![]() ![]() Nevertheless a warning was issued against similar practices, since, “Whether effective or not, such broadcasts clearly are intended to be deceptive.” Now – who’s playing? Did the message persuade people to follow its command, thus driving up sales? It’s hard to say. The games manufacturer claimed to be shocked at the revelation, with a misguided employee carrying the can, and the commercial was removed from airplay. Some sharp-sighted parents noticed something suspicious and filed complaints with the FCC. In a classic case of subliminal advertising from 1973, a TV commercial for the children’s memory game Husker Du, shown in the US and Canada, featured sub-visual cuts, with the phrase ‘Get it’ flashed no less than four times, for a frame each time, during its one-minute run time. Perhaps their spokespeople had been taking lessons from the McDonalds’s team. Watched in slow motion, the flashing images became apparent, though Konami declared they were due to a technical bug. The concerns were clear – even if the imagery was not: picked up subliminally, such signals could encourage people to keep throwing their money away for longer, spurred on by the subconscious feeling of winning. ![]() The games displayed a 5-of-a-kind jackpot symbol combination on screen for a fifth of a second as the reels started to spin on every go. In February 2007, a gambling operator in Canada pulled the plug on 87 Konami slot machines and removed them from the floor of Ontario’s casinos after an investigation uncovered subliminal trickery taking place before bleary-eyed players. How could such a thing occur accidentally? A McDonald’s spokesman said: “We don’t do subliminal advertising.” Sure, just an accidental glitch – a supersized one. What had audiences seen but barely been aware of – all but invisible to the naked eye? A McDonald’s logo that popped up for a single frame together with the hamburger giant’s slogan, ‘I’m lovin’ it.’ Following the revelation, accusations of subliminal advertising were met with claims that it was a “technical error” by the television network, but skeptics unsurprisingly weren’t convinced. On January 27 2007, viewers watching the Food Network’s Iron Chef America may have noticed a brief flash of red that appeared for a split second towards the end of a show when the challengers’ entries were being assessed and two men raised their glasses. Mischievous maybe, but still concealed imagery subliminally playing on the fact that sex sells. Apparently less insidious marketing strategy than a lascivious joke, the ad did nevertheless run before the fuss it provoked, and its illustration has also been found on other materials such as matchbooks and cocktail napkins. What’s being offered here? On the face of it, flooring – though the headline, ‘Laid By The Best,’ is revealed as a somewhat unsubtle sexual innuendo. Looks innocuous? Well flip the image upside down and crop the lady’s head and daintily held champagne glass, and it suddenly doesn’t look like her neck she’s touching but a more sensitive, exposed part of her anatomy. This ad appeared in Britain’s Yellow Pages but was pulled because of the suggestive content it contains. The matter was investigated by the FCC, but while the ad was taken off air, no penalties were imposed and Bush denied allegations of subliminal skullduggery. Gore and his party were associated with vermin. At such a speed, the bold lettering was scarcely perceptible except to the subconscious mind, but the implication was obvious. When the phrase ‘BUREAUCRATS DECIDE’ appeared just after Gore’s name was mentioned, the final fragment of the second word – ‘RATS’ – flashed up for a fraction of a second – one-thirtieth to be precise. A series of words flitted across the screen throughout, yet something smelled funny. Here are ten devious examples that didn’t quite slip through the regulatory net.ĭuring the 2000 US presidential race, a TV commercial created by George Bush’s campaign team used subliminal messaging over pictures deriding presidential candidate Al Gore’s proposals on prescription drugs. What is evident, however, is that ads containing stimuli that are difficult to discern exist, and that they can, however subtly, alter human behavior and emotions. The effectiveness of subliminal messages is actually disputed – if the results of controlled tests are anything to go by. ![]() If adverts can steer us toward a particular product through surreptitiously placed words or images designed to be absorbed at a subconscious level, how else can marketing and government agencies coerce us into decisions that are not our own? The specter of brainwashing looms large. Ever since the term ‘subliminal advertising’ was coined in the 1950s, the idea of advertisements with hidden messages that can influence us without our conscious understanding has captivated the popular imagination. ![]()
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