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The Schmios Go to War

The latest installment of New York's annual spoof of the ad industry's Clio Awards highlights the convergence of corporate and military propaganda.
 
 
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At this year’s 6th-annual Schmio Awards, the ceremony lampooning the advertising industry’s own Clio Awards, marketing propaganda took a back seat to what’s currently driving the American media machine -- war propaganda. Postponed last year in the wake of 9/11, this year’s ceremony was organized around the theme “Disarming the Axis of Advertising.”

“Understand this is a free speech zone!” shouted the evening’s “Secretary of Homeland Insecurity,” professor and media critic Mark Crispin Miller. “We’re back!”

The show opened with a clip of a beer advertisement portraying an angry man silently drinking as he stifles his thoughts towards his female dinner companions. The man is clearly on edge, but the voice over -- representing Phillip Morris -- advises him to keep drinking and just take it.

“What’s significant about this ad is its stark world view of us versus them,” said Miller, noting how advertisers often split the world into disparate categories: men/women, hip/unhip, consumers/those who don’t buy. “This suggests there is no voice worth listening to other than the ad itself.”

Cut to a Chevrolet ad that shows a city bus with “Creeps and Weirdos” in its destination window, and the tagline, “Luckily, there’s an affordable alternative.” Here, people are dichotomized into creeps or drivers -- appropriate, Miller says, considering America’s thirst for oil. “Take this kind of propaganda to the international realm and you’ve got President Bush saying ‘you’re either with us or against us.’”

The first Schmio, The Making War Seem Really Cool Award, was presented by Charles Sheehan Miles, a decorated Gulf War veteran who has been outspoken about Gulf War syndrome. Nominees included Fox News for war reporting akin to reality TV programming: In fuzzy news footage shot from a plane, a white figure runs along a military target in Afghanistan -- really, a dusty, dirt road. As the fleeing figure is shot down, the reporter quips, “And then, they nail him!”

The award, however, went to the U.S. Marine Corps, for an action-packed advertising campaign depicting rugged Marines rock climbing through the Grand Canyon. “There it is,” Miles said chirpily. “Isn’t war cool?!”

The Schmios, sponsored by New York University’s Department of Culture and Communication, continued its tradition of jocular send-ups of crass commercialism with a skit by Bobby Tisdale, Chelsea Peretti and Jonah Peretti, better known as the white folks behind the spoof website blackpeopleloveus.com. To show the pernicious effects of advertising, the trio asked a volunteer to come up on stage and “take the corporate challenge.”

“Who has the nuts to say it, ‘I eat at McDonalds’?” Tisdale asked, waving a fork pronged with chicken McNuggets at the audience. Once a volunteer was onstage, Chelsea taped McNuggets to his eyes, shoved a greasy handful of nuggets in his mouth, and read an excerpt from “Fast Food Nation.” The idea, perhaps: how can you speak out when you’re literally stuffed?

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