Bomshell

As a way of linking some of the ideas that we covered in terms of Feminist Critical Thinking towards the 4th KEY CONCEPTUAL AREA OF A LEVEL MEDIA STUDIES: INSTITUTION, let’s look at Bombshell.

The Fox News Channel, abbreviated FNC, commonly known as Fox News, and stylized in all caps, is an American multinational conservative-cable news television channel based in New York City. It is owned by Fox News Media, which itself is owned by the Fox Corporation.

Roger Eugene Ailes (May 15, 1940 – May 18, 2017) was an American television executive and media consultant. He was the chairman and CEO of Fox News, Fox Television Stations and 20th Television.

Sexual harassment is a type of harassment involving the use of explicit or implicit sexual overtones, including the unwelcome and inappropriate promise of rewards in exchange for sexual favors.

After co-moderating the 2016 Republican debate, Megyn Kelly faces numerous insults from Donald Trump, who is upset because she asked him about his offensive comments toward women. Under pressure from the network, and after receiving death threats and unwanted paparazzi attention, Kelly eventually reconciles with Trump.

Meanwhile, Gretchen Carlson is removed as co-anchor of the popular Fox and Friends show, and is transferred to a less popular show. Inundated by sexist comments on and off the air, including by Roger Ailes, Carlson meets with lawyers, Nancy Smith and Neil Mullin, who explain that Carlson’s contract prevents her from suing the network, but she can sue Ailes personally.

On her first day on The O’Reilly Factor, Kayla Pospisil meets fellow staffer Jess Carr, and the two sleep together. The next day, Ailes begins sexually harassing Pospisil. Pospisil begins to tell Carr about what happened, but Carr interrupts, saying she cannot get involved.

Carlson is later fired, ostensibly for her on-air support of the federal assault weapons ban, and decides to sue Ailes. When the news breaks the next day, Ailes denies the allegations and Kelly admits to her core team Ailes sexually harassed her when she started at Fox. In the following weeks, despite a number of other women voicing their public support against Ailes, Kelly conspicuously refuses to make a comment on Carlson’s accusations.

Facts on Rupert Murdoch’s ‘Media Empire’

  • RUPERT MURCOCH
  • Born in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  • Birthdate: 11 March 1931 
  • Education: Worchester College, Oxford
  • He has 6 children including Prudence, Elisabeth, Lachlan and James
  • MEDIA EMPIRE
  • became a media tycoon
  • Rupert Murdoch’s media empire has unveiled plans to launch a new UK television station and will bring Piers Morgan back to the screens as a presenter, threatening to further disrupt the rapidly shifting broadcasting sector.
  • Murdoch’s media empire includes Fox News, Fox Sports, the Fox Network, The Wall Street Journal, and HarperCollins.
  • In 1981, Murdoch bought The Times, his first British broadsheet, and, in 1985, became a naturalized US citizen, giving up his Australian citizenship, to satisfy the legal requirement for US television network ownership.
  • He won the companion of the Order or Australia in 1984
  • Worth:  $17.1 billion.
  • In 2015, 21st Century Fox announced that Murdoch would be handing off new leadership roles to his two sons, James and Lachlan, keeping the company in the family. Lachlan, 48, now holds the role of co-chairman of News Corp and executive chairman and CEO of Fox Corporation
  • Fox corporation is owned by the Murdoch family via a family trust with 39.6% ownership share; Rupert Murdoch is chairman, while his son Lachlan Murdoch is executive chairman and CEO

EVALUATION – BOMBSHELL AND MURDOCH

Bombshell (2019) is a story based upon the accounts of the women at Fox News who set out to expose CEO Roger Ailes for sexual harassment.

The film provides a narrative of INSTITUTIONAL SEXISM, in the same way that we could look at other stories that are concerned with other institutional prejudices – racism, homophobia, Islamophobia etc. In other words, this film presents a version of the story of INSTITUTIONAL SEXISM and MISOGYNY. It suggests a link between the presentation/ representation of the female form and the ideas of a ruling patriarchy (Fox News, specifically Roger Ailes).

Leading the allegations against Roger Ailes was Gretchen Carlson, a news anchor on Fox News from 2005 to 2016. Other women at the Fox institution such as Megyn Kelly came forward, giving their accounts. Ailes left his position at Fox News in July 2016. He passed away in 2017.

