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A subset focusing on mass-produced, commercial culture—movies, music, TV, influencers, memes—as a vehicle for norms. It examines how the repetitive themes, archetypes, and consumer lifestyles promoted by pop culture create shared aspirations and anxieties, gently guiding tastes, relationships, and political views toward mainstream, market-friendly outcomes.
Theory of Popular Cultural Social Control Example: Reality TV shows that glorify extreme wealth, drama, and cosmetic surgery. They exert control by defining a new, pervasive "normal" for aspiration—creating widespread anxiety about one's own body, lifestyle, and social status. This channels energy into consumerism and personal makeover projects rather than critical thought or social change, aligning desires with market offerings.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
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