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.
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.
- 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.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.