Rupert Murdoch’s ‘Media Empire’

“Murdoch is the 31st richest person in the United States and the 71st richest in the world”

 “By 2000, Murdoch’s News Corporation owned over 800 companies in more than 50 countries, with a net worth of over $5 billion.

  • In 1954, He took over his fathers Australian newspapers ‘The Sunday Mail’, and ‘The News’
  • Murdoch bought the newspaper, ‘News of the World of London’, in 1968
  • He generated news on “crime, sex, scandal, and human-interest stories with boldface headlines”, putting emphasis on gossip in hope to improve circulation.
  • Murdoch bought ‘The Sun’ in 1969 and changed it into a ‘tabloid’ newspaper.
  • In 1981, Murdoch bought British newspaper ‘The Times’ after moving to New York to expand his work to America.
  • Murdoch became a US Citizen in 1985 in order to be able to expand his market to US television broadcasting.
  • During his time in the UK, his political stance (which was shown through his publications) was towards Margaret Thatcher but this changed after her era when he begun to support Tony Blair and the Labour Party.
  • His holding company ‘News Corporation’ acquired ‘20th Century Fox’ in 1985 for $325 million
  • Murdoch bought in a new development which included use of electronic printing processes to his newspaper in Australia, Britain and The USA. This meant that many jobs were lost, causing violent disputes within the industry. Over 6,000 employee’s went on strike, resulting in their dismissal.
  • The ‘News Corporation’ had accumulated $7 billion of debts due to Murdoch’s buyouts in the 1980’s, causing Murdoch to sell many of his magazine interests.
  • In 1990, Murdoch founded the British Broadcasting group ‘BSkyB’ better known now as (The Sky Group)
  • In 1995, the FCC scrutinised the Fox Network, saying that due to his base for News LTD in Australia made Murdoch’s ownership of Fox, illegal.
  • Murdoch creates the Fox News Channel which broadcasted 24/7 news coverage. This was known as ‘Cable News’
  • In 1998, Murdoch offered £625 Million to buy Manchester United FC, this was rejected.
  • Murdoch announced that he was moving his holding company ‘News Corporation’ from Australia to the United States in 2004.
  • 2005 saw ‘News Corporation’ buy ‘Intermix Media’ which owned ‘MySpace’.
  • Murdoch made a $5 Billion offer to buy ‘Dow Jones and Company’ from the Bancroft Family, he acquired the company in 2007.
  • Murdoch resigned as head of ‘News Corporation’ in July 2012.
  • 2015: Murdoch resigned from his post as the CEO of 21st Century Fox, he still owned the company until it was bought by Disney in 2019
  • 2016: Roger Ailes resigned from his ownership of ‘Fox News’ due to allegations of sexual harassment against him. Rupert Murdoch, acting CEO of Fox News from 2016-2019, was given ownership over the company. He later founder The ‘Fox Corporation’ in 2019.

News International Phone Hacking Scandal

Employee’s of Rupert Murdoch’s news papers, including ‘News of The World’ (no longer running), were accused of phone hacking and also police bribery.

2005 and 2006 investigations proved that the phone hacking conducted was only involving celebrities, politicians and the royal family. However, further investigations in 2011 showed that the employees had hacked the phones of murdered school girl Milly Dowler, victims of the July 2005 London bombings and also family members of dead soldiers.

Public controversy led to many ‘high-profile’ resignations, including Rupert Murdoch resigning as the director of ‘News Corporation’. The ‘News of the World’ was forced to close after many advertising boycotts.

Former Prime Minister announced a public inquiry, known as the Leveson Inquiry. This would look into the ‘News International’ scandal and also the way in which the culture and ethics of the British media are handled. Murdoch and his son were forced to give evidence at the inquires held throughout 2011 and 2012.

Murdoch apparently  “exhibited wilful blindness to what was going on in his companies and publications”

Score and Maybelline Essay

Judith Butler describes gender as “an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts”. In other words, it is something learnt through repeated performance. 

How useful is this idea in understanding gender is represented in both the Score and Maybelline advertising campaigns? 

This idea is particularly useful in understanding gender representation in both Score and Maybelline advert campaigns, this is because gender and identity are something that can be changed- as David Gauntlett identified, the fluidity of identity gives ideas that you can choose to identify as the binary ‘stereotype’ male or female, or you can identify as more fluid- Non-Binary, Transgender, Gender-fluid etc. Essentially, gender is not the fixed set of rules it once used to be, which Judith Butler suggests. She also presents ideas that identity is just a social construct you are meant to abide to so you can be essentially categorised. Now, in more modern days, people are starting to realise that the world does not have to be so binary, and you are allowed to be more fluid, and that there is not a set of ground rules that separates males to females and identifies what you can and cannot do as a specific gender and you cannot cross that line. 

