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Title Four Corners: Generation Like
Published Australia : ABC, 2014
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (45 min. 22 sec.) ; 272998367 bytes
Summary In the digital world, whether you're on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, there's a truism that's both uplifting and scary."You are what you like."Endorse a person or product and you're saying something about yourself. If in turn people 'like' you or the products you endorse, you can enhance your social status, build your self-esteem or - with enough 'likes' and followers - create a business. Thanks to social media, today's teenagers are able to interact directly with their culture and their heroes, dispensing approval to music, videos, food and clothes, as well as each other. They say that's empowering because they can deliver a verdict instantly. Like - dislike. Like a modern day, all-powerful Roman emperor. But is this empowerment or a new form of slavery? And are teenagers being manipulated by big corporations and the marketing moguls who see social media as the ultimate marketing tool? What really happens every time you or, more crucially, your children press the 'like' button?This week on Four Corners, a PBS Frontline special report by Douglas Rushkoff (The Merchants of Cool and The Persuaders) examines how the search for identity in teenagers has migrated to the digital world with profound implications for us all. What he reveals is a cat and mouse game played by corporations and young consumers with billions of dollars up for grabs.The program shows how corporations have co-opted social media into their marketing campaigns for products ranging from chocolate biscuits to movies. It follows the modern stars of Facebook and Twitter, who have parlayed their obsessions with the internet and popular culture into lucrative careers. We see how 'likes' and 'followers' are effectively traded between stars seeking bigger and better online profiles.Do young people think they are being used? Are they taken in by the prospect of achieving their own celebrity? This is a fascinating look at the modern teenager and the corporations that stalk and sell to them
Event Broadcast 2014-07-21 at 20:30:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Endorsements in advertising.
Internet marketing.
Popular culture -- Evaluation.
Youth -- Attitudes.
Online social networks.
Social media -- Economic aspects.
Form Streaming video
Author O'Brien, Kerry, host
Rushkoff, Douglas, reporter
Barnes, Brooks, contributor
Bough, Bonin, contributor
Boyd, Danah, contributor
Buckingham, Jane, contributor
Chris, Darren, contributor
Duhigg, Charles, contributor
Fernandez, Steven, contributor
Ioffe, Dimitry, contributor
Luckett, Oliver, contributor
Lynch, Ceili, contributor
Oakley, Tyler, contributor
Somerhalde, Ian, contributor