anti-smoking ad essay

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    Anti Smoking Ads

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    CDC Anti-Smoking Campaign Ads From the common cold to deadly viruses, there are threats to public health everywhere in the world, whether they are caused naturally, intentionally, or accidentally. Providing strategic direction and support against these threats is a national health organization known as the CDC (or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). The CDC is one of the most predominate national health institutes the United States and the world. Its main office is located in Atlanta

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    pastimes is smoking. Smoking, for me is a great stress reliever; it helps take the edge off. It can’t be denied however, smoking is still bad for you. The damage it does to the body is well documented and researched. There have been two warring sides of the media, the pro- tobacco side and the anti- tobacco side. ‘Big Tobacco’ as well as anti-smoking activist bombard the public with images to promote their agenda. This essay I will be comparing and contrasting ads from both pro and anti-smoking industries

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    Anti Smoking Ad Essay

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    In November 2010, an anti-smoking ad was released. It features a woman holding a cigarette. Her face is split in half by cigarette smoke, showing a woman who doesn’t smoke, and a woman who does. On the side where it shows a woman who doesn’t smoke, the woman’s face is smooth, her eyes are clear, her hair is dark and healthy, her teeth are white, and her lips are full. On the other side, her skin is wrinkled and pale, her eyes are dim and cloudy, her hair is white, and her lips are pale and thin.

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    Anti-Smoking Ad Analysis

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    The Anti-smoking ad has a set of brown leaves formed as a lung, holding the leaves is a tree stem. In the ad under the leaves you see a person's hand with a lighter. As he has the lighter flicked the leaves are beginning to burn. At the bottom right it says “Your lungs are more sensitive than you think. Stop Smoking” in a white small font. Under that it has the campaign’s name which is “Casa De Euipedes”. The second Ad, Anti-Racism, has a gray background. There is an African American man with a

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    My ad for an anti smoking campaign shows a picture of a baby smoking a cigarette as half the baby 's face is decaying. To the right of this image there is text that states," I smoke second hand." Right below that in smaller text is a warning that reads, "Warning: may kill your baby." After closely analyzing this image I found that the argument for this advertisement is: Smoking not only effects you but the people around you too. This ad is very effective due the fact that the distinctive feature

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    Rhetorical Analysis of Anti- Smoking Ad Did you know that almost every one person out of seven smokes cigarettes on Earth? It is one of the top cause of death, yet, five million people die each year. Anti- smoking advertisements usually comes up very often, when you are watching TV, on social media, even on top of the cigarette packs. The advertisement that I choosed to do my rhetorical analysis is black and white picture, showing young woman smoking a cigarette and the smoke is forming like rope

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    Philip Morris Anti Smoking Campaign Traditionally, many advertisements released by cigarette brands under the Philip Morris label have depicted happy people joined together in friendship (supposedly due to their common habit). Other advertisements attempted to associate cigarettes with sleek mystical figures, sometimes even sexually desirable ones. All this has changed, however, due to recent legal developments in which the cigarette giant was pressured to offer anti-smoking ads, in addition to

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    health. Cigarette smoking is the number one cause of death in the United States, and it is an easily reversible statistic. All anti-smoking ads gives a choice on whether to smoke or not and there’s a significant percentage that still chooses to do so. Anti-smoking campaigns can either promote or prevent smoking and the negative bi-products of smoke inhalation in various ways. This provides a discussion of the negative and positive impacts of anti-smoking ads. Anti-smoking ads aren’t as effective

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    other fatal diseases. This image is an ad from a Neuroscience blog covering the topic of anti-smoking ads and campaigns. The purpose of this ad is to emphasize the importance of quitting smoking before it is too late. The anti-smoking campaign has a targeted audience of smokers and the loved ones of those who smoke. This ad effectively persuades smokers to give up smoking by the use of simplicity in organization, color scheme, and hidden meaning in the image. This ad is very effective in convincing the

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    interpretation of content through a artistic or critical point of view. The moral dimension allows viewers understand the values and the message of the media. Anti-tobacco ads express all four dimensions in their commercials. Smoking commercials begin with giving statistics of how smoking can harm you, your family, and the environment. The ads explain

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