In the Score advertising campaign, straight away you can see a patriarchal dominance over the 5 women draped around the focal point- a man. The word ‘masculine’ is used in the description in the phrase ‘Score’s famous masculine scent.’ This indicates the fact that if you use the product, not only will you not look good and appeal to women, but you will also appear masculine AND smell masculine. The man is also being held up on a pedestal by the women while holding a gun, indicating that he is ‘above all’  Straight away you can see a sense of toxic masculinity that many males were a part of in the 1970s, linking back to fluidity of identity, you can see the time difference and how people in the 20th century agreed that you were either male or female no in-between, and you had to act like one due to a stylized repetition of acts that society agreed made you a specific gender. 

In the Maybelline advertising campaign, they advocate gender, sexuality, race, and social class. Two of the main representations are reversed gender stereotypes and sexuality, which completely contrasts the Score advertisement. They were the first beauty advertisement that cast a male, which was a huge step in the right direction to some sort of equality. Having a male, who is openly gay, in a beauty advert, allows other males and people who might not identify as female, the stereotype for beauty products, to feel comfortable purchasing the products. This differs to the Score advertisement as it attempts to eliminate the toxic masculinity that comes with beauty and cosmetic products, whereas the Score advert promotes their product to be for males and males only. 

Similar to the Maybelline advert, Harry Styles, a singer and an actor, has recently launched his own beauty/cosmetic line. Harry Styles himself, says “Me seeing a colour on a flower or a wallpaper or something and thinking ‘Oh, I wanna put that on my nails’”. Which is a clear representation of breaking the social construct of gender and toxic masculinity, as Harry, a male, enjoys painting his nails. With him releasing this beauty line, it can be seen that he is trying to break the barrier even more than it has been broken, and with a large following, he is more likely to achieve this.  

Another major thing in the Score advertisement is that the man held up on the pedestal is seen to be wearing a watch. While this may not be an important thing in modern day adverts, the fact that none of the 5 Caucasian women are wearing a watch, almost hinting at the fact that women are so subordinate to men that they do not deserve education or even an accessory that helps you with day-to-day life. Known theorist, Virginia Woolf created a character for a book as famous novelist, William Shakespeare’s sister, and used it as a metaphor for if William were born a female, the world would have missed a huge part of history. This highlights the fact that we have most likely missed other major or crucial parts of history as women were not allowed to be educated or read and write, the had immense potential but could not use it as they were females and did not have the same opportunities as males. This is known as the First Wave Feminism, where the suffragettes, Suffragists, and the International Alliance of Women (IAW), and many other women around the world started to realise that they should have the same opportunities and chances at success as men- they did not like the fact that they were extremely subordinate to males. Secondly, the watch can connote to high social class, and only people of that social class can purchase the item being advertised- essentially, if you buy the Liquid Hair Cream, you are going to be well respected, and even if you are a male, if you do not wear or buy it, you will be slightly more subordinate to men who do wear it. 

On the other hand, in the Maybelline advert, there is a lot of Second Wave and Third Wave feminism seen with the reversed gender stereotypes, inclusive sexuality, race and social class. With having both a male and a female putting on the mascara, this gives off ideas that women are less subordinate to men as they once were as they are sharing the same beauty cosmetic product. There was a massive trend in 2017 on Twitter called the #MeToo movement where women from all around the world shared similar experiences with sexual assault and other major incidents that have been controlled by a man. As Simone De Beauvoir comments, ‘If you’re around long enough, you will see that every victory turns into a defeat.’ Which indicates that even when the Suffragettes etc managed to get women to be able to vote, we are still controlled and do not have total power over ourselves. In the Third Wave Feminism, Naomi Wolf explains that there is a lot more fluidity in sexuality and ways women are allowed to express themselves, which is a substantial difference to the Second Wave Feminism. It is also more multi-dimensional, which brings me back to Judith Butler saying that gender was never there from the start, it is believed to be who you are but in reality, it’s constructed based on things you like and act. 

