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JulyDiaz

Episode 173 - Marketing Lies You've Been Duped Into Believing

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We all know consciously to take advertising with a grain of salt. Those McDonald's burgers can't look as manicured in person the way they do in the ads. Examples like that are easy to catch. It's harder to spot false advertising when companies are bending the truth so much, your bullshit detectors don't know which way is up. Take Listerine mouthwash. It was originally sold as a surgical antiseptic until some ad men in the 1920s were like, "if we told everyone to wash their mouths out with this industrial cleaner every day, then we'd make so much money we could light our cigars with the cash, but how...". The answer was in a book of medical terminology. They looked up the fanciest word for bad breath -- halitosis -- and made an ad campaign telling everyone it was a chronic disease with only one cure.

 

"Hey, sonny boy! Does your dame ever tell ya you have bad breath?"

 

"Why, yes mister!"

 

"That's simply because you're dying son. Say here, drink this poison, BUT SPIT IT OUT FIRST. And do it every day for the rest of your life."

 

And 90 years later we still use Listerine and still think halitosis is is a disease and not just latin for brush your damn teeth.

 

Modern movies do this too. Sometimes if studios have a real clunker on their hands, they'll cut a trailer that's so unrepresentative of the movie, you would want to sue to get your money back. A lot of times this happens to children's movies with disastrous results for the parents that think they're about to spend 2 hours with a rapping kangaroo.

 

So on this week's podcast, Jack O'Brien is joined by Cracked writers Carmen Angelica and JM McNab and producer Brett Rader for a discussion of horribly misleading movie trailers, straight-up advertising lies and the contemporary commercials that are messing with your perception of reality.

 

Footnotes:

 

Article: Cracked: Movies That Were Waaaaay Darker & Crazier Than Advertised: https://goo.gl/w918NK

 

Article: Cracked: The 6 Most Hilariously Misleading Movie Trailers: https://goo.gl/9BLjqf

 

Article: Cracked: 5 Things Movie Trailers Need to Stop Doing: https://goo.gl/C8nfA5

 

Article: Cracked: 6 Dumbass Publicity Stunts That Fooled Everyone: https://goo.gl/ypXnqc

 

Article: Cracked: 6 Iconic Things You Won't Believe Began as Publicity Stunts: https://goo.gl/0Rq4G

 

Video: Helpful Honda Ad: https://goo.gl/WfKsEn

 

Video: Chevrolet "Real People" Ad: https://goo.gl/PfPrvN

 

Article: The News Wheel: Are Chevrolet's "Real People, Not Actors" Car Commercials Fake?: https://goo.gl/aX2sua

 

Video: If "Real People" Commercials Were Real Life: https://goo.gl/n7agpC

 

Video: Aaron Paul on The Price is Right: https://goo.gl/LoUkIW

 

Video: Josh Androsky on The Price is Right: https://goo.gl/3abpcs

 

Follow Jack O'Brien on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jack_obrien

 

Follow Carmen Angelica on Twitter: https://twitter.com/carmesancheeses

 

Follow JM Mcnab on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jmmcnabagain

 

 

Follow Brett Rader on Twitter: https://twitter.com/brettrader

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You talked about those class action lawsuits in this podcast where you might get $3 after taking the time to fill out the forms, etc.

 

Like you, I rarely waste my time on that stuff when I know it's hardly going to pay enough to be worth the 20 minutes it takes to jump through all the legal hoops.

 

I would be interested in finding out if that saves the companies money if we don't bother to apply for our payment. Do they pay a flat amount and that gets divided equally among all the people who respond? Or do they only pay a certain amount per person?

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