Here you will find the "Letter to the Corporation" work:
Letter to corporation | |
File Size: | 56 kb |
File Type: |
Next, you can find the Mock Advertisement:
Here you can find the e-mail we did for the Ad-busters Magazine:
Dear Ad-busters Editor,
Hello! We are tenth grade students from High Tech High Chula Vista, and have begun a mock advertisement project for our Humanities class. My name is Sofia, and my partner’s name is Nicholas. For several weeks, we have been researching and studying the truth behind major corporations, and what they keep from their consumers. After watching a documentary on factories in Bangladesh, we decided to do our project on the Walt Disney Company. We then decided to make a mock advertisement that was informative of the inhumane treatment women and children face on a regular basis in Disney owned sweatshops.
The first ad has a familiar song from many Disney movies, with the famous Disney castle behind it. The Disney logo is altered by the flipping of the “D” in the word, Disney. We also changed the colors to a more opaque hue, and slightly altered the castle’s structure.
For the second ad, we utilized a common Disney Channel image, and photo shopped in a sweatshop image to replace what would normally be on the screen. Similar to the other ad, the “D” in Disney is flipped, and small parts are changed.
Thank you for looking into our two ads, and we hope you consider them for publication.
Sincerely,
Sofia Delgado
Nicholas Walden
Hello! We are tenth grade students from High Tech High Chula Vista, and have begun a mock advertisement project for our Humanities class. My name is Sofia, and my partner’s name is Nicholas. For several weeks, we have been researching and studying the truth behind major corporations, and what they keep from their consumers. After watching a documentary on factories in Bangladesh, we decided to do our project on the Walt Disney Company. We then decided to make a mock advertisement that was informative of the inhumane treatment women and children face on a regular basis in Disney owned sweatshops.
The first ad has a familiar song from many Disney movies, with the famous Disney castle behind it. The Disney logo is altered by the flipping of the “D” in the word, Disney. We also changed the colors to a more opaque hue, and slightly altered the castle’s structure.
For the second ad, we utilized a common Disney Channel image, and photo shopped in a sweatshop image to replace what would normally be on the screen. Similar to the other ad, the “D” in Disney is flipped, and small parts are changed.
Thank you for looking into our two ads, and we hope you consider them for publication.
Sincerely,
Sofia Delgado
Nicholas Walden