Unlabelled advertorials in Slovenian life-style press: A study of the promotion of health products

Authors

  • Melita Poler Kovačič University of Ljubljana
  • Karmen Erjavec University of Ljubljana
  • Katarina Stular University of Ljubljana

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v8i2.157

Keywords:

Advertorials, health-related topics, life-style magazines, news, promotion

Abstract

The paper analyses unlabelled advertorials about health products in four life-style magazines and three daily newspapers’ life-style supplements in Slovenia. Based on 250 hours of observing the production practice, 20 in-depth interviews with the main participants and a textual analysis of 247 advertorials, supported by three detailed case studies, the process of unlabelled advertorial production was unveiled, reasons for their production explained and their discursive elements of promotion uncovered. Despite their typical news-like appearance, advertorials focus on a product’s positive characteristics only and represent an oversimplified viewpoint on health, primarily oriented towards the interest of the pharmaceutical industry. In advertorials, readers are instructed in healthy living and caring about their health through buying the promoted product. No particular differences were found between the magazines and quality dailies’ supplements, indicating that the advertorial practice has become a common part of the Slovenian press media scene. The outburst of advertorials in Slovenia is outstanding due to the lack of historical democracy, problems with the supervision of legal transgressions, the small media and advertising market, economic downturns and the financial weakness of the media.

Author Biographies

  • Melita Poler Kovačič, University of Ljubljana
    Melita Poler Kovačič received her PhD in communication science at the University of Ljubljana (Slovenia) and is now Professor of Journalism Studies at the same university, in the Faculty of Social Sciences, where she lectures in Introduction to Journalism and Journalism/Media Ethics. She has so far published articles in numerous Slovenian and international journals including Journalism Studies, Journalism Practice; Journalism; Journal of Mass Media Ethics; Javnost/The Public; European Journal of Communication; Communications and China Media Research.
  • Karmen Erjavec, University of Ljubljana
    Karmen Erjavec received her PhD in communication science at the University of Salzburg (Austria) and is now Professor of Communication Studies at the University of Ljubljana (Slovenia), Faculty of Social Sciences, where she lectures in Media/Journalism History; Media, Culture and Society; Journalistic Discourse, and Media Education. She has published a number of articles and books, including articles in Discourse & Society; European Journal of Communication; Communications; Journalism Practice; Journalism Studies and Journalism.
  • Katarina Stular, University of Ljubljana
    Katarina Štular received her PhD in Communication Science at the University of Ljubljana (Slovenia) and is now an assistant at the Faculty of Social Sciences.

Published

2012-06-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Poler Kovačič, M., Erjavec, K., & Stular, K. (2012). Unlabelled advertorials in Slovenian life-style press: A study of the promotion of health products. Communication and Medicine, 8(2), 157-168. https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v8i2.157

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