alexr_rwx: (toasters)
Alex R ([personal profile] alexr_rwx) wrote2004-02-25 11:43 am

the power of nature!!!

Identity is an interesting thing, particularly with how it works in with advertising.

I woke up and looked at my deodorant, considered the sort that I, for whatever reason, chose at the pharmacy:

I think, honestly, I bought it because it was funny.

But! I mean, look at it! How much more masculine could any toiletry item possibly hope to be? I mean, not only is it "Speed Stick" -- implying that ever-so-manly quality, speed, and, well, a stick... but also it's got the POWER OF NATURE -- LIGHTNING FLAVOUR!! And apparently NBA players all use it! Yow!

This brings up something interesting, just with the name "speed stick". I think the choice of name has to do with the tendency that people have to use less-specific terms to describe common items... a computer, for example, becomes a "machine", or in a really familiar situation, a "box". You talk about "a 512 stick" when you're in the market for some new RAM. Similar things happen with cars, I think -- car aficionados do something similar, yes? So in all of the masculinity and familiarity attached to the deodorant, you couldn't help but call it just a stick. And now I feel super-fast and powerful and much closer to achieving my childhood dream of getting into the NBA!!

I'm wondering two things:

- Do women do this as well, the genericising-the-important-items thing?
- ... what was the other thing I was wondering?

[identity profile] scottique.livejournal.com 2004-02-25 11:19 am (UTC)(link)
I'm trying to think of uniquely feminine/female things that get turned into short, undescriptive packages... the first one that comes immediately to mind is the slang term "rag," for one's menstrual cycle (used in a sentence, "X is on the rag" or "X is ragging"). And, well, I'm too discombobulated to come up with anything else, so we'll leave it there, eh?