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Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Marybeth Hicks :: Townhall.com Columnist
Emotions Like 'Subaru Love' Is All There Is
by Marybeth Hicks
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Have you seen the television advertisement for the Subaru Impreza that asks the rhetorical marketing question, “What makes a Subaru a Subaru?”

The answer, oddly enough, is not “An Obama ‘08 bumper sticker.”

No, the answer to “What makes a Subaru a Subaru?” is “love.”

In fact, the automaker now has an entire campaign devoted to the theme of “love” as the prevailing emotion evoked by its products. There’s even an ad on Youtube called “Love Letters” in which real Subaru owners read personal letters about their attachments to their cars.

The Subaru slogan struck a nerve with me from the moment I first heard it, and not because I drive a Honda. Rather, what bugs me is our cultural fixation on feelings as the basis for every sort of decision, from which car we park in our garages to which candidate we elect to public office.

As a society, we’re much less interested in what something does than in how it makes us feel. This is why a Subaru is all about “love” while a campaign for the Cadillac CTS featured a sexily clad Kate Walsh pondering the question, “When you turn your car on, does it return the favor?” Um…yuck.

If Thomas Paine made the 18th century famous as the “Age of Reason,” American marketers and media must certainly be responsible for our current “Age of Emotion.”

But what’s so bad about a culture that considers emotions first? Well, for starters, it generates questions at presidential press conferences such as New York Times reporter Jeff Zeleny’s now-famous inquiry of Pres. Obama, “What has enchanted you?” about the presidency.

Borrowing on that touchy-feely theme, this past weekend in a piece on Father’s Day, CBS’ Harry Smith asked the leader of the free world, regarding his childhood, “In this fatherless world, where did you learn to love?” Continued...

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About The Author
Marybeth Hicks is the author of Bringing up Geeks: How to Protect Your Kid’s Childhood in a Grow-up-too-fast World (Penguin/Berkley, July 2008).
Ha!
My 1982 Subaru 4x4 was a hatchback with a console that illuminated like the instruments guiding a 747.

It was 'cosmic blue', had U.S. rims with chrome wheel rings, quarter panel decals, scotch plaid red and black cool cloth interior and was 4 wheel drive on demand when others with 4 wheel drive were getting out and locking wheels.

It was my first new car. I did love it.

Not as I loved the woman that I asked to go on a date with me in that new blue Subaru, nor as I loved the animals that went on and off road in the car but in some materialist manner that some might have called cockofthe walk. So be it.

The emotions we feel are hard to class sometimes. I know now that I was proud of that car. Proud of the deal I'd struck. Proud of the choice I'd made and proud to lift that second handle and turn all wheels as I splayed mud and water or grime and grit in canyons and deserts.

The car is gone. The date remains ... somewhere love met pride and we merged.

Love is not an emotion
That said, there is nothing wrong with showing some; the Apostle Paul said "we are to "Rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep." We are to comfort one another. That's a little difficult to do if you don't know what someone is feeling.
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