Friday, July 10, 2015

Tracy

A Meth Project Ad


Colorado has a problem with meth. The Department of Justice has called methamphetamine the “number one drug threat to Colorado.” The average age of new meth users in 2012 was 19.7 years old. The Meth Project is an advertisement campaign targeting teenagers; their goal is to make them think twice about trying meth. In the visual ad entitled simply Tracy, the Meth Project tells the viewers the story of a girl and her slip into meth abuse and its effects.
           
The use of appeals to emotions to the audience of the campaign (teenagers) was evident throughout. The entire video consists of disturbing images and words describing the progressive destruction of a girl’s life. The narrator, a girl with an unknown relationship to eponymous Tracy, only says a few short descriptive statements about what she did, each giving context to the images shown. The ad has a dark color scheme and cuts sharply between everyday images like a storefront and more jarring ones, like a window breaking, a crying baby and a screaming woman. There is no music behind, leaving only the images and the narration. The ad effectively uses ‘scare-tactics’ in an effort to impress on the audience that meth is not something you want to mess with.
            
The ethical appeals of the ad are almost non-existent, relying on the disturbing images and seemingly genuine emotions of the narrator near the end. There is also a screen at the very end with the message “What do you know about Meth?” along with “Ask methproject.org,” the only potential avenue for factual information. We have no real reason to trust the narrator except for the expectation of the empathy they should feel when seeing her emotions, however she is relatable to the target audience.
           
Simple statements and disturbing images make the message clear, that meth is not something to mess with. There is no factual information to back back up this message, so there is no real way to follow the argument logically.
           
While I feel that the ad is effective and the message is clear, I think that it only really employs pathos while ignoring both ethos and logos. The pathos is clear, using empathy and fear to make people think about meth use, but ethos is based entirely on the narrator with an unknown relationship to Tracy. Logos is ignored almost entirely, with only observational statements about a girl and a website listed at the very end of the ad. Again, I think that this is still effective for the target audience, who is both likely to go to a website they see on television and likely to empathize with the plight of the girl and the narrator.
           
I believe that the ad is effective for the target audience but perhaps not an educated resistant one. An educated audience would probably ask why there are no real facts presented about meth, just an emotional manipulation and nothing else. Honestly, I felt that way, and it made me immediately skeptical. I am not in their target audience, but I still felt that they would be better served either making a bigger deal of their website or having some sort of facts. Pure observational statements and manipulated empathy via an unknown narrator makes me wonder if there are actually facts behind this story. It seems that while the ad would be effective for its targeted audience, but a more educated audience wouldn’t have the same response.



Works Cited
National Institute on Drug Abuse. Research Report Series: Methamphetamine. Maryland: National   Institute on Drug Abuse, 2013. Print.
United States. U.S. Department of Justice. Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area: Drug Market Analysis 2011. Washington: GPO, 2011. Print.