Over the past few months, a number of readers have sent in examples of college-related advertising with a distinctly sexual theme. There’s something interesting here. College pursuit, preparation, and achievement are being conflated with sexual prowess (the size of one’s dick, no less). I suppose it was never was really about smarts. Still, the overt conflation of (masculine) sexual superiority with academic achievement seems new to me. Am I wrong?
Scott M. and Ed A-N. sent in which penis size is used as a proxy for preparedness for the LSAT:
Stephanie A. sent in this ad for MyEdu, a college management site (whatever that is) that makes an obvious reference to Viagra (the little blue pill that makes for not-so-little erections):
Last but not least, Becky E. and Monica Y. sent in this facebook ad encouraging women to apply to a school loan by suggesting that very-sexy-ladies do the same:
See also our post: using sex to sell the most unlikely things (like organ donation!).
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 4
nmlop — June 24, 2011
(I have removed my commented because I hadn't read the post carefully! my reading comprehension is not very good right now. Is there no way to delete this thing?)
Ceiling Cat — June 25, 2011
Whoa, what the hell?
The middle ad is at least somewhat subtle and humorous, but the first ad insults men AND excludes women, while the last ad seems to be targeted at strippers.
Are these ads actually effective? I don't get it.
Scott Wayne Murrah — June 25, 2011
that scott m sure must be a cool guy!
I'm with Ceiling Cat, I really don't see these ads being effective. The first and third seem more aggravating than inviting. I guess sex sells everything.
Amber Hale — July 1, 2011
seems to me that facebook adds generally don't pay any attention to the pic that is posted. As if it were just a random keyword search.