
Women could blog for many different reasons - just as there are many types of blogs out there. For instance, take the movie "Julie & Julia" the entire movie is bent around this idea that Julie is making a blog of her accomplishment/task of cooking her way through a Julia Chide cook book, and through her expression over the Internet she becomes famous for it. At the same time this movie came out, there was an ad on TV degrading women - sending them 'back to the kitchen' after working so hard to get out of there. It shows women in a powerless position - the woman who has no backbone and takes what she is handed - or the "ideal women" in the eyes of most men. Linked on the side of this blog is the Shaw ad that I'm referring to.
Again, though, relating back to things I learned in my last semester Communication’s cour
ses – it is not necessarily the message (the advertisement or the blog itself) that determines how the audience receives a message. Each audience member can take something different out of contemporary media depending on their situation, their cultural baggage, their other baggage – or basically who they are. For instance, I, being a female could watch the Shaw ad and feel degraded as a female – and not understand the part of the advertisement the company was trying to relate to me (which is the fact that Shaw does not use contracts).
Another idea brought to us in class was the question:
To what extent do the conditions of PRODUCTION determine the conditions of CONSUMPTION?
Dr. Strangelove talked about the point that Karl Marx was an economic materialist, and philosopher. Marx believes that one determines the other (with his organization of Base à Superstructure) Where the Base = production, which determines the superstructure (the conditions of consumption).

To what extent? Nobody can know for sure – its not something that can be measured. One thing is for certain – to get a message or point across, there needs to be a lot more production (more advertisements, and different types). I’ve produced and worked publicity for many different events back in Sault Ste. Marie, including concerts, banquets, musicals, fundraisers, etc. and one thing I know most is that to get people to know about an event, you need to market! Market! MARKET! The amount of advertising needed for even the biggest or smallest events is HUGE to get a desirable turnout. And that’s just in a small city, where everybody knows the other. I wouldn’t be able to imagine the difficulty of trying to plan an event in a larger city – the amount of advertising needed to get the point of the event across must be immense.

