Toronto Star

Sex, violence in ads don’t entice customers

New study says age-old adage about what sells doesn’t resonate with today’s consumers

- LAURA COLBY BLOOMBERG

Maybe sex doesn’t sell after all.

Commercial­s that feature sex and violence — or appear on programs with that kind of content — are less effective than those with neutral themes, according to a study published by the academic journal Psychologi­cal Bulletin.

Violent and sexual television programmin­g impairs viewers’ memory because it diverts attention from the advertisin­g, said Brad Bushman, a professor of communicat­ion and psychology at Ohio State University and co-author of the study, which analyzed the results of 53 previous experiment­s.

Results were similar when ads themselves contained sexual or violent content, he said.

“It never helps to have violence and sex in commercial­s,” Bushman said. “It either hurts, or has no effect at all.”

The study concluded that “brands ad- vertised in violent contexts will be remembered less often, evaluated less favorably, and less likely to be purchased than brands advertised in nonviolent media. We also suggest that advertisin­g in sexual media may not be as detrimenta­l as advertisin­g in violent media, but does not appear to be a successful strategy either.”

There was no significan­t difference in how men and women reacted to the different types of advertisin­g, Bushman said.

The study, co-written by Robert B. Lull, a former Ohio State researcher who is now at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Annenberg Public Policy Center, found that some advertiser­s have already adopted these conclusion­s in their strategies.

U.S. President Barack Obama’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign advertised on video-game sites, but avoided those of a violent or sexual nature. And Walmart Stores, the world’s largest retailer, has done its own research showing that its advertisin­g was18 per cent more effective when placed in family-friendly programmin­g.

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