Digital Advertising’s Frankenstein Is Wreaking Havoc and Damaging Democracy

“We need a digital economy where our data and our attention is not for sale to the highest bidding authoritarian or demagogue.” -Zeynep Tufekci What has the digital ad man wrought when the same algorithms companies like Facebook, Google and Amazon use to get you to click on ads are also used to organize your […]

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How Dumb Are Smart Phones At The Dinner Table?

Chances are good that you may be too distracted to read this. On the off chance that you’re able to focus for a few minutes, I’d like to share some findings from the Common Sense Census. Did you know that 42% of young children have their own tablet device, up from 1 percent in 2011? […]

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We Have A Big Fat Platform Problem

Fake news is such an innocent term. The fact that it masks what it really is—propaganda—seems to get lost in the equation. Nevertheless, what does “fake news” actually look like? It looks like this: Sadly, fake news, a.k.a. propaganda is not innocent, nor does it exist in a bubble. According to Bloomberg, Russian meddling is […]

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Like Lions, Hard Truths Are Hard To Come By

Photojournalism is a beautiful documentary art and a much-needed pursuit in today’s mixed up world of lies and propaganda. Thankfully, The New York Times employs some of the world’s best photojournalists. The newspaper’s ad agency, Droga5, wisely saw this truth and placed it at the center of this Cannes Lion-winning ad campaign. The combination of […]

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Democracy Dies In Darkness

The Washington Post drove Tricky Dick Nixon to resign. Will the nation’s newspaper also drive Don Trump from office? Time will tell. What we know now is the mainstream press is consistently under attack from a wannabe dick tater. Don Trump says the press is “an enemy.” The fact is he and his criminal syndicate […]

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Trump’s “First Family” Look Is An Image That’s Hard To Beat

There are new and variable factors to the election this year, which makes it maddening and interesting at the same time. Without wanting to forward anyone’s political agenda, as advertising professionals, we do want to offer what insight we can about the use of advertising to win elections. Much has been made of Donald Trump’s […]

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Ad Grunts Want To Work for Pay, Time Off and Coffee (Not Trophies)

Advertising is a glamorous industry. Or so it may seem to some from the outside looking in, partly due to how the industry is portrayed in TV shows, film and lifestyle press. Of course, there are ad people enjoying a corner office with views of the San Francisco Bay or the equivalent, but they’re in […]

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Publicis Groupe’s Digerati Join NYC Media Lab

In a quest to innovate and apply leaner methods to age old practices, agencies are increasingly acting like media and technology companies.

In one such move, Publicis Groupe—agency parent to DigitasLBi, MRY, Razorfish and VivaKi—is joining the NYC Media Lab as a corporate member. Other partners include AT&T, ESPN, HBO, Hearst, NBCUniversal, News Corp., Time Warner Cable and Verizon.

The Lab connects companies seeking to advance new media technologies with university labs, programs and talent in New York. It was launched in 2010 by the New York City Economic Development Corp., New York University and Columbia University.

According to Adweek, all Publicis Groupe agencies have the chance to participate in the Lab’s media research initiatives, covering areas like design, data science and engineering.

This development will likely benefit clients in the end, but in the near term it may help high quality talent choose between offers from an Omnicom- or WPP-owned shop, and a similar offer from a Publicis-owned shop.

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Digital Divide Widens As Technology Grows More Complex

How many hours a day do you spend on Facebook? Is it enough time to fully understand the ins-and-outs of the platform and all its various uses?

I am a heavy Facebook user myself, but basic things like looking up a Facebook Page’s followers continue to prove difficult.

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Imagine how tricky certain aspects of Facebook are to the casual user. What’s this messaging function? Is it email? Why does it look like a chat box? And so on…

Ryan Holiday, author of Trust Me I’m Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator, points to a short list of attributes one must attain to become functionally literate in online media environments today.

Knowing how to tell a troll from a serious thinker, spotting linkbait, understanding a meme, cross checking articles against each other, even posting a comment to disagree with something–these are skills. They might not feel like it, but they are. And they’re easier to acquire the higher your tax bracket.

Holiday also suggests, if you work as a security guard or at the counter of a Wendy’s, our modern media environment is “significantly more difficult to track.” He asserts that a person’s reality (who is not in front of a computer all day) is shaped by the things that “tend to trickle about and from the Internet.” Meanwhile, the people with time and money inhabit another universe of free and paid information, that more closely resembles the news.

I might add there are degrees of media literacy to consider here. Apart from the inequity that Holiday addresses, we have our own literacy problems to address inside marketing communications. For instance, if you are hoping to sway security guards or retail counter workers on your client’s behalf, check yourself before coming up with a consumer-generated content idea that rolls out on Instagram.

We can also look to SEO and other technical marketing information as a media literacy problem inside our own industry. Last week, a poacher emailed one of my clients this subject line: Errors on your website. He then proceeded to point out a “canonical URL issue,” in hopes of winning new business.

It is my obligation as someone conducting business in the digital realm to know enough about such things to respond intelligently when my client asks, even though I don’t have a web dev background. Thankfully, I can ask the publisher of AdPulp about it. But the point remains, we’re all navigating an increasingly complex river of information. Power to the people who artfully simplify.

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