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What I’ve Got: Netflix’s New Rating Algorithm - The Thumbs System
Earlier this month, Netflix introduced a new way of voting/reviewing on their featured entertainment: a thumbs up/down rating system (rather than a star-system). According to Netflix, the thumbs-based ratings will “produce far more accurate recommendations for what you want to watch.” According to me, however, I am very skeptical that such a system will prove to be effective in keeping quality titles that may be smaller and harder to find (i.e. an indie movie a la Netflix’s recent acquisition from Tribeca Film Festival “Tramps” or even their recent production “The Discovery”) afloat. The system, in my mind, is far too simplistic. Further, as Netflix continues to face more glaring issues in the way its content is curated and distributed (see David Ehrlich’s article on Netflix “burying” its indie titles in the void of its other selections - http://www.indiewire.com/2017/04/netflix-bad-for-movies-theaters-okja-tramps-1201806272/), it will be interesting to see if the Thumbs system truly proves to aid users with better suggestions.
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What I’ve Got: SKII’s Advertisement on Marriage Markets
In one of the more fascinating examples of a Western advertising company (Tool of North America) being hired to promote a foreign product by tapping into a deeply problematic story and representing such a story through the docu-format, SKII’s “Marriage Market Takeover” is an endlessly fascinating advertisement. On one side of the spectrum, the advertisement bravely portrays a counter-narrative to the subjugation of single women (or “leftover women” in Chinese culture. On the other side, however, the advertisement is promoting a beauty product designed to make its consumers more “appealing” or “beautiful” in the eyes of the other. It is in that tension that something bizarre exists - though the ad chooses to portray an issue that has yet to be talked about on a large, mainstream scale, does it do so in a way that may be considered disingenuous?
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What I’ve Got: Mast Chocolate (The Aesthetics of Desirability vs. Desirability Itself)
Over the past five years, the Mast Brothers, their beards, and their artisanal chocolate has not only ignited a flame amidst hipster crowds in popularizing the “bean-to-bar movement,” but it also has been subject to recent widespread criticism. After a food expert’s in-depth four-page exposé (http://dallasfood.org/2015/12/mast-brothers-what-lies-behind-the-beards-part-1-tastetexture/) on Mast exposed the chocolate makers as fraudulent ponzi schemers who - in their efforts to craft “high-end chocolate” - prized the aesthetic qualities of their chocolate over the quality of the chocolate itself.
The report - which was later backed by The New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/21/nyregion/unwrapping-mast-brothers-chocolatier-mythos.html?_r=0), discusses how the Mast Brothers “faked how they learned to grind their cacao beans, the ingredients in their candy and even their beards,” along with purchasing their chocolate from third-party vendors (and not making it by hand).
The Mast Brothers returned with a statement along the lines of how “taste was never th[eir] brand.
Yet, in light of all of this information, the question remains: does it matter? To what extent does a product - particularly in the culinary world - have to taste especially “good” to be considered desirable?
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What I’ve Got: Tyrone Lebon and Calvin Klein’s #MyCalvins Campaign
In the Fall of 2016, filmmaker and visual artist Tyrone Lebon teamed with Calvin Klein to craft one of their most visually striking and provocative campaigns since the 1990s.
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Much like his other work (i.e. Frank Ocean’s “NIKES” video), Lebon employs cinema vérité and observational filmmaking - amidst highly controlled studio environments - to capture an energy foreign to the world of advertising. The pairing between his raw and unvarnished style (complete with each video’s blink-and-you’ll-miss-it length) with a brand that literally sells itself on sex (or “sexiness”) results in some surprisingly beautiful advertisements.
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Design POV: Observations on Faux Docu-Cinema in the Creative Ad Space
In the late 1950s, cinema heavyweight Alfred Hitchcock remarked, “In feature [fiction] films, the director is God; in documentary films, God is the director.” This sentiment may have proven true in a simpler time – one unburdened by "post-truths" and fake news. Indeed, in an era of the adjustable truth, the former role of documentary filmmaking (as naturalistic observations of the “human condition”) has seemingly mutated into a moral/ethical battlefield of factual ambiguity. As insatiable global audiences, fetishizing the “incontrovertible" truth via sensational documentaries, continue to mushroom, documentarians and all content-creators are faced with revealing or even creating exciting “truths.” If deemed too “dry” by the same audiences captivated by frenetic Vice videos or flashy, covertly- branded “reality-based” short films (ie: “First Kiss” where twenty strangers kiss each-other for their first time), many purely “factual” documentaries are swallowed up and spit out into the abyss of cyber-space. As piquing the interests of large audiences is growing more competitive and common, a great number of documentarians are beginning to play “God” (in Hichcockian terms) by distorting and slanting the “truth.” This is true and can be found in none other than the US ad space.
Being a documentary filmmaker with deep-rooted interests in narrative films and comic books, there comes a certain fascination with product experiences that challenge industry-standards by embracing stranger alternatives. This is particularly relevant to big brands (a la Clearasil, the NYT, Calvin Klein, Drake and OVO Records, even Quilted Northern Toilet Paper), as they attempt to skew their advertising to a more youthful, internet-literate demo. Throughout this past semester, I, more often than not, unwittingly wrote about many of the marketing methods employed by big creative ad agencies like Droga5 or Havas. Yet, it was only until reviewing both BJ Fogg’s “A Behavioral Model for Persuasive Design” and Pieter Desmet and Paul Hekkert’s “Framework of Product Experience” that I realized that something perhaps more gray lurked beneath many of my posts: big brands using the documentary medium for its ephemeral “aesthetic, emotional and meaningful” qualities rather than as a vessel for truth.
In an era guided by post-truth, I have very closely felt the hypocrisy that non-fiction filmmaking allows for an unvarnished look at others’ lives. Though it is no secret that some documentaries are partly staged, the fact that truth can be essentially true is fascinating to me. Documentaries for Nike products, often times, contain less truth than narrative movies because there are a number of heavily gray layers that exist between fact and fiction. Indeed, one could largely argue that the cinematic docu-qualities of a commercial spot like SKII’s Marriage Market spot largely fulfill what both Fogg, Desmet and Hekkert categorize as desirable” design: its visuals not only are pleasing to the eye (the spot is lensed with cinematic precision), but its tear-jerking music, and well-directed interviews tease out an emotional narrative that is moving and rousing. Yet, this particular SKII ad’s tactics are equally as manipulative. In what should play as reality, the advertisement seemingly plays as scripted fiction, thanks to the story’s contradictory relationship to its product (SKII can be looked at as a cosmetic item).
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Thus, in reviewing my previous posts, I am attracted to design that utilities conspicuous minimalism (i.e. the Yashica T4i’s build to Harris Savides’ understated cinematography) to the emotional experiences of self-reflexive narratives (a la Clearasil’s advertisements in which they admit they do indeed have no awareness of what kids find “cool”) to disruptive tech as personal experiences (Drake’s expansion of the OVO brand with his recent “playlist” More Life).
Yet, do interweb denizens share similar thoughts? Do people really care about truth anymore, anyway? Does irony - when endorsed by a corporation attempting to sell a consumer a product (a la Marvel’s pastiche of Joss Whedon’s humor in their more recent, Whedon-less entries in the MCU) - sell? If Ryan Staake’s “Wyclef Jean” video for artist Young Thug is any indication, perhaps it does.
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