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English Pages 240 [244] Year 2000
THE CENTURY'S MOST
GROUNDBREAKING ADVERTISING AND HOW IT CHANGED US ALL
I
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20 ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
ALSO BY JAMES
B.
TWITCHELL
Adcult USA: The Triumph of Advertising
in
American Culture
Carnival Culture: The Trashing of Taste
For
Shame: The Loss
Lead Us
of
Common Decency
Into Temptation:
The Triumph
of
in
in
America
American Culture
American Materialism
THAT
SHOOK THE
WORLD THE CENTURY'S MOST GROUNDBREAKING ADVERTISING
AND HOW
JAMES
IT
B.
CHANGED US ALL
TWITCHELL
CROWN PUBLISHERS
/
NEW YORK
©
Copyright
All
2000
by
James
rights reserved. No part of this book
transmitted
B.
Twitchetl
may be reproduced
or
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
in
including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission
in
writing from the publisher.
Published by Crown Publishers,
201 East 50th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Member Random House,
Inc.
of the
New
Crown Publishing Group.
York, Toronto, London, Sydney, Auckland
www.randomhouse.com
CROWN is
a
is
a
trademark and the Crown colophon
registered trademark of
Manufactured
Random House,
Inc.
the United States of America
in
DESIGN BY KAREN MINSTER Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Twitchell,
James
B.,
1943-
Twenty ads that shook the world: the century's most groundbreaking advertising
and how
it
changed us
all
James
/
B.
Twitchell.
Includes bibliographical references. 1.
Advertising.
I.
Title.
HF5811.T9 2000
99-42477
659.1-dc21 CIP
ISBN 0-609-60563-1
10
9
8
7
6
5
First Edition
4
3
2
1
For Mary
1
CONTENTS Introduction
P. T.
1
BARNUM: Prince
LYDIA
E.
of
Humbug
16
PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND: Personalizing the Corporate Face
PEARS' SOAP: John
E. Millais's
A
Child's World
PEPSODENT: Claude Hopkins and the Magic
LISTERINE: Gerard Lambert and Selling the
and the Powers
IN
UPPER
4:
The
Birth of
DE BEERS: A Good Campaign
Is
of Associated Value
38
Preemptive Claim
of the
48
Need
60
THE QUEENSBORO CORPORATION: Advertising on the
THE KID
26
First Electronic
Medium
70
Advocacy Advertising
80
88
Forever
COKE AND CHRISTMAS: The Claus That Refreshes
102
THE VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE: William Bernbach and the Fourth Wall
108
MISS CLAIROL'S "DOES SHE
...
OR DOESN'T SHE?": How
to Advertise a
Dangerous Product
118
THE MARLBORO MAN: The Perfect Campaign
THE HATHAWAY MAN: David
Ogilvy
126
and the Branding
of
Branding
ANACIN AND THE UNIQUE SELLING PROPOSAL: How Would You
LBJ VS.
BARRY GOLDWATER: Thirty-Second
Like a
136
Hammer
in
the
Head?
146
154
Politics
SHE'S VERY CHARLIE: The Politics of Scent
162
ABSOLUT: The Metaphysics of Wrap
174
APPLE'S 1984: The Ad as Artifact
184
THE RISE AND FALL AND RISE OF THE INFOMERCIAL:
NIKE AND MICHAEL JORDAN: The Hero as Product
"Call
Now! Operators Are Standing By
." .
.
194
204
Works Cited
217
Index
221
5
INTRODUCTION The Sponsored Art of Capitalism
Ads,
Commercial speech one
happy about
is
— advertising— makes up most of what we share
this,
not even the people
who make
Thev
it.
call
it
clutter,
rather like a doctor complaining about a frantic patient after he has shot adrenaline.
The
what you
will,
it
guage about
all
rest of us call the current glut of advertising;
other subjects.
As the language
become
ture has
We
all
know
of
And
it
seems
the funereal refrain:
vocabulary of
known
much
lines,
full
of
call
not going away.
it's
to
him
is
replaced lan-
commercialism has become louder, the language
quieter;
which
by worse names. But,
language about products and services has pretty
No
as a culture.
be ending not with
The canon
our cultural
of
of
high cul-
a bang, but with a
whimper.
recognized literary works, the shared
literacy,
the wink-wink of allusions to hun-
dreds of years of "the best that has been thought and said" has
all
but disappeared
thanks to "a few words from the sponsor."
Ask anyone under the age of famous
the
.
.
