Social Sciences, asked by alok6722e, 1 month ago

4. Advertisements exaggerate the
of a particular product

Answers

Answered by ItzNiladoll
2

Answer:

Hope this helps you ✔️✔️

Explanation:

One of the most common methods advertising agencies use to sell a product is exaggeration. Now, it cannot be just a little bit of exaggeration, as that could get confused with reality. No, it has to be "full-on, out there, only a complete idiot would believe it" exaggeration. For example, let's imagine that you're selling a car. In the TV ad, the driver gets into the car, revs it up, and then the car takes off. The speedometer shows the car going 180mph. Now, it's a regular road car, and the average production car has a top speed of around 110mph. Some can go a little faster. But the point is, 180mph is not enough of an exaggeration. The average consumer could very easily think the car can go that fast. However, if you show the speedometer breaking the needle, and flames shooting from the wheels as it takes off and passes a plane, well, that's not believable at all. 

Answered by amitbera1769
4

Answer:

There’s a particularly bad rash of scam-artist/ online clothing advertisers, interestingly, mostly from China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan infecting the internet nowadays. They deceitfully put photo’s of some high-fashion, expensive, designer clothes on their website (the head is always cropped off the fashion model so the original photo-shoot can’t be traced back to the original copyrighted designer, who then has every right to sue) Next, they promise to sell you the dress or shirt at 50–90% lower cost…. Many thousands of young Western consumers who were looking for a lower-cost Prom Dress, or cute lower-cost jeans have been completely ripped-off by these international criminals. The clothing item often never even gets delivered after the money has been received off the credit or debit card (and a internet scammer now has this person’s debit card info) Or if something does actually ship, it’s some pathetic, ill-fitting rag that looks like my 10 yr. old grandson was playing with my sewing machine. Us old war-horse consumer’s already know that “You get what you PAY for”. it may help you

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