2002 45 min 1-893521-74-5 This film has subtitles English

Toxic Sludge Is Good for You

The Public Relations Industry Unspun

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Synopsis

While advertising is the visible component of the corporate system, perhaps even more important and pervasive is its invisible partner, the public relations industry. This video illuminates this hidden sphere of our culture and examines the way in which the management of "the public mind" has become central to how our democracy is controlled by political and economic elites. Toxic Sludge Is Good For You illustrates how much of what we think of as independent, unbiased news and information has its origins in the boardrooms of the public relations companies.

PR critics include PR Watch founder John Stauber, cultural scholars Mark Crispin Miller and Stuart Ewen. Toxic Sludge Is Good For You tracks the development of the PR industry from early efforts to win popular American support for World War I to the role of crisis management in controlling the damage to corporate image. The video analyzes the tools public relations professionals use to shift our perceptions including a look at the coordinated PR campaign to slip genetically engineered produce past public scrutiny. Toxic Sludge Is Good For You urges viewers to question the experts and follow the money back to the public relations industry to challenge its hold on democracy.

Sections: Introduction | The PR Industry | Roots in Conflict | Not Local, Not News | Third Party Advocacy | Selling Wars | Controlling Damage and Managing Crisis | Silencing Debate

Release Date:2002
Duration:45 min
ISBN:1-893521-74-5
Subtitles:English

Trailers

Watch the trailer

Filmmaker Credits

Executive Producers
Loretta Alper & Sut Jhally
Producer
Margo Robb
Editor
Jeremy Smith

Conference Screenings

Festival of Films
2002 Bioneers conference

Resources: Downloads and Related Links

Praise

"The true power of this video can be witnessed in the horror on students' faces as they manage to voice, after viewing the film, 'Where have we been all our lives?!'"
Pepi Leistyna
University of Massachusetts, Boston
Recommended by School Library Journal as a teaching tool on consumer education.