A subjective component for the media’s influence in consumer culture would be the perception that because we go to the mall or any other shopping stores, and we go to the movies or watch TV at home, and we use social media on a daily basis, it is impossible we wouldn’t come across the idea that we feel the need and want to consume something based off of something a person has seen from the examples I’ve given. There is also perception that is associated between the items people accumulate and the degree of happiness those things bring to the person. With the objective component of the media’s influence in consumerism, as the author of Makers, Buyers, and Users: Consumerism as a Material Culture Framework, Ann Smart Martin writes, “Shopping became obsessive for the unwary. Popular television shows and movies, fashion and women’s magazines best describes the access and liberty of impulse spending, and the wish for material things was the new world power” (p 141). Which suggests that research do show that because of the media, people tend to consumer more, and it makes them powerful to know that they have the ability to spend impulsively on items that are not necessarily a necessity. Using the theoretical perspectives to analyze the topic: For a functionalist, the idea of a consumer culture would be of great help for the capitalist economy,
A subjective component for the media’s influence in consumer culture would be the perception that because we go to the mall or any other shopping stores, and we go to the movies or watch TV at home, and we use social media on a daily basis, it is impossible we wouldn’t come across the idea that we feel the need and want to consume something based off of something a person has seen from the examples I’ve given. There is also perception that is associated between the items people accumulate and the degree of happiness those things bring to the person. With the objective component of the media’s influence in consumerism, as the author of Makers, Buyers, and Users: Consumerism as a Material Culture Framework, Ann Smart Martin writes, “Shopping became obsessive for the unwary. Popular television shows and movies, fashion and women’s magazines best describes the access and liberty of impulse spending, and the wish for material things was the new world power” (p 141). Which suggests that research do show that because of the media, people tend to consumer more, and it makes them powerful to know that they have the ability to spend impulsively on items that are not necessarily a necessity. Using the theoretical perspectives to analyze the topic: For a functionalist, the idea of a consumer culture would be of great help for the capitalist economy,