No space left unsold
“In back,” turned out to be—a library.from “The Space Merchants” by Frederick Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth, 1952
I was conscious of Herrera’s eyes on me, and I don’t think I showed any of what I felt. I even stayed with him for an hour or so, while he devoured a wormy copy of something called Moby Dick and I glanced through half a dozen ancient magazines. Some of those remembered classics went a long way toward easing my conscience—there was actually an early “Do You Make These Common Mistakes in English?” and a very fine “Not a Cough in a Carload” that would have looked well on the wall of my office, back in Schocken Tower. But I could not relax in the presence of so many books without a word of advertising in any of them. I am not a prude about solitary pleasures when they serve a useful purpose. But my tolerance has limits.
The Space Merchants was written as a satire, but more and more of it has become depressingly true. There are few spaces left without advertising. We now have:
- commercials on public broadcasting
- commercials masquerading as news shows in classrooms
- cartoons that are little more than half hour commercials
- athletes have become billboards
- the State of the Union address is used to promote a brand of children’s videos.
In other words, a pesticide manufacture can put the American Cancer Society logo on known carcinogens with a small donation. A Feed the Children logo can be used to crowd the safety warnings of a rat poison. A chemical fungicide can compete with Neem oil by donating to the Sierra Club.
I’ll close with the words of Mitch Courtney.
"It was an appeal to reason, and they’re always dangerous. You can’t trust reason. We threw it out of the ad profession long ago and have never missed it."
Labels: Corporationists, EPA, George W Bush
3 Comments:
There is going to be a lot of undoing that needs to be done to clean up the Big Giant Mess that Bush and all his appointees are making for the next hopefully sane President.
The list of Bush messes to clean up goes on forever. Some he started, a lot he shifted into overdrive.
The slide towards corporationism was noticed by Pohl and Kornbluth in 1952. I wish more people would have paid attention.
Reading your latest post I recalled the story of how Harry Truman got his nickname (from Wikipedia):
During a speech by Truman in, Harrisburg, Illinois attacking the Republicans during the 1948 Presidential election campaign a supporter yelled out, "Give 'em Hell, Harry!". Truman replied, "I don't give them Hell. I just tell the truth about them and they think it's Hell."
Cheryl, you're a great "truth teller". Keep up the good work.
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