Editing 870: Advertising
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| date = March 9, 2011 | | date = March 9, 2011 | ||
| title = Advertising | | title = Advertising | ||
− | | image = | + | | image = mathematically_annoying.png |
| titletext = I remember the exact moment in my childhood when I realized, while reading a flyer, that nobody would ever spend money solely to tell me they wanted to give me something for nothing. It's a much more vivid memory than the (related) parental Santa talk. | | titletext = I remember the exact moment in my childhood when I realized, while reading a flyer, that nobody would ever spend money solely to tell me they wanted to give me something for nothing. It's a much more vivid memory than the (related) parental Santa talk. | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | This comic pokes fun at | + | This comic pokes fun at some advertising tricks, analyzing them mathematically. |
− | * | + | *"Up to 15% or more" comes from {{w|Geico}} car insurance commercials: "15 minutes could save you up to 15% or more on car insurance.". Some afterthought shows that the statement is a vacuous {{w|truism}}. They could even safely go wild and exchange the 'could' for a 'will'. It ''seems'' like they are saying something about the difference in the prices they offer compared to the prices of their competitors. The problem is just that "up to 15%" covers saving nothing at all, or even the scenario in wich they rob you of all your money and you "save" something like minus a few thousand percent (in comparision to staying with your current car insurance). |
− | :The | + | :The first line uses notation from {{w|set theory}} and reads out as: The {{w|Union (set theory)|union}} of {{w|Set (mathematics)|sets}} A and B equals the set of all x, such that x is {{w|Inequality (mathematics)|less than or equal to}} 15, or greater than 15, wich equals the set of all {{w| real numbers}}. |
+ | :Below is a {{w|number line}} (with the numbers being interpreted as {{w|percentages}}) the black dot indicates that the number 15 is included, and the white dot indicates that 15 is not included, but only strictly bigger numbers. | ||
− | : | + | * [http://thepiratebay.se/search/some%20things/0/6/0 Some things] in life are free. However, typically not those agressively advertised, with a capital "free!" splashed right over the ads, followed by a small asterisk, inticating the presence of a {{w|fine print}}, ensuring that they are only tecnically not guilty of {{w|false advertising}}. (Get a FREE* drink!) |
− | : | + | :The little formula [[Randall]] gives us, to calculate the least amount of money that they expect to make from you. The suggestion is that they expect their income from the ad to be more than what they paid for it. <small>(*with the purchase of a $6 meal)</small> |
− | + | *Some sales are based on a scaling percentage rate - for example, all items are 20% off, but if you spend more than $200, you get 30% off instead, and so on. These are almost universally proclaimed with a phrase like "The more you spend, the more you save!" This is of course nonsense, as "spending" is the opposite of "saving", and the deal is there to make you spend more. | |
− | + | ==Trivia== | |
− | + | Randall changed the image name from advertising.png to mathematically_annoying.png, since adblocking extentions interpreted it as an ad and made the comic blank. He had had the same problem again just three months later with [[906: Advertising Discovery]]. | |
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==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
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:When discussing real numbers, it is impossible to get more vague than "up to 15% or more". | :When discussing real numbers, it is impossible to get more vague than "up to 15% or more". | ||
− | :[" | + | :["FREE!*" in large text, with substantial illegible fine print.] |
:If someone has paid $x to have the word "free" typeset for you and N other people to read, their expected value for the money that will move from you to them is at least $(x / (N+1)) | :If someone has paid $x to have the word "free" typeset for you and N other people to read, their expected value for the money that will move from you to them is at least $(x / (N+1)) | ||
:[Graph representing inverse relationship between "amount you spend" on the y axis and "amount you save" on the x axis.] | :[Graph representing inverse relationship between "amount you spend" on the y axis and "amount you save" on the x axis.] | ||
:It would be difficult for the phrase "the more you spend the more you save" to be more wrong. | :It would be difficult for the phrase "the more you spend the more you save" to be more wrong. | ||
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{{comic discussion}} | {{comic discussion}} | ||
− | + | [[Category:Math]] | |
[[Category:Charts]] | [[Category:Charts]] | ||
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