As Jean Kilbourne makes clear, women are overly objectified in many adverts, but mostly print ones. The Score advert is a prime example of this as the five women in it are wearing little clothing that shows off their body for men to enjoy looking at, which reinforces Laura Mulvey’s theory of the Male Gaze and how men look at women in an extremely oversexualising way. Alternatively, the Maybelline video advert contains no sexualising of women at all and includes males also getting ‘Bossed Up’ to equalise the gender stereotypes. 

To conclude, I believe that both Score and Maybelline adverts are juxtaposed by using women’s sexuality and gender. While Maybelline’s advertisement advocates gender, sexuality, race and social class, Score’s advert is all about men being the superior gender and only being able to buy the product if you’re of the correct social class. Theorists such as, Laura Mulvey, Judith Butler, David Gauntlett and many others previously mentioned all have great ideas of identity, how you express yourself and feminism that helps analyse the two adverts further. 

advertisement essay

Judith Butler describes gender as “an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts.” In other words, it is something learnt through repeated performance. 

How useful is this idea in understanding gender is represented in both the Score and Maybelline advertising campaigns?

In this essay I will be discussing the difference between Maybelline and Score, and how gender roles are played within these advertisements. I will also be discussing who Judith Butler is and her work towards the third wave of feminism and discuss the other waves of feminism we have experienced to make the world we live in today and how these waves of feminism have affected how women are treated today.  

Firstly, Judith Butler a gender theorist discusses with her audience that gender is just performed. By this Butler means that we act our gender and the way we act is how we are perceived. It is not about how long your hair is or whether you wear makeup or not, Butler believes that is the way we act influences the gender we are perceived as. Judith works in the third wave of feminism, within this Butler is working towards stopping women from being looked at as objects and being called names such as a “slut” for showing off skin. Raunch culture suggests the sexualised performance of women in the media that can play into male stereotypes of women as highly sexually available, where its performers believe they are powerful owners of their own sexuality. This culture is a massive part of the third wave of feminism as it presents that face that not just women, but everyone should have the freedom to identify as what they want to be identified as. There is one problem which comes along with Raunch culture which is it may be presenting old misogynistic ways due to the idea of men wanted to identify was women and the idea that women cannot do what men can do but women wanting to be men. This may cause misogyny as a woman cannot become a man as she does not have the capability to-do what a man can do. 

Raunch culture links into the Maybelline advert Bossed up as a man who is in the Advertisement wears the mascara that Maybelline are trying to promote. Manny Gutierrez the male starring in this advert was the first male Maybelline ambassador, the advertisement was released in 2017 which suggests that there is a new revolutionised way to look at gender. Manny wears makeup like the other females and is hired by a female-based company. Manny received little to no scrutiny about this due to the fact that it was becoming more normal the idea that men wear makeup too as men like drag queens have been becoming more seen. Not only that when we see the product being held as it is about to be used it shimmers and once it is placed on the eyelash the eye shimmers. This suggests that the product gives you a glisten in your eye and makes your eyes pop due to the use of the product. 

The idea of men wearing makeup goes coincides with what second wave feminism worked towards, as second wave feminism spoke about equality between male and females. So understandably the second wave of feminism achieved something as men and women can equally use makeup as presented in Maybelline. But Score on the other hand is the complete opposite as the women in the advertisement are lifting a man and the whole advertisement is about men using this hair product and getting loads of skinny women who will love him. The fact that the man is placed higher than the women present the idea that he has more power over them due to his masculinity. Also, the slogan “get what you always wanted” suggests that men always wanted women who would treat them like royalty and women who are heard over heels for them as well as them being dressed in skimpy clothes and are considered beautiful. Jean Kilbourne and Laura Mulvey worked in the second wave of feminism and faught for equality and rights for women. Laura Mulvey spoke about the male gaze and introduced to women that fact that males looked at women as objects and as though women were only there for the males’ eyes and pleasure. Jean Kilbourne said, “You almost never see a photograph of a woman considered beautiful that hasn’t been Photoshopped,” which suggests that the image of women is structured whereas the image of men is not so structured. Which is where the idea of equality is and links into first wave feminism due to the idea that men and women are treated differently and why can men and women do the same thing? 

First wave feminism is all about the questioning on why women cannot do what men do. Before the suffragettes, the world was a brutally sexist place to live-in but when the suffragettes came into play, they changed how women were viewed due to their devotion to change the matter. The suffragettes campaigned for the rights of women and were activists in gaining equality for men and women so that we could live freely and equally due to how much men were place above and how sexist the world actually was. The suffragette’s struggled to make a change in society and change how women are viewed today but without the suffragettes there would not have been change due the fact that women now no longer have to fight so hard for equality as nowadays many people believe that men and women are equal and there is no divide in men and women.  

