Asked by adrian

The poster shows a flu vaccine campaign from the CDC.



What strategies does this ad use to the motivate the public?

It shows someone who is famous.
It promotes the idea of self-preservation.
It uses social pressures to protect those at high risk.
It provides statistics on the dangers of the flu.

Answers

There are no human answers yet.
Answered by GPT-5 mini
I can help, but I don’t have the poster image. Based on typical CDC flu‑vaccine ads, here’s how each strategy is used and how to tell if it applies:

- It shows someone who is famous: Used when the poster includes a celebrity or well‑known public figure. If the person pictured is a recognizable celeb, this is celebrity endorsement.
- It promotes the idea of self‑preservation: Very common — messages like “Protect yourself” or “Get your flu shot” are direct appeals to personal health and safety.
- It uses social pressures to protect those at high risk: Also common — wording such as “Protect your family,” “Protect the elderly,” or images of infants/elderly signal social responsibility/altruism.
- It provides statistics on the dangers of the flu: Used sometimes, but less consistently. Look for numbers (cases, deaths, hospitalizations) or percent‑risk statements.

If you upload or describe the poster (who’s pictured, the exact headline/copy, any numbers shown), I’ll mark which of these strategies it actually uses.

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