.
in
the sky."
same group
Moms
Few
can do
what's in a Big
lettuce, cheese, pickles,
know
fill
in the
blank
in
it
(its
Mac and
and onions on
a
"rainbow"
you'll hear,
heart leaps up
in case you're
"Two
when
I
wondering). But ask
all-beef patties, special sauce,
sesame-seed bun."
the cat than William Morris, and
what was arguably the most
"My
nineteenth-century poetry, Wordsworth's
line in
behold a
fifty to
It's
sad to say that
more
more about Mr. Whipple and Mr.
(
of us
aean
than about Mr. Kurtz and Mrs. Dalloway.
Commercial
culture, the putative
enemy
3.
ol
high culture,
is
currently
in a
period
INTRODUCTION
And
of rapid ascendancy. take to be
for
good reason. While we older people may laud w hat we
"monuments of imaging
affiliate,
w hile we may
concern
really
intellect."
while
we may
act distressed at the plight of the National
makes no difference. Commercialism
goods to those with the time and
X
Generation
is
the
first
small son while looking
up
money
to
at a
is
here to
know
in
Endowments, our delivering the
stav.
the world almost entirely through
cartoon of a few years ago has a father saxing to his rainbow:
advertising anything, dammit."
"It isn't
baby boomers have been profoundly affected. Remember the Saturday Night Fever
which
a character
telling
scene
in
mentions Laurence Olivier
heard of him." Travolta mumbles.
In 1915
When
I
"Oh
it
"Come
to
was growing up
The average voung
to go entire
The only
criticize
that has
something
halitosis,
knew where thev were. No
some 5.000 ads each dav
ad-free refuge
is
in
longer.
almost every minute,
sleep and prayer.
hard to understand a culture that has outposts
to
ad.
was entering the bloodstream,
commercialism while humming a mindless
hard to
about
weeks without observing an
in the 1950s, just as telexision
adult todav sees
almost every place. it's
"Never
yeah, him."
was perfectly possible
Put simply,
John
on." the friend savs. "the guv in the Polaroid
ads w ere confined to distinct "pods," and everyone
in
Even
the film
Travolta, who's never heard of him. "He's the great actor." the friend says.
commercials."
PBS
consume them.
generation to
A New Yorker
commercialism.
support our local
in
your mind.
jingle for
chewing
It's
gum
do with gleefullv happy twins doubling pleasure; while worrying
dandruff, and water spots; while trying to decide
among
the thirty-
seven different kinds of toothpaste: while buying outrageously overpriced sneakers with big check marks on them: while eating something called "Real Turkey Pastrami," "I
Can't Believe
This stuff
is
It s
Not
the water.
Butter." "This Can't
We
are the
fish.
2
Be Yogurt," and.
well,
you get the point.
INTRODUCTION
become
Advertising has
much about sion,
to
the dominant culture, yet what an irony that
specific advertisements, so
little
and almost nothing about the history
consumers. In
Ask someone
fact,
if
you
really
in advertising
Wanamakers department
want
about advertising
of selling.
to
which the copywriter
nished truth; about some over-the-top campaign
w hich surgery is the implied the genius
who
payouts-at-death
Now railroads
"life
is,
in a
not limited
is
like Scott Toilet
alternative to proper hygiene; about
John E. Powers and
on
telling the unvar-
Tissue in the 1930s, in
some
great insight, like
sales;
about some ad-based cultural transformation,
of
one
like calling
met with a blank
stare.
ask a doctor about the development of blood transfusions, ask a lawyer about
and
tort law, ask
To some degree At
like
insisted
insurance," and chances are you will be
the eighteenth century.
ing.
persua-
of
suggested that Alka-Seltzer drop two tablets into the glass instead
and hence doubled the
so
observe the paradox, ask an adman.
about some famous relationship
store, in
form
as a
phenomenon
This
we know
first
glance,
an English professor about
Why do
they have institutional memories while
this collective
it is
how Shakespeare was
amnesia stems from how
self-evidently disposable,
Let's face
or even ahead of the curve. So
Could our neglect
also
why
it,
be because people
what they do, and hence don't want
to
know
is
in
what's
don't?
us look at advertis-
ads they
of study.
It
seem hopelessly
about being current,
is all
behind the times? marketing are
come before?
ple practicing your trade have been regularly excoriated,
your
at
advertising todav
look at what
admen
and therefore not worthy
word, trash. And, as well, when one looks back
dated and often ineffectual.
all ol
rewritten in
maybe
Or do salesmen
slightly
Alter
ashamed
all,
you, too,
il
of
the peo-
would want
think that advertising
is
so
evolved that they only need to know what's happening right now so they can copy
it?
to stav blissfully ignorant of
history.
That certainly might explain why so much modern advertising tive
and uninspired. Or
is
it
because advertising
3
lias
become
is
so
unflaggingly deriva-
much
of
our culture
INTRODUCTION
we
that last
think that
it
has no history? Anthropologists
tell
us that
if fish
could think, the
thine they would think about was water.
