HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1957-07-25, Page 6The Men VVho Make Up Our Minds MEMORIZE THIS PICTURE!
NEW YORK — While Vance
Packard has gone home to work
en a new book, Madison Avenue
—the mother -ulcer of the na-
lion's advertising industry — is
still trying to digest his first
book without gagging.
It's called "The Hidden Per-
suaders" and describes in minute
detail how we are being sold
eine in and instead of another,
one candidate instead of another,
ene point of view instead of an-
other.
Why, asks Packard (who knows
the, answers), do cars keep get-
ting longer and" longer? Why
are men's clothes becoming fem-
inized? How do supermarkets
sell 25 per cent more than the
shopper needs?
On and on the questions roll.
And the answer, according to this
study, is because merchandisers,
ad men, publicists are applying
the findings of Motivational Re-
search.
MR is psychology applied to
selling. And Motivational Re-
searchers are depth men whose
philosophy, according to one of
their trade journals, says: "In
very few instances do people
really know what they want,
even when they say they do."
For the most part, behind our
specific purchases and points of
view are unconscious and irra-
tional motivating factors. For
example, Packard cites "the
drive to conformity, the need for
oral stimulation, yearning for
security."
Once these "vulnerable points
'are isolated, he explains, the psy-
chological hooks are baited and
placed in the merchandising sea
for the unwary consumer who
has no way to defend himself.
Under chapter headings like:
Marketing Eight Hidden Needs;
The Built -In Sexual Overtone;
Babes In Consumerland; The
Packaged Soul; etc., Packard
points to product after product
and campaign after campaign
which MR has successfully sold
to us.
"They're not selling products
much anymore," Packard said
about his findings. "Today, one
brand is often about the same
as another. So the merchandisers
have to sell us as people. It's
inhuman and dangerous."
Ready confirmation of his con-
clusion is available to most
working newsmen in the morn-
ing mail. A publicity release by
s& cigar firm, for example, pro-
claims that it has hired a good-
looking woman to "glamorize"
cigars so that women will buy
them and younger men will
smoke them.
And an item from Blank Art.
Studios who supply - much of
the art you see in ads explains
that they "have been giving a
Tot more emphasis to the people
rather than. the product in the
ad."
Even qualified market report-
ers find themselves baffled by
what people say about a product
before they buy it. Here's a news
report on a new automobile
style: "You may not like the
looks of this car . but the
public is going for it—big!"
In both subtle and obvious
ways, Packard said, we're being
exploited in our unconscious: our
hopes, fears, dreams — places
where we have no defense.
In order to get at these feel-
ings, Packard found, MR people
have called on college professors
of psychology and sociology to
devise depth questionnaires and
tests that will by-pass conscious
guards.
"It's getting to the place," ac-
cording to Kenneth Schwartz, an.
expert market reporter, "where
if you want to interview a col-
lege professor, you have to look
for him at supermarket open-
ings."
ciF
But one psychology professor
at an eastern college who has
been ignored by MR firms said
wistfully: "Of course I'd be glad
to consult with these researchers.
understand they pay very
well."
They charge very well. It costs
a medium-sized .ad agency about
$1,500 for a day -and -a -half con-
sultation. And with each new MR
success,,'the fee. climbs.
About the only thing, Packard
said, that can pull the frightening
structure down is awareness by
the consumer of what the mer-
chandisers are doing to him with
MR.
And ad men are frankly wor-
ried that "The Hidden Persuad-
ers" will .do just that. The book
is selling at the rate of 1,000 per
week and as one Madison Avenue
man said, "How can you tell
who's erading it? If it's just us
ad men, it's okay. But what if
it's a consumer?"
Packard- sadly admitted his
own fear that the middle ma-
jority—the market which MR
manipulates — does not read
books like this,
"About the best I can hope
for," he said, "is that the MR
people and the advertising men
will read it and discover a sense
'of morality and responsibility
toward the unaware consumers
who can't defend themselves
against the exploitation of their
unconscious."
BY THE TIME her supermarket
trip is done, MR will have sold
her 25 per cent more than she
needs—or wants.
H ighway Eyewash
A pat argument used by mem-
bers of Congress opposed to bill-
board controls is that only
esthetes are concerned about
turning the new 41,000 miles of
Federal highway into a garish
jungle of billboards and neon -
lit hot dog eateries. Yet among
the chief opponents of unregu-
lated billboards are highway en-
gineers — hardy known as an
arty -arty group — who rightly
point to certain safety hazards
posed by confusing signs on a
speedway. We further suspect
that many a motorist whose
closest approach to the fine arts
is watching a wrestling match
will take loud offense if he sees
more soapflake placards than
sunsets on his first vacation tour
on the new highways. — Wash-
ington Post.
