Beyond Advertising and Publicity: Hybrid Messages and Public Policy Issues
- 1 December 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Advertising
- Vol. 23 (4) , 29-46
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00913367.1943.10673457
Abstract
This research explores a growing genre of marketing communication, labeled hybrid messages, which creatively combine key advantages (and avoid key disadvantages) inherent in advertising and publicity messages. Several types of hybrid messages are discussed, including those with long established histories (product placements, program-length commercials, program tie-ins), and those with a relatively recent origin (masked-art, masked-news, and masked-spokesperson messages). To obtain integrative insights on hybrid messages, this study: (a) reviews their historical/current regulatory status, (b) discusses their pros and cons, theoretical rationales and practical implications, and (c) delineates an extensive agenda for future research. Several important public policy questions raised by hybrid messages are addressed.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Use of Mass Media in Substance Abuse PreventionHealth Affairs, 1990
- Recent Developments in FTC Policy on DeceptionJournal of Marketing, 1986
- The Changing Language of a Consumer Society: Brand Name Usage in Popular American Novels in the Postwar EraJournal of Consumer Research, 1985
- The Effects of Music in Advertising on Choice Behavior: A Classical Conditioning ApproachJournal of Marketing, 1982
- Advertising Regulation in the 1980s: The Underlying Global ForcesJournal of Marketing, 1982
- Social modeling films to deter smoking in adolescents: Results of a three-year field investigation.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1981
- Advertising & the First AmendmentJournal of Marketing, 1978
- Causal inferences about communicators and their effect on opinion change.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1978
- An experiment in training volunteers to answer anti-minority remarks.The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1950
- The Effect of Propaganda upon Attitude Following a Critical Examination of the Propaganda ItselfThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1944