own job to reverse this way of thinking.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Politics hasn't been about policy for a long time from what I've gathered.

Today, politics is about personal branding. It *is* about packaging yourself for consumption. It's a cynical view to take, but it's reality; and you have to wonder if it's really as bad as it sounds.

At the executive level politics are so broad that they almost don't matter. There is no way for a candidate to actually determine WHY someone voted for them, and so what stance they should actually take with respect to any individual policy is unclear—if they actually wanted to represent their constituency, anyway. And since this is true, a discussion about policy becomes secondary to branding.

And while I'd agree that it's disappointing to see the NYT approve such an ad, don't you think it would be simply marvelous if the two of them actually got together and produced such an ad after this whole thing is over? I mean, if you really wanted to connect with an entire generation—I mean really connect—I can't think of a better way to do it. It would make a great opener for SNL at the very least.

I hope it's okay if I drop you a comment from time to time. Last one for a while. Super swear.

siege said...

I really really want to respond to this, but I'm lazy/busy. But I will get to it sooner or later, oh just you wait. Also, thanks for the comments. Stop by anytime.