Overall, the idea of feminism development has been presented in both CSP 3 and CSP 4 as in CSP3, Score we can show the idea of a man being dominant over the women but in CSP 4, Maybelline we can see the development of feminism as both male and female are placed with the same role and there is no dominance of one over the other.  We can also see the change in advertisements due to people with colour now being in ads aswell as men wearing make up which wasn’t seen in the earlier days of advertisement

Bombshell – notes

Bombshell (2019, Dir. Jay Roach) a story based upon the accounts of the women at Fox News who set out to expose CEO Roger Ailes for sexual harassment. 

Having had enough of her boss’s sexual harassments, Gretchen Carlson files a lawsuit against Fox News founder Roger Ailes. Her bravery triggers a domino effect, culminating into a liberation movement.

This film providesa narrative of INSTITUTIONAL SEXISM, in the same way that we could look at other stories that are concerned with other institutional prejudices – racism, homophobia, Islamophobia etc. In other words, this film presents a version of the story of INSTITUTIONAL SEXISM and MISOGYNY.

This film provides a narrative of INSTITUTIONAL SEXISM, in the same way that we could look at other stories that are concerned with other institutional prejudices – racism, homophobia, Islamaphobia etc. In other words, this film presents a version of the story of INSTITUTIONAL SEXISM and MISOGYNY. It suggests a link between the presentation / representation of the female form and the ideas of a ruling patriarchy (Fox News, specifically Roger Ailes) and perhaps explains why we are presented with the stories we are presented with and how those stories are presented to us.

Essay score vs maybelline

Judith Butler describes gender as “an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts”. In other words, it is something learnt through repeated performance, Butler suggest that gender is not fixed however it is reinforced consistently through none verbal communication, Judith creates the idea that there aren’t specific aspects or qualities that make you gender specific, but that gender is only a title . You can choose and change your gender, and that whatever you do will not change who you are and who you identify yourself as. Judith Butler writes to identify and break gender stereotypes such as football being a male sport and/or makeup being feminine. As seen in this quote “our gender identities are not fixed objects; they are constituted as a result of our behaviours” and again “Our bodies or sex do not define our gendered identities”. Most people believe that gender is simply divided into male and female, but Butler claims that this is not the case, and that this can lead to misrepresentation. For example, in the score commercial, women are sexualized and objectified, whereas in the Maybelline “boss up” commercial, there are a variety of identities. Butler is a gender theorist who claims that gender is a performance in which everyone is portraying their own gender and that it is a fluid of identity, a term created by David Gauntlett for his own. The usage of identification is not gender-based, and I’ll talk about how gender and identity are represented in the Score and Maybelline commercials.

In contrast to Butler, Laura Mulvey identifies the sexualisation of femininity and female characters compared to male characters that we identify with due to the lack of sexualisation and the addition of development and characteristics shown to deepen their character in a lot of games and movies, Mulvey stated that female characters are forced to identity as passive objects to be looked at and desired compared to men’s representation which is more focused on how “manly” and strong their characters are. She also believes that because the majority of movie directors, game developers, big artists, and key people in the media are men, we view media through their eyes, resulting in the male gaze. An example would be panning the camera on a sexualized female scene in a film, or exaggerations of female body parts in a media game to show more depth to the character. This isn’t to say that male characters can’t be sexualized; it’s simply that female sexualization is more prevalent. If someone substituted a boy for a popular oversexualized female stance, it would still be viewed through the male gaze. The assumption that a sexualized style of seeing strengthens men and sexualized women is supported by the masculine gaze.

As a historical artifact from 1967, the Score hair cream advertisement can be productively examined by considering its historical, social, and cultural contexts, particularly as it relates to gender roles, sexuality, and the historical context of advertising techniques. 1967 can be considered as a period of gradual change in western societies, with legislation concerning and changing attitudes toward the roles of women and men in society, something that the advertisement appears to address. The first wave of feminism can be summarized by a quote: “Sexism was coined by analogy with the term racism in the early 1960s in the American civil rights movement.” Simply put, sexism is the systematic conditioning of men and women to perceive each other negatively, based on the idea that the male is always superior to the female. The Score advert can be similarly linked to this idea because we can see a total of five female figures holding up the male figure giving us the assumption that the male is superior to the females. 

