Selling Saturday Morning
Television, Advertising, and the Making of the Child Consumer
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Narrated by:
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Dick Terhune
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By:
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David Boles
In October 1972, a seven-year-old boy in Nebraska sat on red shag carpeting in front of a wood-grain television console and absorbed the full commercial curriculum of Saturday morning. He did not know he was being trained. That is the central finding of this book.
Selling Saturday Morning reconstructs the twelve-year period between 1968 and 1980 in which American broadcast television built, contested, and politically ratified a commercial pedagogy of childhood. Five interlocking mechanisms delivered the lesson: parasocial relationships with animated spokescharacters, aspirational product demonstrations, jingles designed for viral transmission through children's voices, the program-length commercial, and retail environments engineered to complete what the screen began. Together they taught children what this book calls the Grammar of Want: how to recognize brands, articulate product preferences, associate identity with ownership, and accept commercial interruption as a natural condition of entertainment.
The author is a product of the system he reconstructs. He watched the commercials, wanted the products, ate the cereal, hosted a segment on local children's television, and loved every commercial second of it. The absence of resentment is intentional. A pedagogy that produces genuine pleasure in its students does not feel like pedagogy. It feels like Saturday morning.
©2026 David Boles (P)2026 David Boles