ICEMAIL MAN -• Learning her new duties down to the last letter,
this would-be postman, not yet in uniform, trundles her "trolley"
from house-to-house in The Hague, Holland, under the watchful
stye of a regular mailman. Owing to a shortage of male per-
sonnel, Dutch postal authorities are recruiting women for the
letter -lugging lab. The postwomen will be issued "trolleys" to
Make their lob easier.
This scene is duplicated all tao often on a brig
ments of highway tragedy are here. The smash
passersby. You can smell, almost the funmes o
hear (almost) the keening of ambulance siren
wreck, made to occur on a test track at the,UC
of head-on collision. Place yourself mentally i
before you take a chance on the highway. Eac
an hour when they hit.
ht, pleasant Sunday afternoon. Many of the ele-
ed cars — the news photographers curious
f dripping gasoline and hot engine oil. You can
s. But this is no accident. It is a carefully staged
LA engineering laboratory to study the effects
n the driver's seat of either car, for a moment,
h of these vehicles was going "only" 55 miles
TA BLE TALKS
rg clam Ar,diews.
/f you are doing any warm -
weather entertaining, gelatin for
salad molds, crumb crusts for
refrigerator pies, or some other
dessert that can be made and
refrigerated 24 hours or so be-
fore serving are a real help. Or'-
if you don't want to cook et'
the last moment, a chicken loaf
be be baking in your oven for
the last hour before the party
and whisked onto the table hot
at the last minute.
* m *. .
Vegetables with cottage cheese
make an easy, go _ with - steak
salad. This one uses four colour-
ful vegetables. It should be un -
molded on crisp lettuce and serv-
ed with mayonaise.
VEGETABLE SALAD
1 package lemon -flavored
gelatin
1 cup boiling water
134 tablespoons vinegar
Cold water
134 teaspoons salt
Dash pepper
34 teaspoon paprika
Pinch Cayenne
1 cup shredded raw cabbage
2 tblsp. grated onion
s/ cup chopped raw spinach
l/ cup grated raw carrot
Cottage cheese
Dissolve gelatin in boiling
water. Place vinegar in 1 cup
measure and add enough cold
water to make 3/4 cup. Add this
to dissolved gelatin and stir in
seasonings. Chill until syrupy.
To 34 of thin mixture add onion
and cabbage. Pour into 1 -quart
ring mold and chill until set.
Add spinach and carrot 'to re-
mainder of gelatin; pour over
set mixture. Chill until firm.
Unmold on lettuce; fill center
with cottage cheese. Serves 6.
* * �n .
If you would like to . serve
fruit as your salad, try 'this
molded fruit medley. Serve with
whipped cream to which • you
have added a small amount of •
mayonnaise. This amount serves •
6.
MOLDED FRUIT MEDLEY
1 envelope unflavored
gelatin
cup sugar
Ye teaspoon salt
lei cups very hot water
1/ cup lemon or lime juice
2 cups mixed cut-up fresh,
canned or frozen fruit
Mix together gelatin, sugar,
and salt. Add very hot water
and stir until gelatin is thor-
oughly dissolved. Stir in lemon
juice. Chill until mixture is con-
sistency of unbeaten egg white.
Fold in fruit. Turn into 3 -cup
mold or individual molds. Chill
until firm. Unmold on crisp let-
tuce leaves.
* * *
Have you every tried making a
chocolate-grapenut crust for an
Ice cream pie? Use peppermint
ice cream to fill this crust and
put the whole thing in your
freezer until ready to serve. This
is a 9 -inch pie.
CROCOLATE PEPPERMINT
PIE`
2 pints peppermint ice cream
3/ cup semisweet chocolate
pieces
2 teaspoons butter
1 cup grapefruit flakes
eo cup semisweet chocolate
pieces
1 to 2 tablespoons warm
water
Line a 9 -inch pie pan with
aluminum foil, pressing foil
around edges of pan. Melt to-
gether butter and 3/4 cup choco-
late pieces in small saucepan
over low heat, stirring until
smooth. Add grapenut flakes and
mix well. With the back of a
spoon, press mixture into foil -
14
lined pie pan. Chill until choco-
late shell is firm. Lift foil from
par:" and peel from chocolate
shell. Place shell in pie pan and
spoon slightly softened pepper-
mint ice cream into shell. Melt
the' lee • cup chocolate pieces in
the warm water. Drizzle choco-
late over ice cream. With a spat-
ula or
pat_ula`or fork, mark through choc-
olate topping to make a marble-
ized effect. Cover with freezer
wrapping. Freeze until ready to
serve.
