Admit it, we are all swimming in the deep end of the culture pool!
What’s your all time most memorable commercial? No doubt you have one
that sticks in your mind. It may be dated since many new ones come on
the scene each year but we all have been inundated with hundreds of
thousands of video, print, voice over, signs, and every form of
advertisement imaginable, that is, if we have breathed air on this planet. While
we might like to think this bombardment has not influenced us, we would
be kidding ourselves to try and defend that position. This particular
feature of the culture war is what I have before me on this Friday,
June 5, 2009. Not surprising, a recent top ten vote for most popular
commercials by USA Today included two beer commercials, three cola ad
spots, the famous “Got Milk?” promotions, and the burger “Where’s the
beef?” campaign.
However, the ad chosen number one by a wide
majority was not that familiar to me. It is one put up by Monster.com in
1999 that runs black and white footage of children talking about
what
they want to be when they grow up. Each child in the commercial speaks
about a particular underachieving goal as their passion in life and at
the end the punch line is how that Monster.com has a better job and
future for every person. I watched the ad and remembered it but it
certainly would not have made my top ten. My list would include the
recently resurrected “See the USA in a Chevrolet!” by Dinah Shore,
(Sadly, it is being played now as a swan song for the GM bankruptcy.);
the “Plop Plop, Fizz, Fizz, oh what a relief it is!” Alka Seltzer ad
along with another one where the fellow says, “I can’t believe I ate the
whole thing!” (These ads may have appealed to me because it was back in
the days when we didn't know that indigestion needed some very
expensive medication for an ailment called acid reflux!) These are all
from the past and
I am too, but, brand identity does end up being a part of the life we live especially in this commercialized world.
Jesus
told us to be in this world but not be of this world. (See John 17 and
1st John 5.) That’s one of the toughest challenges you and I will ever
face. The incessant drumbeat of all things worldly surrounds us and our
children every second of every day. To say otherwise is to do the
proverbial ostrich head in the sand maneuver. We may think it cute for
our little ones to be able to sing the latest beer tunes and quote the
less than wholesome memorable lines from TV ads but there is a corrosive
element to all of this and as the old saying goes, “The steady knock
does wear the rock.” Seeing it for what it is goes a long way in
beginning to form a respon
se
to try and fulfill the admonition of our Lord. We can’t escape the
deluge of commercialized media but we can do all we can do to offset it,
to reduce its influence, to change the channel, or whatever is needed
to deal with this issue. I’m not saying you can do what the old
Pepsodent ad proclaimed, “You will wonder where the yellow went when you
brush your teeth with Pepsodent!” But you can do what you can do with
God’s help. This is some food for thought as we enter our Saturday and
Lord’s Day Sunday. May God help each one as we deal with the life we
have! Amen. ….More later.


No comments:
Post a Comment