Furthermore, Gauntlett’s concept of identity fluidity, the ability to change how you present yourself in any way you want is known as fluidity of identity. If you don’t want to look a specific way, identity fluidity gives you the power to modify your appearance and how you see yourself as a person. Not only that, but fluidity of identity also entails the ability to shift your behavior to something that is preferred or that may be classified as normal. The ability to change who you are as a person, from how you look to how you act, is known as fluid of identity. Gender, for example, is fluid; you may choose who you want to be. Butler’s theory is supported by this, as he states, “Biological anatomies do not determine our gender.”She concludes that masculinity and femininity are not naturally occurring states, but rather are maintained by humans via daily behaviors, implying that a person is neither born male nor female, but their gender is defined by their daily actions. Gauntlett made a comment about how men and women are shown differently in the media. Throughout the twentieth century, for example, images of aggressive women taking control of their life were progressively replacing those of submissive housewives, as exemplified by the Spice Girls’ “girl power.” Men’s energetic and confident representations were giving way to a more contemplative and emotionally sensitive interpretation of masculinity. Despite the fact that old binary representations continue to appear on magazine front covers, there is now a “great diversity of identities.” As a result of our willingness to adapt to new cultural standards, we do not always have a permanent identity.

This theory is not implied in the score advertisement, but it can be seen in the Maybelline “boss up” advertisement. This is because in the Maybelline “boss up” advertisement, we can assume that the representation of the female gender has evolved over time, and we can make this assumption because the gender roles are suggested to be more equal. Within the advertisement, there is a homosexual male celebrity (Manny Mua) with what appears to be feminine traits, as well as a female character who is represented as feeling like a “boss” after using the product, which is found near the end of the advertisement. This can be used to refute the assumption of set gender roles, as well as the historical notion that men are superior to women.

Maybelline’s commercial is thought to represent the third and fourth waves of feminism. Naomi Wolf coined third wave feminism in response to the age gap between the 1960s and 1970s feminist movements, criticizing and re-contextualizing some of the resulting notions of femininity. When debating feminism, it saw women’s lives as intersecting and exhibited a plurality toward race, ethnicity, class, religion, gender, and nationality. It can be described as a “rebellion of younger women” against what they saw as elder feminists’ prescriptive, aggressive, and “sex negative” stance. The Maybelline ad exemplifies this concept since the female depiction in the ad is neither sexualized or objectified in any manner, implying that she defies the stereotype of what it means to be a ‘female,’ as suggested by the first wave of feminism.

In conclusion, I believe Butler’s definition of gender as “an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts” helps people understand how gender is represented more clearly in the Maybelline ad than in the score ad, due to the score ad opposing the idea that gender is not determined by biological genders.

EXAM ESSAY

Judith Butler describes gender as “an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts”. In other words, it is something learnt through repeated performance.

How useful is this idea in understanding gender is represented in both the ‘Score’ and ‘Maybelline’ advertising campaigns?

