Lipstick Commercial Script
Video removed by advertiser. Okay, while I do think that makeup can make a person feel better about oneself – and I’m not denigrating the use of it at all – there is something about this commercial that just sets me on edge. Is it the idea that the implication is that the only reason this woman feel pretty is this particular red lipstick? Is it that the woman playing Karina is, in fact, actually quite conventionally attractive? I don’t know, it just pings that old grarr feeling in me for some reason. What do you think, if anything at all? Absolutely coincidentally (I swear) I’m playing the DVD of Catwoman, which has serious flaws (like the plot), but which also has the mixed messages of (1) a woman coming into great power after a death experience who (2) as Catwoman wears the reddest lipstick available and lots of eye makeup.
It’s almost as though lipstick is being presented as an accoutrement of power and/or sexiness, rather than something that focuses attention on one’s lips. (I have the non-existent deleted scene in mind in which Catwoman has to spend twenty or so minutes on the make-up before she goes leaping around town.). sbg says. It rubbed me the wrong way, too. I mean, make-up helps improve my self-esteem, and I love putting it on, but the way that the lady talks made it sound like she was really pushing the thing on her, and I hate it when people try to really push things on me. (Like, originally Karina didn’t want to wear it, and then she gets her to try Avon Red). And at the end of the commercial, she says she sold a slow dance, like Karina wouldn’t have been able to dance on her aniversary w/o red lipstick?
It definitely feels like Maartje said, that woman need to be conventionally pretty to take up space. There also that she’s conventionally attractive. Like, what if she was selling lipstick to a woman who just isn’t conventionally attractive? Would they still have had the “her lips aren’t the only thing that light up” or w/e?
Commercial Script Free Font Download
It seems like women are supposed to be conventionally attractive without trying, yet we’re not supposed to think that we’re attractive because then we’re arrogant. : And at the end of the commercial, she says she sold a slow dance, like Karina wouldn’t have been able to dance on her aniversary w/o red lipstick? It definitely feels like Maartje said, that woman need to be conventionally pretty to take up space.
And not only that, it implies that a “slow dance” or whatever contrived romantic cliche is what you’re supposed to do in your anniversary. And yes, the fact that “Karina” is gorgeous pre-lipstick does not help. Neither does the awful grammar of the script. Another thing that got me: does anyone ever actually think they’re not pretty enough to wear red lipstick? I’ve never heard that said in real life. What I.have. heard is that they don’t think it goes with their coloring, which is an entirely different consideration.
I mean, Angelina Jolie stopped wearing red lipstick because with lips that voluptuous, drawing more attention to them just makes the rest of her face disappear. It’s certainly not that she’s “not pretty enough” for anything. I think in that case, heavy makeup is a purported as either powerful or as a mask. Red is a “power color”, isn’t that what that old chestnut says? Before, she was a mouse, a victim, and plain-faced. After, she is a cat, a predator, and heavily masked.
Goodness knows we wouldn’t want plain-faced women to think they’re powerful, and pretty-faced women to think it’s them that’s powerful rather than their mask giving them that strength. Or something. That made more sense in my head., I will say I don’t think I could pull off red lipstick, but that it’s got less to do with my looks or coloring and more to do with the fact I’ve never been much of a makeup wearer and pretty much any shade would make me feel self-conscious. Which is, I think, the exact opposite of what it’s meant to do. Cheryl says.
Targeted Advertising Instead of targeting a large audience with a particular type of makeup, target a niche customer. Munk explains in her article that a popular cosmetics company owns dozens of different brand, with each brand targeting a different demographic, such as older women, young adults, teens, budget-conscious consumers, trendsetters and eco-friendly consumers. This technique contributed to the success of the parent cosmetic company. Even if you just sell one type or brand of makeup, targeting a specific customer with appropriate advertisements can prove more fruitful than appealing to masses. Link Selling Use advertisements to show the benefit of purchasing a combination of makeup products instead of a single item.
Lipstick Commercial Script Font
For example, if you create an ad for eye shadow, you can show the other products used to create the model’s look so a customer is more likely to purchase the eye shadow along with the eyeliner, mascara and even eye makeup remover. Another example of link selling is creating an advertisement for lipstick with an explanation at the bottom of the ad that the model paired the lipstick with lip liner to prevent feathering.