I've been living in Paris for the past 3 months and re-reading my last post (yes it has been awhile!) I realize how our geographical landscape and the culture that it insinuates very much molds our relationships with businesses. To take it another step further, not only do our relationships with businesses change depending on where in the world we physically are, how we think about promotions, marketing and advertising - our perspectives - are very much intertwined as well.
Toronto seems to be the lab rat of cities where on any urban corner you can be either bombarded by a mob of hawkers or equally intrusive billboards. I peronally have become desensitized to the phony hype that businesses try to instigate. I've seen it all, although I do stop, from time to time, to appreciate the more ingenious & out-of-the-box promotion solutions, the majority "me-too" campaigns are grey clutter.
It was only until moving to Paris that I fully digested that perhaps, Toronto was one of several lab rats and clearly not the worldwide norm. It was eerie at first, trying to pinpoint (other than the obvious) what made Paris's urban landscape so charming. I found that to a large extent it was its absence of advertising.
As if the city was saying,"Look, let's try to keep the focus on the city itself, not on consumption." How different is that voice in Toronto? Clearly, our architecture scene is not on par with cities with a deeper, more enriched history. But how much of the clinical, starkness that Toronto exudes in comparison with European cities is due to a lack of history? Toronto has a thriving arts scene and yet, we are moved toward looking at the facade of a building and not the building itself.
My thoughts on advertising are conflicted, especially being someone from within the industry itself. How can we communicate our ideas to the masses without being obnoxious and loud? It seems the harder we try to make ourselves known, the further consumers feel pushed up against their bubble wall.
As an evolving blog, I'm aiming to let what I find within Toronto's streets and relationships construct the dialogue. [i want to chat here about relationships. about life. and about this crazy path we take ourselves on.]
17.11.10
17.4.10
The Opening Chapter
Sitting in the suburbs of the GTA (actually just outside of it) & with my degree coming to a close at the end of the year, I'm asking questions I didn't even know were issues a week ago. Reminded me of this excellent video that's been circulating since 2008.
If you haven't seen it, understandably because of the cave you've been living in for the past few years, I suggest you constantly ask yourself the question that is posed at the very end of the video. WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?
What does it all mean? Rhetorical obviously, but on a simplistic level, it means that change happens. It means that change happens even if we ourselves are not. Think of a moment when you were sitting in the back seat of a car stuck in traffic. The truck beside you starts to move forward giving the impression that you are moving backwards. This is precisely what happens when new technologies spread to the masses. Increasingly more people move forward with the traffic in front of them, while some, maybe it's even you, stay still. In fact, you feel like you're moving backwards. You know you're staying where you are.
In reality, you are moving backwards in relation to the people who are moving ahead. If you can't move forward in the car you're in, get out of the car and run.
If you haven't seen it, understandably because of the cave you've been living in for the past few years, I suggest you constantly ask yourself the question that is posed at the very end of the video. WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?
What does it all mean? Rhetorical obviously, but on a simplistic level, it means that change happens. It means that change happens even if we ourselves are not. Think of a moment when you were sitting in the back seat of a car stuck in traffic. The truck beside you starts to move forward giving the impression that you are moving backwards. This is precisely what happens when new technologies spread to the masses. Increasingly more people move forward with the traffic in front of them, while some, maybe it's even you, stay still. In fact, you feel like you're moving backwards. You know you're staying where you are.
In reality, you are moving backwards in relation to the people who are moving ahead. If you can't move forward in the car you're in, get out of the car and run.
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