In this essay, I will be discussing representation in media. I believe that Judith Butler’s ideas about gender are very useful in understanding how gender is represented in both the ‘Score’ and ‘Maybelline’ advertising campaigns.
Judith Butler describes gender as “performative” and suggests that there can be no gender identity before gendered acts (daily practices, learned and performed based on cultural norms of femininity and masculinity), because the acts are constantly forming the identity and therefore nobody can be a gender before doing gendered acts. Butler argues that the dominance of heterosexuality representation in media maintains typical male and female identities as a social norm. This is harmful for individuals who “deviate” from gender norms and is harmful to those who participate in this heteronormative culture because it limits their capacity to empathize and create. She critiques the notion that gender exists inside the body and suggests that these gendered identities are realised through our desires, sexual contacts and physical expressions of love – they are not a fixed object and are created as a result of our behaviours. Similarly with Butler, Liesbet van Zoonen sees gender as dependent on social and historical context. She suggests that the meaning of gender is a “discursive struggle and negotiation, the outcome having far-reaching socio-cultural implications.”
None of these ideologies are associated with the ‘Score’ advert, which seems to be more connected with Laura Mulvey’s ‘male gaze’ theory – the idea of how typical, heterosexual men viewing media, sexualise and objectify women.
The ‘Score’ advert shows that if you buy their product, then you can attract lots of women. This is suggested in the strapline: “Get what you’ve always wanted” and the dominant signifier of a man surrounded by women. The costumes for the women are incredibly revealing and sexualising, and have connotations of voyeurism for heterosexual men. In the advert, the women at the back are gazing lustfully at the man – which insinuates that most women look at men wearing the product like this. Another woman, on the right, is looking proud, as though she is showing off the man and the final woman, on the left, is looking directly at the camera, which could connect the advert with the potential purchaser.
The ‘Score’ advert is an artefact from 1967, a period of slow transformation in western cultures with laws about and changing attitudes to gender roles, sexuality and the historical context of advertising techniques in society – something that this advert can be seen to overcome. Feminist critical thought was becoming much more prominent at this time, which later brought many changes including a greater acceptance of birth control, divorce, abortion and homosexuality.
This period is often termed as “second wave feminism” – set after the first wave of feminism, which was influenced by organisations such as: the British Women’s Suffrage Committee (1867), the International Council of Women (1888) and others who, in early part of the 20th Century, worked to get women the right to vote. The second wave passed many laws that helped women get more reproductive rights and equal pay in the work force. It also liberated women and changed their mindset. However, the second wave of feminism overlooked other aspects of diversity – their focus on sexism did not extend to include the consideration of intersectionality, resulting in a predominantly white woman’s movement.
Media is a loudspeaker that magnifies power relations, and it can either reinforce or expose those who have political and social power. Diversity in media matters because it brings attention to an otherwise underrepresented community and gives a voice to the otherwise voiceless. When a given minority or disadvantaged group is portrayed in the media in a positive light, stereotypes can be dismantled, and this is especially important for younger generations who are more directly exposed to this.
In his investigation into the fluidity of identity, David Gauntlett noted how the representation of gender in the media was beginning to break down the old binary definitions and was now offering a more diverse range of identities. Women, who were simply stereotyped as housewives and passive in the past, were now represented as empowered and assertive. Instead of the physical and combative masculine identity, men could now be seen as sensitive and introspective without any ridicule. In “That Boss Life”, Manny embodies the merging of masculinity and femininity. He wears typical masculine clothes, but his speech and actions are quite feminine and he is also confident in his identity to use mascara.
None of this diversification came into place until third wave feminism began in the early 1990s. It was a response to the generation gap between the feminist movement of the 1960s and ’70s – challenging and changing some of the definitions of femininity that grew out of that earlier period. In particular, the third wave sees women’s lives as intersectional (the realisation that everyone has their own unique experiences of discrimination and oppression and people must consider everything and anything that can marginalise people such as: gender, race and class).
Whilst ‘Score’ completely ignores third wave feminism ideologies by having an exclusive cast of white characters, ‘Maybelline’ follows these ideologies by including a black woman and a homosexual man – showing how as time moves on, diversity becomes more common.

Score Vs maybeline essay

Judith Butler describes gender as “an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts”. In other words, it is something learnt through repeated performance .How useful is this idea in understanding how gender is represented in both the Score and Maybelline advertising campaigns?

In this essay, I am going to talk about understanding gender through the Score and Maybelline adverts, and analyze how identity is established in an unrealistic repetition of acts. I am going to conduct a representational analysis of both the score and Maybelline advertising campaigns, and how they present gender and identity to the audience . Butler discusses the idea that gender is a ‘social construct’ and that our gender identities aren’t established at birth. She believes that we aren’t strictly ‘male or female’ but our identities are fluid and always changing, and our identity is shown through constant changes in behavior and personality. She states that ‘What it means to be a woman does not remain the same from decade to decade” implying that our collective expectation of how a woman should act, dress, speak etc, are constantly changing. She also states that “Gender does not exist inside the body” meaning that gender is created through what we present to society. Butler has a modern way of thinking, however stereotypically, society believes that gender is simply just male and female,but this is not what Butler agrees with.

In contrast to Butler’s Idea that gender is a ‘social construct’ Laura mulvey identifies the misogynistic sexualisation of women in comparison to that of a man, through an idea called the male gaze. Mulvey stated female characters are forced to identify with passive objects to be looked at and desired compared to men’s representation which is more focussed on how the characters body language reinforces the features they have. For example when a man is sitting with their legs apart, this is known as man spreading, whereas if a woman was to do this it would be uncalled for. She also believes that directors, bosses, authors, game makers etc, present women in a way that is sexualised through a males perspective, so that they can attract the attention of male viewers and therefore making them more money. For example, the classic ‘damsel in distress’ story comes from the idea that a girl is weak and incapable, and they alway need a big and strong man to save them. The male is almost always presented as the main character, this is done to make men feel empowered and strong, and by saving the girl they may get some sexual reward. However the male gaze does not suggest that men aren’t sexualised by society too, but Laura Mulvey highlights the extreme difference between the sexualisation of men and women to make men feel empowered.

