women to buy and smoke cigarettes through logical arguments, Bernays saw
it as an emotional and cultural issue. If he wanted women to smoke, then he
had to appeal not to their thoughts but to their values. He needed to appeal to
women’s
identities.
To accomplish this, Bernays hired a group of women and got them into
the Easter Sunday Parade in New York City. Today, big holiday parades are
cheesy things you let drone on over the television while you fall asleep on the
couch.
But back in those days, parades were big social events, kind of like the
Super Bowl or something.
As Bernays planned it, at the appropriate moment, these women would all
stop and light up cigarettes at the same time. He hired photographers to take
flattering photos of the smoking women, which he then passed out to all the
major national newspapers. He told the reporters that these ladies were not
just lighting cigarettes, they were lighting “torches
of freedom,”
demonstrating their ability to assert their independence and be their own
women.
It was all #FakeNews, of course, but Bernays staged it as a political
protest. He knew this would trigger the appropriate emotions in women across
the country. Feminists had won women the right to vote only nine years
earlier. Women were now working outside the home and becoming more
integral to the country’s economic life. They were asserting themselves by
cutting their hair short and wearing racier clothing. This generation of women
saw themselves as the first generation that could behave independently of a
man. And many of them felt very strongly about this. If Bernays could just
hitch his “smoking equals freedom” message onto the women’s
liberation
movement . . . well, tobacco sales would double and he’d be a rich man.
It worked. Women started smoking, and ever since, we’ve had equal-
opportunity lung cancer.
Bernays went on to pull off these kinds of cultural coups regularly
throughout the 1920s, ’30s, and ’40s. He completely revolutionized the
marketing industry and invented the field of public relations in the process.
Paying sexy celebrities to use your product? That was Bernays’s idea.
Creating fake news articles that are actually subtle advertisements for a
company? All him. Staging controversial public events as a means to draw
attention and notoriety for a client? Bernays. Pretty much every form of
marketing and publicity we’re subjected to today began with Bernays.
But here’s something else interesting about Bernays: he was Sigmund
Freud’s nephew.
Freud was infamous because he was the first modern thinker to argue that
it was the Feeling Brain that was really driving the Consciousness Car. Freud
believed that people’s insecurities and shame
drove them to make bad
decisions, to overindulge or to compensate for what they felt they lacked.
Freud was the one who realized that we have cohesive identities, stories in
our minds that we tell about ourselves, and that we are emotionally attached
to those stories and will fight to maintain them.
2
Freud argued that, at the end
of the day, we are animals: impulsive and selfish and emotional.
Freud spent most of his life broke. He was the quintessential European
intellectual: isolated, erudite, deeply philosophical. But Bernays was an
American. He was practical. He was driven. Fuck philosophy!
He wanted to
be rich. And boy, did Freud’s ideas—translated through the lens of marketing
—deliver in a big way.
3
Through Freud, Bernays understood something
nobody else in business had understood before him: that if you can tap into
people’s insecurities, they will buy just about any damn thing you tell them to.
Trucks are marketed to men as ways to assert strength and reliability.
Makeup is marketed to women as a way to be more loved and garner more
attention. Beer is marketed as a way to have fun and be the center of attention
at a party.
This is all Marketing 101, of course. And today it’s celebrated as business
as usual. One of the first things you learn when you study marketing is how to
find customers’ “pain points” . . . and then subtly make them feel worse. The
idea is that you needle at people’s shame and insecurity and then turn around
and tell them your product will resolve that shame and rid them of that
insecurity.
Put another way, marketing specifically identifies or accentuates
the customer’s moral gaps and then offers a way to fill them.
On the one hand, this has helped produce all the economic diversity and
wealth we experience today. On the other hand, when marketing messages
designed to induce feelings of inadequacy are scaled up to thousands of
advertising messages hitting every single person, every single day, there
have
to be psychological repercussions to that. And they can’t be good.
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