In 1987, Nike released their new sixty-second commercial for Air shoesand changed the face of the advertising industry. Set to the song Revolution by the Beatles, the commercial was the first and only advert ever to feature an original recording of the Fab Four. It sparked a chain of events that would transform the art of branding, the sanctity of pop music, the perception of advertisers in popular culture, and John Lennons place in the leftist imagination. Advertising Revolution traces the song Revolution from its origins in the social turmoil of the Sixties, through its controversial use in the Nike ad, to its status today as a right-wing anthem and part of Donald Trumps campaign set list. Along the way, the book unfolds the story of how we came to think of Nike as the big bad wolf of soulless corporations, and how the Beatles got their name as the quintessential musicians of independent integrity. To what degree are each of these reputations deserved? How ruthlessly cynical was the process behind the Nike ad? And how wholesomely uncommercial was John Lennons writing of the song? Throughout the book, Alan Bradshaw and Linda Scott complicate our notions of commercialism and fandom, making the case for a reading of advertisements that takes into account the many overlapping intentions behind what we see onscreen. Challenging the narratives of the evil-genius ad conglomerate and the pure-intentioned artist, they argue that we can only begin to read adverts productively when we strip away the industrys mysticism and approach advertisers and artists alike as real, flawed, differentiated human beings.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 130 x 197mm
Publication Date: 16 Aug 2018
Publisher: Watkins Media Limited
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781912248216
About Alan BradshawLinda Scott
Alan Bradshaw is a Professor of Marketing at Royal Holloway University of London and has previously worked at the University of Exeter and the University of Stockholm. His work is interdisciplinary and he likes to take questions of marketing to critical theory audiences across different subject areas such as cultural studies philosophy and geography. He is Associate Editor at the Journal of Macromarketing and the Journal of Marketing Management. Professor Linda Scott is the Emeritus DP World Chair for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Said Business School University of Oxford. She writes a blog called The Double X Economy as well as blogging for the World Economic Forum Forbes and Bloomberg Businessweek on gender issues she also served as Editor for the Advertising and Society Review for eleven years.