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Spin
the Bottle: Sex, Lies and Alcohol
Against
the backdrop of a popular culture that glamorizes and normalizes excessive
drinking and high-risk behaviors, Spin the Bottle explores
the role alcohol plays in college life. Award-winning media critics
Jean Kilbourne and Jackson Katz examine the relationship between media,
gender, and alcohol, while campus health professional speak about
the impact of heavy drinking on the lives of students. Throughout
the video, young adults give voice to the complexity of the issue,
honestly acknowledging their own enjoyment while simultaneously exploring
the negative consequences. The conclusion offers concrete strategies
for countering the ubiquitous presence of alcohol propaganda and challenges
young people to make conscious decisions about their own lives.Distributed
by the Media Education Foundation.
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Deadly
Persuasion: The Advertising of Alcohol & Tobacco
In
Deadly Persuasion: The Advertising of Alcohol & Tobacco,
Jean Kilbourne exposes the manipulative marketing strategies and tactics
used by the tobacco and alcohol industries to keep Americans hooked
on their dangerous products. Illustrating her analysis with hundreds
of current advertising examples from mainstream and trade sources,
Kilbourne presents a compelling argument that these cynical industries
have a clear and deep understanding of the psychology of addiction
an understanding they exploit to create and feed a life-threatening
dependency on their products. Deadly Persuasion casts a critical
eye on the corporate interests that lie behind the industries whose
products kill more than 450,000 Americans each year. Distributed by
the Media Education Foundation.
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| Killing
Us Softly 3: Advertising's Image of Women
Jean
Kilbourne's pioneering work helped develop and popularize the study
of gender representation in advertising. Her award-winning films
Killing Us Softly (1979) and Still Killing Us Softly
(1987) have influenced millions of college and high school students
across two generations and on an international scale. In this important
new film, Kilbourne reviews if and how the image of women in advertising
has changed over the last 20 years. With wit and warmth, Kilbourne
uses over 160 ads and commercials to critique advertising's image
of women. By fostering creative and productive dialogue, she invites
viewers to look at familiar images in a new way, that moves and empowers
them to take action. Distributed by the Media
Education Foundation.
A study guide for this video is available online from the Media
Education Foundation. Find the HTML
version here, and a printable, PDF
copy here.
...ads continue to teach men contempt for women and the feminine
side of themselves. All encourage people to think that life's problems
are best solved with products...with skill, humor and acuteness, Kilbourne
encourages action against these society-weakening images. Never shrill,
her indictment is, if anything, understated. --Jay Carr,
Boston Globe
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| Slim
Hopes: Advertising and the Obsession with Thinness
In
this video, Jean Kilbourne offers an in-depth analysis of how female bodies
are depicted in advertising imagery and the devastating effects of that
imagery on women's health. Addressing the relationship between these images
and the obsession of girls and women with dieting and thinness, Slim
Hopes offers a new way to think about life-threatening eating
disorders such as anorexia and bulimia, and it provides a well-documented
critical perspective on the social impact of advertising. Using over 150
magazine and television ads, this illustrated lecture is divided into
seven sections for easy classroom viewing and discussion: Impossible Beauty,
Waifs and Thinness, Constructed Bodies, Food and Sex, Food and Control,
The Weight-Loss Industry, and Freeing Imaginations. Distributed by the
Media
Education Foundation.
A study guide for this video is available online from the Media
Education Foundation. Study
Guide in PDF.
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The
Killing Screens: Media and the Culture of Violence
An illustrated discussion with George Gerbner and Jean Kilbourne. The
video images in The Killing Screens represent the film
and television carnage that has both attracted and repulsed students and
others with increasing intensity over the years. The far-reaching effects
of violence in the media reach the core of the individual's sense of security
and relationship to community in our modern culture. Young people's notions
about the world are shaped by these powerful images. One purpose of The
Killing Screens is to empower students to be able to put this
imagery and its effects in an analytical context. Designed for use in
a broad range of educational settings, The Killing Screens
includes scenes with Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, and others.
It is paced and edited for viewing by students from high school through
college, and also provides concrete information and advice for educators,
parents, and individuals concerned with the cult of violence that engulfs
our screens. Distributed by the Media
Education Foundation.
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| Pack
of Lies: The Advertising of Tobacco
Cigarettes kill more people every year
than alcohol, cocaine, heroin, car accidents, homicide, suicide and AIDS
combined. In the U.S. alone, the tobacco industry needs to get
3,000 children to start smoking everyday simply to replace those who die
or quit. It is thus no accident that elementary school students recognize
Joe Camel© more readily than Mickey Mouse©. Pack of Lies
exposes how pernicious and how deadly cigarette marketing is, and shows
how the media cooperate with this industry that will kill one out of every
ten people alive today worldwide. Featuring award-winning speaker Jean
Kilbourne and advertising expert Rick Pollay, Pack of Lies
challenges the biggest drug pushers around. Distributed by the Media Education Foundation.
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| To purchase or preview Spin the Bottle, Deadly Persuasion,
Killing Us Softly 3, Slim Hopes, The Killing
Screens or Pack of Lies, please contact: Media
Education Foundation, 60 Masonic Street, Northampton, MA 01060,
TEL: 800-897-0089/413-584-8500, FAX: 800-659-6882/413-586-8398 |