|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Television Commercials: A Respected Art Form in Japan
| Article
# : |
12913 |
|
|
Section : |
THE ARTS
|
| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1987 |
2,209 Words |
| Author
: |
David Tracey David Tracey is a film critic residing in Japan. |
Japan is probably the only country in the world where it's better to wait until after the television commercials finish to head to the kitchen for a snack. The ads are often more entertaining than the programs.
The Japanese treat advertising as a respected art form. Top copywriters attain celebrity status, command lucrative salaries, and receive invitations to discuss the latest cultural trends on television talk shows. Collections of the year's top magazine and newspaper ads are prominently displayed in the art sections of bookstores. A leading national newspaper carries a weekly column entitled "My Commercial Watching," written by an editor of a well-known magazine that deals exclusively with advertising.
In Western countries advertising generates few fans. Commercial breaks interrupting a favorite television show are at best endured, only rarely appreciated. In contrast, the Japanese tend to like their ads.
It isn't that they have an inherent fondness for being told what to buy - although it may seem that way to a Western visitor. Display ads inundate the country. A ride on any subway is a commercial explosion of color and design, from the wall posters advertising weekly news magazines to the window stickers extolling chocolate bars to the hand straps dangling with plastic messages from apartment-rental consultants. And the high regard for television advertising has little to do with consumers being thankful for helpful shopping hints. Most commercials say nothing about the virtues of the product.
Homogenized
... (1968 of 13330 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|