The Score hair cream advert is a historical artifact from 1967, in which gender is presented as strictly male or female, contrasting to Judith Butler’s view on fluidity of identity. The score advert involves 5 women and only one man. The women are dressed in tight, revealing clothing praising the man using the score hair cream. This advert supports Laura Mulvey’s idea of the male gaze: A heterosexual perspective that presents and represents women as sexual objects for the pleasure of the heterosexual male viewer, and to objectify women for the benefit of empowering men. This is shown clearly in Score through the sexualisation of  women , wearing tight clothing to please the men. Furthermore, this supports the idea of constructed identity, meaning the collective idea of society on how each gender should look, act, and behave. This supports the idea that gender roles were fixed in the 1970s, and that men and women were defined by their biological gender, and were confined to a collective identity of how they should act and what they were allowed to do. 1967 marks the time when second wave feminism was introducted, however the score advert much relates to the first wave of feminism. The first wave of feminism; ‘ sexism was coined by analogy with the term racism in the American civil rights movement in the early 1960s. Defined simply, sexism refers to the system in which men and women are brought up to view each other antagonistically, on the assumption that the male is always superior to the female. This is clearly shown throughout the score advert through the body language of the females. They are positioned in a way that implies they are praising the man, almost seeming like they are his slaves.

In contrast to the score advert, Gauntlet presents the idea of fluidity of identity: being able to decide who you want to be, whether that be male or female, and being able to change your identity freely. Fluidity of identity contrasts with the ideas presented in the score advert, as it allows there to be no defined line between male or female. There is positivity in this in the sense that you do not have to follow the strict ‘gender stereotypes’ allocated to you at birth, instead you can change the way you look, act, and dress to shape yourself into the person that you want to be, not what everyone else wants to be. This is supported by the quote “ Biological anatomies do not determine our gender”. She describes that masculinity and femininity aren’t defined by your biological gender, but instead  are maintained by individuals through everyday acts meaning that an individual is not born neither male nor female, however your gender defines you through your actions all the time.

This theory can be applied to the maybelline advert, fluidity of identity can be show clearly through the diversity of characters in the advert. For example, the Maybeline boss life adverts feature a biological male, enjoying things that are categorically feminine. It is clear that fluidity of identity is used here, as stereotypically, a man wouldn’t wear makeup, but he has shaped himself into who he wants to be, regardless of his biological gender. As Well as this, another actor in the advert is a black female, this contrasts to the score advert as all females are white. This shines a positive view on the black community.The maybeline advert demonstrates the third and fourth wave of feminism. Third wave feminism was insiuated by Naomi wolf as a response to the gap between the feminist movement of the 1960s and 70s. She challenges and re-develops some of the definitions of femininity that remained.it presented women’s lives as intersectional and demonstrated a pluralism towards race, ethnicity, class, religion, gender and nationality when discussing feminism. It was described as the rebellion of younger women against what was perceived as the prescriptive, pushy and ‘sex negative’ approach of older feminists. This concept is shown through the Maybelline advert because of the fluidity of identity presented by the man, and the non-sexualisation of the female through the advert. This contrasts to the stereotype of what it means to be a female in first wave feminism.

In conclusion, I agree with butler’s theory that gender is presented through stylized acts rather than your biological identity. It shows a positive light on identity and allows people to be who they want to be, even if it doesn’t fit the stereotypes.

Bombshell

Bombshell (2019) is a film portraying the real-life scandal of how the CEO of Fox News, Roger Ailes sexually exploited his female staff.

Roger Eugene Ailes (May 15, 1940 – May 18, 2017) was an American television executive and media consultant. He was the chairman and CEO of Fox News, In July 2016, he resigned from Fox News after being accused of sexual harassment by several female Fox employees.

In a book published in 2014, Gabriel Sherman alleged that, in the 1980s, Ailes offered a television producer a raise if she would sleep with him. Fox News denied the allegation and rejected the authenticity of Sherman’s book. On July 6, 2016, former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against Ailes; Carlson’s allegations were the impetus for more than a dozen female employees at 21st Century Fox to step forward regarding their own experiences with Ailes’ behaviour.