The Art of Deceptive Advertisements

If you drool over that gleaming pure honey flowing over steamy mashed potato you’ve seen on TV, hold your horses. You’re likely salivating over motor oil and freshly microwaved wet tampon placed behind the potato.
There are countless advertisements which are literally making people fool. Other deceptive advertisements include -
1. Use a hair spray and get a girlfriend.
2. Use a deo or perfume and get extreme attention from girls.
3. Get your wife in a restaurant and she have no problem with you to not celebrate your 10th anniversary together.
Is it okay?
And sometimes the fake out is especially funny in hotels and restaurants . For example- an ad shows an infinity swimming pool and it's more an oversized jacuzzi.
You must also be probably familiar with the extensive 'photoshopping' of makeup and fashion models until they appear emaciated humans who barely resembles normal beings.
There's something weird going on in our culture today and fakeness is normalized in today's era.
Pointed comments kicked off Advertising Week and lingered over a conference that touted
promising new sponsorship models on channels like esports and TikTok.

And you can see the reality in this picture also.
Just see the angles how that picture of swimming pool was taken and how amazingly it is photoshopped. People just focus on their profits. They have no ethics or moral values left in today's market dealing .

For more than a decade, audiences are migrating away from traditional free-to-air broadcasting, towards more personalized media experiences, including on-demand video streaming services that are entirely devoid of advertising. Instead of promoting innovation and new ways to engage consumers, the internet giants offer big agencies the chance to repeat the exact same thing they had done for sixty years in television: video adverts. Only this time the delivery of the commercials was “more targeted”.

It's high time to stay vigilant as consumers so that you don't fall get fooled anymore by these deceptive advertisements. Stay smart. Stay Satark.

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