McDonalds Advertising
Everyone eats McDonalds. It's cheap, easy, and greasy. Who wouldn't love it? But recently, since learning about companies using certain words or phrases in advertising to be more appealing, I've been looking at every ad differently now. I've been analyzing the wording and searching for evidence to confirm what I've been taught. The other day I went to McDonalds to eat and I look at the ads that are displayed everywhere in the restaurant. Literally everywhere. There is no hiding. Anyways, I started looking at these ads and realized I found the ambigous language that we had been learning about in class. They use words like 'bliss' or 'tender'. Even their kids meals are called 'happy meals'! They use these words so people associate good things with their food. It's a quite simple technique: Use a word with positive connotations, relate it to the food that is being advertised, and suddenly the brain is associating chicken nuggets with happiness! It's crazy how unaware I was to these types of strategies, it wasn't until I got an ad from McDonalds as I was watching YouTube. This ad talked about their new donut sticks, and how they could brighten your day with just one bite. This alarmed me in a way because the language they used was so vague and non-specific that if I wasn't listening closely, these donut sticks would've sounded very appealing. And although I'm only talking about one company, every company does it. It's just so crazy to me that a word can make a big difference in how things are perceived in advertising.
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