Certainly part of the reason people in sales are so untethered to their history
is
I've
asked people
who
why
teach advertising
this
is,
they say
the accrediting process discourages everything but hands-on experience. tising faculty see
man
cultural
that advertising courses in universities cover almost everything except the
When
past.
own
it's
because
The
adver-
themselves as part of a technical school where they teach a journey-
trade, rather than as part of a professional school
history of persuasion. Advertising
is
where they teach the
art
and
taught in the schools of journalism and business,
not in liberal arts and sciences.
So
I
want
tioners, but for
not too far off art
and
problem of an incomplete education not
to address the all
students of popular culture. Like
when he
it
sical,
even
It
certainly merits
usually receives. Believe
enterprise. Little
is
or not, Marshall
rather grandly said that advertising has
form of the twentieth century " tsk-tsks
it
haphazard about
it,
it
it
McLuhan was
become
"the greatest
more than the arched eyebrows
or not, great advertising
although
just for practi-
is
also
an intellectual
often seems so casual, often
whim-
«/jf/-intellectual.
A There are many wavs
to
decode commercial speech;
of art-historical approach
What makes
it
Tradition of Advertising
in
w hich the
artifact
work? What s the story behind
in this
of the ad
it?
is
How did
it
book
I
wall
be using a kind
the basis of intei*pretation.
change the way we looked
not just at the advertised object, but at other things as well? It
would be comforting
if
the instances
understanding. But what one finds
is
I
have chosen led to some crescendo of
that great ads are not always congruent with
each other, nor do they progress to higher and higher sophistication.
4
Some
of the best
INTRODUCTION
are very crude, and
about
it,
some of the worst
isn't this also
F.
book
in this
These ads are
expanded and contracted, but not pushed cialism, the central passages of
we
like
what
These are the
aside.
words and images
only stay before our eyes for a few seconds. if
take the twenty ads
I
in
medieval times
those passages of theological matter that could be
as sententiae,
know them even
as sacrilegious,
analogous to those touchstone works of high culture that
as
R. Leavis called the Great Tradition.
were known
think-
true with works of literature, music, and painting?
Although some may regard the comparison
examined
when you
are veiy sophisticated. But
that
won t go
They often
cliches of
commer-
away, although they
are, in a sense, inspired.
We
haven't seen them, because our culture has been built
around them. As opposed
to literature
the-hip exegesis. Ads are another. Although they
music.
We
Newsweek
and theology, advertising
made
come
to
sets itself
up
for a shoot-from-
be consumed on the run, piled one on top of
to us in pictures
and
text,
thev are
like
background
hear them without listening. They have become, as Jack Kroll wrote
in
—
er,
a quarter of a century ago, "the most pervasive music in the history of
civilization" (Kroll 1975, 69).
While agencies may claim strike occasional chords,
advertising does
its
to clients that they can create desires, ads
and only then
work
in
long enough to get
The waste
in
day, only
purchase.
is
money from
"the science ol arresting the
it"
(Jackman 1982,
much
criticism.
still
is
huge and
is
While we may see and hear thousands
two or three ever get remembered, and only
Fewer
human
intelligence
1).
generating such short-lived ephemera
standable object of
change the sensation,
the wink of an eve. Stephen Leacock, the English
humorist, once said that advertising just
for an instant. Or, to
can only
a
few
of
the underol
ads each
those ever lead to a
ever work their w ay into our nervous systems. Video Storyboard
5
INTRODUCTION
Tests reports that a startling 40 percent of the 20. 000
cannot think or even it
of a single
remember an
consumers surveyed each year
"memorable" commercial. But we
ad. to
consume
advertising.
don't have to
That comes
to us,
buy a product,
w hether we
like
or not, "free of charge." If art struggles to create
now. Advertising
is
mav prove more
them we mav
sell it short.
when he wrote
certainly correct
of eternity ads settle for
of advertisements:
it
art in
"These humbler adjuncts
to liter-
valuable to the future historian than the editorial contents. In
trace our sociological history, the rise
of life as
modern cave
right
The legendary adman Earnest Elmo Calkins w as
and
fall
ing interests and changing tastes, in food and clothes,
panorama
w hat's happening
the big-print edition of the Rosetta Stone,
strobe lights. But don't
ature
images
was
lived,
more informing than old
of fads
and
crazes, chang-
amusements and
vices, a
and crumbling tomb-
diaries
stones" -Calkins 1946, 222-30).
