Using the “payoff” for
the title – a ploy precariously uncertain to succeed. Try to forget I did that. Thank you.
I am glad I did not decide to go into advertising.
The opportunity was available. During my twenties, I was commissioned to
write and perform a series of radio commercials, inaugurating a Toronto
delicatessen’s foray into frozen dinners selling in supermarkets. Longtime Canadian radio listeners may
smilingly recall:
“Hi, I’m ‘Salisbury
Steak.’ I come with mushrooms but they
don’t talk.”
That was Yours Truly.
(Imitating Mel Brooks, so badly you could easily imagine I wasn’t.)
Shortly after that assignment, the agency that had hired me
– a small, two-man operation – offered me a full-time position writing
commercials. I respectfully turned them
down, explaining that I preferred to remain in show business, an interesting
perspective, as I was not anywhere near
show business at the time.
In the sixties, it was preferable to have an unreachable
fantasy than full-time employment. (See: A
Thousand Clowns (1965.) I could not
imagine myself wearing a suit every day – the only one I then owned being my
itchy, woolen Bar Mitzvah suit – visiting the client’s house for an obligatory
dinner, pretending the “Salisbury Steak with Mushrooms” they served was
delicious.
I have never regretted that decision, not only because
things worked out for me in the arena I had imagined I was engaged in but
wasn’t. But because, when you come down
to it, I do not essentially understand the business of advertising.
For example:
How do ad agencies explain to sponsors that they are
required to pay more for airing television
commercials although today’s viewing audience is only a fraction of the one
sponsors had previously less for without
bursting out laughing before finishing their sales pitch?
“No, really…
(LAUGHING HYSTERICALLY)… it’s worth
it. (REGAINING CONTROL) Sorry.
I just thought of something hilarious my three year-old daughter said at
breakfast.”
EXAMPLE TWO:
I have bored you to death – or at least asking for death – with complaints about prescription medicines
whose names – selected by advertisers – do not mean anything.
Altuva.
Or is that the second baseman for the Astros?
Wait, that’s Altuve
– an understandable confusion between an American League batting champion and a
medicine treating a persistent tickle in your ear, although I am only guessing,
since the medicine’s “Brand Name” keeps bafflingly secret what it alleviates.
Finally – and this one’s a perennial, though the infraction
is more noticeable of late –
Repetition.
How many times can you repeat the same commercial before the
viewing audience throws something heavy and destructive at their televisions? As in,
“You drove your car
for four years. You named it… ‘Brad’…”
Okay. First, kudos
for choosing the name “Brad.” “You named
it ‘Ron’”? Not as evocative. “You named it ‘Brenda’”? – Let’s not get
sidetracked by “gender stuff.”
“You named it ‘Brad’.” Let me respectfully tip my cap.
Still…
There is a continuum, it seems to me, an inevitable sequence
of responses, beginning with the genuinely approving,
“She named it ‘Brad’ – That’s so sweet.”
It then proceeds to “There it is again”, applied
appreciatively for its confessional cleverness.
Shortly thereafter, however, comes the “turn”, irritation due to
relentless repetition, culminating when they run the ad twice during the same episode, after which you never want to see it
again, a tasty confection morphed into Guantanamo-style torture.
That can’t be good for the product, can it? – you come to
despise its commercial?
The “Ad Folks” behave like it’s no problem. “More is better”, the pounding reiterations
seem to insist.
Maybe. Up to a point.
I mean, I enjoy Buster Posey washing his socks in the
clubhouse “whirlpool” while a Giants
teammate relaxes in it.
The first three
times!
But they keep showing it! Moving me progressively from “chuckling” to “indifferent”
to “Again?!?”
Imagine if I repeated the same joke in a script three times.
“I think ‘Little Earlo’ needs a vacation.”
That’s essentially what they’re doing, running the same
commercial again and again, expecting… I
don’t know, “Audience Amnesia”?
(FIRST VIEWING) “That’s
funny.”
(SECOND VIEWING) “That’s
funny.”
(FIFTIETH VIEWING) That’s
funny.”
I’m just asking. How
many times can you repeat a commercial before it becomes achingly
counter-productive?
“Thirty-seven.”
(Hopefully, you have forgotten the title.)
All right. I am guessing the number. But advertising – at least to its
participants – is a virtual science. I
am confident there’s a number.
Or am I giving them way too much credit?
Law & Order “Log
Line”:
“McCoy puts an ad agency
on trial, arguing the excessive repetition of the “They named it Brad”
commercial compelled the assailant to run amok.”
I’m on that jury?
I am extremely tempted to vote “Guilty.”
2 comments:
...and then they wonder why people download TV shows from unauthorized sources that have helpfully removed the commercials...
wg
There is a commercial for a pill that helps improve short term memory (I won't name it and give them a plug here) and it contains an ingredient,"originally found in jellyfish!" the narrator excitedly announces. How does something from an animal with no brain make you feel good about using that product to help your brain? I guess that's where the repetition comes in. They show that commercial more often than political ads here. It drives me crazy. But perhaps, if you suffer from that affliction, after hearing about the stupid jellyfish stuff in the pill thirty-seven plus times, maybe it does start to make you feel that they are on to something. On the other hand, if your problem is short term memory loss, you've probably forgotten about it by the next time the ad shows.
I can't imagine seeing an advertisement I like thirty-seven times let alone the annoying ones.
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