Banksy's mock Coca-Cola Ad |
But Banksy is making the situation black and white (or rather red and white in this case), when in fact there is a lot more gray area than anything else.
First of all, people may not be in control of the messages posted around them, but they are in control of what they choose to believe. Advertisers moved on from the idea that people were just sponges ready to be told what to buy in the 1960s. They've realized that consumers are smart and they know what they want. They can only be swayed minimally by advertising and when they do so it's because something is appealing to them, not because they have no brains and no filters for information. Banksy needs to give credit where credit is due: people are smart. His quip, "They are on TV making your girlfriend feel inadequate" assumes that women are always at pray to the images they see on TV; that they're moldable beings whose self image fluctuates based on the latest advert. Of course, some women are affected like this, but most are have a more stable self worth than Banksy is giving them credit for.
Secondly, advertising is not Coca-Cola. If we're going to villainize something lets make it the companies that bully their way into dominance, not the tool they use to do it. Advertisers are not sitting in tall buildings laughing at you as Banksy says; they are thinking and worrying about your opinion all day, most everyday. Advertising can be powerful when done well, but this doesn't make it bad. Separating atoms can create a bomb large enough to kill billions, or it can make enough energy to power their cities.
Advertising can and has been a tool of harm, but it has also been, and will continue to be, a tool for good. At its very core advertising is an effective way to spread ideas. Can we think about the advertising that happens for political campaigns? For non-profit organizations? For art? For music? Lets not create and archetypal villain of advertising. Like everything else in the world, it's neither good nor bad, but somewhere in the middle.