Miley Cyrus’ music video We Can’t Stop is filled with sexual
imagery and a girl who just discovered her body and tongue and is not afraid to
flaunt them – a hundred times over.
Miley’s video aired online June 19, 2013 and today has just shy of 204
million hits, with 955,805 likes and 867,062 thumbs down. Some people hate some
people love, but EVERYONE has seen this video. Miley may be over the top but
she knows that for people to stop and look you need to get naked, and be sexy
(she might need to work on that part). All in all, Sex drives our culture. Sex
Sells.
Humans by nature are sexually driven. Advertising latches on
to that. Axe does a good job of using a sexual theme or idea and making it
funny to attract users. Calvin Klein ads are banned all the time for exploiting
children and using over sexualized content. Advertising has the power to
influence one of our greatest instincts but is also responsible for the
morality and ethics in our culture in shaping what is socially acceptable. If it’s
acceptable in an advertisement it’s acceptable in society. Once an ad is
banned, like Calvin Klein, it can be even worse for society, because the ad
ends up getting even more exposure because people want to know why it’s banned
and look it up on YouTube. Calvin Klein makes society feel like teens having
sex is acceptable which could have a negative impact on teens in high school
struggling with peer pressure and society.
Also ads like that of Calvin Klein which spark so much media
attention, doesn't really say anything about the sales of clothing. An ad with a
lot of media exposure (for a negative reason) may not generate sales as
expected. Would you see an ad with a child’s underwear stuffed and think “my
kids gotta have that”?
Some ads however, use sex in a way that society can
recognize and accept. Companies like this respect that there are boundaries as
far as sex is concerned and that our society must have some standards in
protecting the innocence of youth and corruption of a sexually driven society.