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Black Stats
Frequently requested
data on African American consumers
Black Buying Power:
$679 Billion (2004)
Black U.S. Population:
38.3 million
Top Five Black Cities
- New York
- Chicago
- Detroit
- Philadelphia
- Houston
Top Five Black Metros:
- New York-New Jersey
- Washington-Baltimore
- Chicago-Gary
- Los Angeles
- Philadelphia
Top Five Expenditures:
- Housing 110.2 bil.
- Food 53.8 bil.
- Cars/Trucks 28.7 bil.
- Clothing 22.0 bil.
- Health Care 17.9 bil.
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Study finds
African-American women not equally represented in bridal magazines
(December 8, 2006) Bridal magazines are filled with images of the
fairytale wedding - long white dresses, champagne, flowers and kisses. But
a study by a University of Missouri-Columbia researcher has found that
magazine portrayals of fairytale weddings are missing a key element:
African-American brides.
"The dominant image of today's bride is that she is white, blond,
blue-eyed and thin," said Cynthia Frisby, associate professor of
advertising at MU's School of Journalism. "We would expect advertisements
and images to reflect a multicultural value, but mainstream bridal
magazines show predominantly white brides and a few black bridesmaids."
Frisby and Erika Engstrom, professor at the University of Nevada at Las
Vegas, studied mainstream bridal magazines published from 2000 to 2004.
Their study was a follow-up to Chrys Ingraham's study of bridal magazines
from 1959 to 1999, published in Ingraham¿s book "White Weddings," that
found few African-American brides in the magazines. Frisby and Engstrom
wanted to determine if recent trends toward multiculturalism and cultural
sensitivity had led to changes since 1999.
The covers and advertisements of 57 randomly selected issues of Bride's
Magazine, Modern Bride and Elegant Bride published from 2000 to 2004 were
analyzed. Frisby and Engstrom did not find a significant improvement in
the portrayal of African-American women: fewer than 2 percent of the
advertisements featured African-American brides, and not a single magazine
analyzed had an African-American bride on the cover. Images of
African-American bridesmaids were more common.
"Our data seem to support the idea that the phrase 'always a bridesmaid,
never a bride' was actually meant for how women of color are represented
in bridal magazines," Frisby said. "Such portrayals of African-American
women as bridesmaids may communicate a negative assumption that it's
better for African Americans to stay in background roles as opposed to
positions of equal status or power.
Various forms of bias in bridal advertisements not only harm
African-American women's sense of identity, but also derail attempts to
show that our society is multicultural and accepting of people of color.
Interracial settings and frequent portrayal of African Americans as main
characters may help break down cultural and racial barriers and increase
communication among people of all colors and ethnicities."
Frisby hopes this study will raise awareness and increase the number of
images of African-Americans brides in mainstream magazines.
"It's possible that advertisers are simply unaware of the pattern
developing in portrayals of African-American women as brides. Hopefully
this study will call that to their attention," Frisby said. "A principle
to remember: unequal status breeds prejudice."
The study was published in the fall 2006 issue of the journal Media Report
to Women.
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12th
Annual Edition Available
Latest
'Buying Power' report shows black consumers spending more on home life
As the American economy continues to move sluggishly,
African-American households are curtailing their spending in many
categories, including food, clothing and basic household items, while
investing more in home repair, home entertainment and consumer
electronics. Although they are trimming back, black consumers are still
spending more than their white counterparts on most of these products.
Story and statistics
continued
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