It's super bowl LIV in 2020. Record-setting numbers of viewers
are tuned in to watch the game, but not on television and not over
the Internet. Instead they are using handheld broadband devices
that allow them to project the transmission onto any flat surface.
And in 2020, just as today, viewers are interested in the game,
but they're even more interested in the advertising.
The commercials, of course, are greatsurprisingly better than
they are now. Directors make sure the commercials are moving, exciting,
entertaining; research and planning make sure they are relevant;
technicians make sure the effects are breathtaking.
It's not the commercials that are the most interesting part, though:
the really important advertising is hiding in plain sight on the
field. The Microsoft Mustangs are playing the GM Generals at Cisco
Stadium in a town called Ciscovilleformerly known as Philadelphia.
Corporations will pay big money for the right to digitize logos
onto the T shirts of the fans in the stands. Logos of sponsors won't
be painted on stadium signs or on the field anymore. Thanks to a
trend that is already happening, they'll be digitally embedded in
the image on your screen. The logos you see will depend on your
personal interests and profile, and they'll be different from the
ones seen by your next-door neighbors.
Advertising will change profoundly over the next couple of decades,
although there's a good chance you won't notice the difference,
since the most meaningful changes won't be visible to the casual
observer. It's the changes that are happening underground that will
count, and they're the ones we should be aware of. Advertising in
the future will be surgically, stealthily and eerily targeted, and
disturbingly omnipresent.
Technology, naturally, will be the engine. User-tracking software
that records your TV- and Internet-viewing habits in minute detailand
crosses it with your purchasing historywill allow the advertiser
to know that you have children, that you eat meat, that your native
language is Spanish and that your dishwasher is however many years
old. That way you will be shown commercials for minivans, cheeseburgers
and replacement dishwashers, all in Spanish, and not for roadsters,
tofu and replacement refrigerators, in English. (In fact, this technology
already exists.) Refined with data that track what kinds of online
ads you tend to click onfunny, sentimental, fact ladenevery commercial
will hit home.
Say what you will, that's a nifty trick. In the future people
won't be bothered with advertising messages irrelevant to them.
They'll tend to like advertising better because it's so carefully
tailored to their tastes. It will begin to feel less like an intrusion.
This works for the advertiser too because fewer dollars will be
wasted. While it's a little dispiriting to think we can be so predictably
manipulated, maybe that's a fair price to pay to avoid the pollution
of messages you don't care about.
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