Another Win for Occupy Wall Street: Cute Commercials for McDonald's, Vegas Vacations
New York Times reporters are eager to see the influence of the left-wing sit-in Occupy Wall Street around every corner. On Sunday's front page, Tanzina Vega even credited Occupy Wall Street for a new batch of class-warfare themed television ads from McDonald's and others, inspiring overworked employees to actually take their lunch breaks and vacation days: "In Ads, the Workers Rise Up...and Go to Lunch."
A photo caption from an ad for Las Vegas tourism began: "Experts say some companies are tapping the spirit of Occupy Wall Street in ads."
The woman had had enough. Amid ringing phones and clicking keyboards she climbs up on her desk and shouts through her speakerphone: “I have 47 vacation days. That’s insane.”
“Let’s take back our summer!” she yells as she raises a sign over her head with the phrase “Vacation Now” on it. “Who’s with me?” A handful of employees applaud. The rest look away.
The scene, echoing a pivotal sequence in the 1979 film “Norma Rae,” is not a union recruiting pitch but instead is part of a television ad for the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, from a campaign called “Take Back Your Summer.” Other big advertisers like McDonald’s and Coca-Cola are also tapping into a sense of frustration among workers to sell products portrayed as minor luxuries.
Vega managed to tease out an insidious pro-corporate interest agenda:
Marketers are adopting the theme of workers’ rights at a time when unions themselves are confronting declines in membership and influence. In effect, some labor experts say, they are turning a pro-worker theme on its head to serve the corporate interest.
“It’s an effort by management to co-opt the Occupy Wall Street spirit and redirect it to promote its product,” said Harry Katz, dean of the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations. “They are using it in a somewhat manipulative way.”
Nevertheless, the appeals to downtrodden workers keep coming. If a mere lunch break or a weeklong vacation is not enough of a respite, workers can enter a contest called “Take the Year Off,” sponsored by Gold Peak Tea.
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Comments
Getting squishes to want to
Submitted by ray johnson on Mon, 07/09/2012 - 4:29pm.
Getting squishes to want to eat fast food won't take a big ad budget, it's pretty good and pretty quick. Groupthink sometimes doesn't factor in reality.
How is it an occutard theme? The ads show people with jobs!
Submitted by JeffC... on Mon, 07/09/2012 - 4:35pm.
Wouldn't the squishes and occutards recognize that the corporations are targeting them with advertizing and resist?
Now, Jeff
Submitted by Tugboat Phil on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 8:55am.
They can't really watch mom's TV when they're out "fighting the power."
Can They Back It Up With Facts?
Submitted by HardRightTurn on Mon, 07/09/2012 - 4:56pm.
Or is that asking for just too much? Like, please show us the records that prove corporations are denying employees their vacation/paid-time-off. Give us the names of the plaintiffs and witnesses to these pseudo-crimes.
Man! I just can't wait until John Galt pulls the rug out from under these miscreants.
To more fully comprehend the Left, one must read “Leftism As Psychopathy” by John Ray, M.A., Ph.D. Caution, it might scare you a little bit.
http://jonjayray.tripod.com/psycho.html
Ain't it just good advertising?
Submitted by Galvanic on Mon, 07/09/2012 - 5:51pm.
“It’s an effort by management to co-opt the Occupy Wall Street spirit and redirect it to promote its product,” said Harry Katz, dean of the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations. “They are using it in a somewhat manipulative way.”
So, if McDonalds advertises that it employees work hard and get time off for meals and breaks, isn't that aimed at attracting potential hires?
I mean, the "Spirit of OWS" is about hanging out in public land all day, getting free food, trashing out those public places, and occasionally initiating mayhem and vandalism. It's about not working. That's the antithesis of what businesses are about.
I doubt any business -- not even head shops -- want to hire the kind of people found at OWS.