| Issue: 2.04 | April 1, 2001 |   by: 
        Joe Klock Sr. 
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      Side Effects and Misdirects in the Promises' Land   "Now you see it, now you don't!" This signature pronouncement, long the mantra of shell game operators on the 
street, has infiltrated modern sales techniques, pulling a slick, sophisticated 
bolt of wool over the eyes of the American consumer, particularly in the area of 
new medicines.  The driving forces of such merchandising, be it of products or services, are 
promises - and the 'Promises Land' is advertising. In that Oz-like world, the 
bait is irresistible and the proffered rewards equally so, but there are often 
devils in the details and flimflams in the fine print. That is to say, what you 
see is not exactly what you get - and what you don't know at first can hurt you 
at last. For example, the TV ad promises you more hair where you want it, less 
hair where you don't, livelier sex, deader allergies, longer-lasting life, 
shorter lasting heartburn, or a cure for your erstwhile incurable ailment. Then 
the ominous super text at the bottom of the screen informs you that you may 
receive in exchange for the the promised boon less desirable tradeoffs like 
angina, diarrhea, cramps, constipation, mood swings, fainting spells, blurred 
vision, insomnia, enlarged pores, bad smells, or even croakage, if you really 
hit a bad patch. And if you're pregnant, thinking about getting pregnant, 
nursing, or just naturally unlucky, forget about it and settle for whatever you 
have that you wish you didn't. For some of us, specifically we hypochondriacs, that variation of Russian 
Roulette is a cruel game. I am, you must understand, plagued with most of the 
maladies trumpeted during 'short breaks" on TV, come to think of them...of which 
I wouldn't come to think except for the damned commercials! Although I've never, thank God, had cancer, most of the danger signals have 
been weekly visitors all of my adult life; and after seven decades of hearing 
about the "heartbreak" of Psoriasis, I finally contracted it this year...and any 
septuagenarian male who wouldn't opt for better (or maybe just a little) sex is 
lying in his longish teeth. Besides doing a nasty deed to Hypos like me, not to mention legitimately 
suffering humankind, these "take-away teasers" must be the worst affliction to 
health care professionals since the arrival on the scene of malpractice 
attorneys, since they typically caution that you can't get the magic potion 
without a prescription, for which reason you're exhorted to "ask your Doctor 
whether Neonostrum is right for you." Until this type of "come-on" advertising became fashionable, the latest 
"prescriptions du jour" were offered exclusively to Doctors, who then 
introduced them to such patients as had need for them. The new approach seems to 
be self-diagnosis, then disturbing the peace of your health care provider with 
the suggestion that you, during a pause in your favorite sitcom, uncovered a 
course of treatment of which he or she is ignorant. Were I, not to mention his scores of other patients, to call Dr. Bernie 
(whose holy mission it is to keep my functionally obsolescent body parts 
functioning) every time a new unpronounceable medication exploded from the 
laboratory of some corporate drug pusher, he would soon either give up the 
profession, sue me for stalking, move to Des Moines, or (most likely) abandon 
his Hippocratic Oath and administer unto me a deadly medicine. As though these side effects and misdirects were not a sufficiently mortal 
sin against society, modern marketing techniques have dragged out of the shadows 
certain subjects that, while always in the realm of reality, were regarded, in 
kinder, gentler days, as unmentionable, except between doctor and patient or in 
discreet powder room whispers. I never felt, for example, the need to know the intimate details of 
incontinence, impotence, yeast infections, feminine itching, or acute flatulence 
- but all of these unpleasant conditions and more are as common on the boob tube 
as ants on a picnic pie. Clearly, it would now be as practical to return to the 
relative innocence, good taste and straight shooting that once prevailed in 
merchandising as it would be to refold the average road map, but one Genie could 
easily be put back in the bottle: Leave the diagnosis of disease and the 
prescription of potions to the trained professionals. If people who are their own lawyers have fools for clients, surely the 
dumbest patients are those who would prescribe for themselves on the basis of a 
TV drug ad, following the one that promises them orgasmic ecstasy through 
driving a new car, with microscopic subtext that would, were it possible for 
them to read it, drag them rudely back to the no-free-lunch world of reality. On the other hand, hype is what fuels the economic engine of America, so why 
not its citizens as well?  | 
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Joe Klock, Sr. (The Goy Wonder) is a freelance writer and career curmudgeon. To read past columns (free), visit http://www.joeklock.com  | 
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