Describe the 5 or 6 stages (i.e., precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance, and, if applicable, termination) of change and apply them to your health behavior.

Describe the 5 or 6 stages (i.e., precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance, and, if applicable, termination) of change and apply them to your health behavior.

Describe the processes of change that enable each stage change (i.e., consciousness raising, dramatic relief, environmental reevaluation, self-liberation, self-reevaluation, helping relationships, counterconditioning, reinforcement management, and stimulus control. Describe the preferred intervention(s) for each stage.

Describe your level of confidence in your ability to change your behavior.

Describe the concepts of the Transactional Model of Stress and Coping applied to your health behavior.

Define and apply each of the concepts in the Transactional Model of Stress and Coping (i.e., primary appraisal, secondary appraisal, coping efforts [problem management, emotional regulation, and meaning-based coping], outcomes of coping/adaptation, dispositional coping styles [optimism, benefit finding, information seeking]. Describe your level of confidence in your ability to change your behavior.

Do you think most movie-goers would even notice these products, or have we been conditioned to overlook these indirect forms of advertising?

What film did you watch and what products were you able to identify? List every product that you noticed.
In which of these cases do you believe the film’s content was altered to accommodate the placement, however minimally?
Do you think most movie-goers would even notice these products, or have we been conditioned to overlook these indirect forms of advertising?
How effective do you think the product placements in your film might be? Use specific examples from your film or from others you can recall seeing.
What is your general opinion of companies “buying visibility” in movies like this?
Pl

Do you listen to “regular” radio or digital radio? Do you pay for any radio services like XM, Apple Music, or Spotify?

From your readings you know that radio is similar to the magazine industry in that they both media appeal to very specific audiences. Such audiences are valuable to advertisers because they can deliver the attention of a consumer with a specific profile. For this week’s discussion, answer the following questions:

Do you listen to “regular” radio or digital radio?
Do you pay for any radio services like XM, Apple Music, or Spotify?
Do you feel you get your money’s worth?
What do you listen to? Do you listen to talk/news radio or just music (or both)?
How specific are your interests? Do you like “general interest” stations like NPR (which has talk, news, and music) or a specialized station like The Ticket, BOOM 94.5, or 97.1 The Eagle?
Are there any radio shows/personalities you listen to regularly? Why?
Has a radio commercial ever convinced you to buy anything, including songs? For example: Have you ever “Shazamed” a song and bought it right then?