* * m
Here's a chicken and rice loaf
recipe you'll like. It bakes at
350° F. for I hour. Use ;a 2 -quart
ring mold, a large bread loaf• pan
or any special loaf pan you -like.
British inside of pan with melted
fat'+'before pouring mixture into
pan. Allow loaf to stay in pan
10 ;: minutes after taking from
cokiel;i, then loosen edges and
slda with spatula. Put platter
ov€r pan; use both hands to turn
106, onto platter.
OT CHICKEN AND
RICE LOAF
ewing chicken (4 pounds
dy--t e!cook weight)
aspoons salt
ps raw rice, cooked
teaspoon salt
cup chopped pimiento
teaspoon paprika
eggs, beaten
cup chicken fat, skimmed
from broth
2'' cups chicken broth
I' cup milk
Cook chicken with 2 teaspoons
salt, the day before you want to
make the loaf. Pour broth in
covered container. Cool quickly.
Keep in refrigerator. Remove
chicken meat from bones and
cut' into 3i- to 1 -inch cubes.
Keep in refrigerator.
The morning of the party, use
spoon to remove fat from broth.
There should be a quart of
broth. If there . is more, boil
down to 'I quart. If there is less,
add ;water to make a quart. Heat
to blend. Reserve 2 cups for
sauce.
Combine the chicken, 4 cups
cooked rice, and all other in-
gredients as listed. Stir to blend
well. Pack mixture into greased
pan. Bake at 350° F. for 1 hour.
Serves 8-10.
Season and thicken 2 cups
chicken broth and serve as sauce
for loaf.
Follow Basic Rules
For Safe Vacation
To ensure a healthy, happy
holiday it pays to follow a few
basic rules:
1. Avoid deep water and canoes
if you are a non -swimmer.
2. Take the sun in easy doses
. sunburn is a real .burn.
3. Be sure your summer water
supply is pure and your va-
cation milk supply is pasteur-
ized . . if not, pasteurize it
yourself.
4. Avoid over-exertion, particu-
larly if you are unaccustomed
to strenuous exercise.
When a man is pushing 60,
that's exercise enough.
Happy Motoring
VVIth Small Fry
If you're taking very young
children on a motor trip, load
suitcases on the floor of the back
seat until they are level with the
seat. Place a mattress across
this area, with blankets and pil-
lows, providing both a play area,
and a comfortable place to sleep.
A space -saving is to hang a,
plastic shor wardrobe over the
back of the car's front seat so•
that compartments face the rear.
This holds toys and necessary in-
cidentals ... one being a paper
bag for litter.
Items in the glove compart-
ment of the car should include
sun glasses for tired little eyes,
sunburn preventative, a first aid
kit, and a damp washcloth and
soap in a plastic bag.
TV Art Lessons
For Housewives
The French TV network has
launched a program to teach
housewives with time on their
hands, how to paint pictures. The
idea stemmed from earlier suc-
cess of cooking lessons via TV.
Viewer.; receive three after-
noon classes a week. Georges
Labaille, a well - known art
teacher, is in charge but he of-
ten presents guest stars from
the Paris art world, to offer
words of encouragement to the
aspiring painters in their kitchen
aprons.
It is estimated that 20 per cent
of the persons watching the pro-
grams have their easels in front
of them and are painting right
along with the teacher.
Cool kr' rinks Won
Serve simple cool drinks and
you'll be a winner! Grape juice
is a good old standby. Just com-
bine one medium bottle of juice
with enough sugar syrup to
sweeten. Add half cupful of
lemon juice and chill. Just be-
fore serving add one quart of
ginger ale and serve six satis-
fied customers.
VIRUS VICTIMS — These residents of Delhi, India, some of the
35,000 in the Delhi area stricken with Oriental influenza,
crowd into a dispensary for treatment. First detected in north
China in January, the virus has raged through the entire Far
East. With cases showing up in European cities and among
travelers returning to America, world health officials fear fur-
ther spread and are waging an all-out war against it. Known
as Mutant A—it changes its nature—the flu has resisted modern
miracle durgs. Few deaths have been reported, though millions
have been stricken.
•
infAT'S MY MESS YOt`ll'RB MBSSIN'-Two-year-ol d British lass Peta Louise Skingley appears mif-
fed because chimp "Congo's has his fist in the paintpot, spilling colors over the young lady's
surrealistic effort. Puma simply shouldn't pain t at the London zoo.
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