uses 2 days ago

help me understand why adorable mini ice cream cones or the convenience of delicious frozen food is bad for human civilization. and why is a 15 dollar tin of fishwife worse for “the environment” than a 99 cent tin of brunswick?

by the way, it would be most sustainable to not produce at all? that’s certainly a surprise.

i don’t spend a ton of time in spaces where would i get marketed to by this instagram garbo, so maybe i don’t understand the sensation of being spoken down to by it. but it strikes me as the equivalent of watching saturday morning cartoons and then being huffed that all the ads are for silly action figures and play doh.

  • mieses 2 days ago

    do you even care about civilization?

bigyabai 2 days ago

> Advertising and branding used to be smart. It was witty, cohesive, and most importantly, it respected the intelligence and shrewdness of the consumer it was marketing to.

They really weren't. If you look at the examples they list, none of them rely on a particularly intelligent audience. Their wording preys on the insecurities of possessing wealth and coerces the viewer with lowest-common-denominator logic. They're insulting and smarmy, pretentious but zero-sum. I read through hundreds of issues of Popular Mechanics as a kid, and even back then I wasn't dumb enough to feel "witty" for parsing an advertisement's joke. Maybe that was more obvious in the context they were published.

What I find funny is that I see nostalgia for every age of branding like this. There are postwar idealists who think all modernity is sin, there are 60s and 70s obsessives that think every advertisement should be full-page and drenched in cigar smoke, and others yet that think the gaudy trappings of the 80s and 90s were the most humanist advertising got. They're all falling for the same illusion of "sophistication" that advertising has always lacked. The fact that the author seems to think branding ever had prestige is kinda a mea-culpa for their own outrageous outlook.

renewiltord 2 days ago

This is just the usual Taleb’s Ugly Surgeon result. If you have a two-factor model with a selection threshold that is the sum of the two, improvements in one factor will be accompanied with reductions in the other factor on the margin.

nothercastle 2 days ago

It’s basic math the pie is only so big. If you allocate resources to tech and ads then you can’t also afford good service and people.

Similar to how you can’t expects affordable prices from a company that hires football stars to make ads for them.

bwoj 2 days ago

WTF does yassified CPG even mean?

  • eesmith 2 days ago

    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/yassify

    > 1. (transitive, Internet slang) To apply several beauty filters to (a picture or video of someone), typically making the subject look more made-up, potentially more feminine, and often unrecognizable.

    > 2. (figuratively, sometimes derogatory) To present (something) as fashionable and glamorous, often by removing or disguising aspects which are considered unappealing.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast-moving_consumer_goods

    > Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), also known as consumer packaged goods (CPG)[1] or convenience goods, are products that are sold quickly and at a relatively low cost.

    So I read it as consumer packaged goods which are presented as fashionable and glamorous using Internet marketing and real-world branding, for what is likely generic brand quality.