Thursday, December 5, 2013

Noodles, Females and Objectification


Masayuki Chinen, OCU

Nisshin Food Products television commercials have attracted the attention of many people, especially men, in its use of sexuality as a method of stimulating a sense of hunger in viewers. One ad in particular expresses man’s sexual desire toward women. It also reflects the general desire of women to maintain a beautiful appearance and slender body.

Nisshin is a well-known food company, especially for its Cup Noodle brand. In 2010, Nisshin marketed a new line known as Cup Noodle Light. Viewers may notice immediately what is special about this product from its name. Obviously, this product is supposed to contain less calories than other similar products while it also contains dietary fiber.

Nisshin Food Products, 2012
When I heard the name of this product, I thought the company was mainly targeting female customers. However, the commercial presents also another perspective from what I had first imagined. The advertisement features a beautiful woman who appears essentially naked. She framed by the camera from the low waistline up, and her exposed skin is painted in the pattern of Cup Noodle Light. Her slender appearance and beauty illustrate the power of the visual and what could possibly be in store for customers who eat this product. So, the TV advertisement strives to elicit the general female desire to be slender and to be beautiful.

The message, though, is meant not only for women but for men with its portrayal of the woman. It is appealing to male customers because it presents the woman in an almost erotic pose half naked, exposed and welcoming, which motivate the male sexual drive. When male customers choose this brand of noodle, the images presented in the advertisement serve to appeal to the emotions connections that men feel toward women. These connections are also linked to the product, Cup Noodle Light.

While recent women’s equal rights movements challenging the unfair treatment and discrimination of women have had some success in Japanese society, we still need to go further in improving equality and respecting the dignity of women. Unfortunately, male chauvinism still appears to exist in societies across the globe where women are objectified in the interest of marketing products.

In Japan, the woman who is generally slender and who has wider eyes than the norm has come to be more visually appealing, more valuable, and more marketable to manufacturers. It seems every condition of feminine beauty is manufactured today by a man’s sense of value. Many women strive to be more slender by dieting and sometimes the result is excess dieting, which leads to very serious emotional and psychological problems. These unrealistic concepts about feminine beauty appear to be a leading cause of anorexia.

Nisshin Cup Noodle also emphasizes the calorie and dietary fiber, which is related directly the slender body image. If such extreme emphasis continues to be placed on sexual fantasy in advertising, we really need to step back from the media presented on TV and ask about the real value of this fantasy and its effects on women.

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