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© 2026 Ann Mathenge · Built with love, coffee, and cat hair.
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© 2026 Ann Mathenge · Built with love, coffee, and cat hair.
By Douglas Rushkoff
Rushkoff warns that the promise of the Net as an open-ended civic forum is fading, as relentless corporate marketers peddle their wares and capitalize on shortened attention spans. He identifies subtle forms of coercion used by advertisers, public relations experts, politicians, religious leaders and customer service reps, among others, and provides examples of how the ordinary person is often unsuspectingly manipulated, whether in the shopping mall, at a sports event or in a Muzak-drenched store or office. This analysis is particularly strong when deconstructing the "postmodern" techniques of persuasion that advertisers use to reach increasingly cynical target audiences, including commercials that self-consciously mock the marketing process. Rushkoff also argues that mass spectacles (e.g., rock festivals, Louis Farrakhan's Million Man March, Promise Keepers rallies) foster "tribal loyalty" but are often contrived, commercial or downright destructive. He devotes a chapter to pyramid schemes used by cults, infomercials, Internet con artists and get-rich-quick marketers. His freewheeling survey underscores the social cost of these coercive strategies, which, he says, tend to make us see one another as marks.
Published
October 10, 2000
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Language
English
ISBN
9781573228299