A number
of lists of ads already exist,
and
I
have been helped by thinking about
them. Although even multinational agency has a reel of what work,
in
it
takes to be
1995 the Global Product Committee of the Leo Burnett
together a tape of what
Time," which
is
it
takes to be the "100 Best Television
the basis of Bernice Kanner's The 100 Best
have been books
of lists
TV
its
best
Company
Commercials of
put All
Commercials. There
compiled by practitioners: The 100 Greatest Advertisements
(1949: revised 1959), by Julian Lewis Watkins,
who had
spent his
life in
the business,
and 100 Top Copt/ Writers and Their Favorite Ads 1954), assembled bv the editors of (
Printer's
Ink.
a trade
journal.
For
its
Bicentennial Collection (April 19. 1976).
Advertising Age asked a distinguished panel of ninety-seven
adwomen
to
list
published the
admen and
three
"the best ads or ad campaigns that you've ever seen or heard" and
result.
And
for
its
special issue
Bob Garfield ranked the top one hundred
6
on "The Advertising Century" (1999). advertising campaigns. Entertainment
INTRODUCTION
Weekly, which loves fifty
dedicated an entire issue (March 28, 1997) to anointing "the
lists,
greatest commercials ol
industry, Advertising
my
found of
list is
being
like a
axiomatic.
different.
I
am
alter the
poem,
What were
the lingua franca?
in
true to
a lively
Which
site
(adage.com)
mecum
of the
listing the liitv
them by decades.
most profound ads ever produced. Not pro-
the sense of selling product, but in the sense
like a painting, like a series of
the ads that
vade
role as the
its
Web
dividing
last fiftv years,
sense of being clever, or
in the
And
Age now maintains
best commercials over the
But
time."
all
became
musical notes, deep and moving,
became
part of the nervous system,
part of
ads really had the beef?
Advertising of this sort
is
more
Renaissance
like
ait
modern
than
art.
In the
Renaissance, painters like Michelangelo, Leonardo, and Giotto did not paint what they
wanted
They were
to paint.
Then they were
told to paint
dicant orders of the in
Rome, the
we now
usually told exactly
Roman
it
little differently.
had some say
and even how
in
how
in part
of the greatest cre-
because they never forgot (or never were
Modern
art,
however,
similarities too
deepest needs.
is
different.
important to overlook.
Here the
artist is
breaking boundaries, for getting out
for
New, taking
liberties.
Think
of all the
Expressionism. Impressionism disturbing expectations.
My
its
I'm not saying that cathedrals are billboards, or that frescoes are thirty-
second spots, but there are
rewarded
it.
they chose their advertising (what
allowed to forget) the necessity ol drawing an audience by addressing
Now
to paint
Their clients were the men-
Competition among these orders produced sonic
Western imagination,
ations of the
to paint,
Catholic Church. Although the corporate headquarters was
individual orders
call art).
again, just a
what
list is
It
movements
— and you
will
being shocking w
of line, lor ol
what
of Renaissance ads, not modern ones.
and he
for himsell
modern
art
it
says, but for
W
hen
I
ith
is
die
— Cubism, Abstract
see that creativity often
gets attention not for
7
working
means how
it
violent!)
says
it.
hear the term "break-
INTRODUCTION
through" or "cutting edge" used to
happen. From
so
much
my
I
realize
something forgettable
clutter in advertising today
prizes as Clios, Effies,
"make
is
that copywriters
a point."
and Addies
is
Almost
modern
all
and
art directors struggle
Lord Leverhume)
that "half
which half" needs
to
my advertising
When
advertising of this sort.
dollars are
wasted
I
want
—
to treat these keystone print
way Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren
I
it
more
comes
to
Wanamaker and
just
can
figure out
t
the then-radical claim that certain
and
television adver-
treated individual
in the 1940s, as objects deserving of formal readings. In their
made
is
have the percent of waste increased.
Essentially, therefore,
the critics
about
advertising that wins such annual
kind of creativity, the famous quotation (attributed to both John
tisements the
is
vantage point as a cultural historian, part of the reason there
to "get through" than to
this
in advertising,
poems
Understanding Poetry,
poems were
especially rich in
meanings, that these poems were concentrated moments of human attention, and that
when thev "worked" they gave sense, they
The
were
ads
I
us lasting insight into the
exactly
condition. In this
truly creative.
have chosen
may
not
make you
gulp, but they did change the
swallowed information about the world around
Many of the
human
us.
They got
into our bloodstreams.
products are no longer produced, which raises the interesting question of
how important
advertising really
is.
Some
of the ads take totally different
approaches, w hich raises the intriguing question of the nature of
Maybe
way we
there
is
a lot
more going on
in
consumption than exploiting
human
anxiety,
desire.
"keeping
up with the Joneses," or consuming conspicuously. Maybe consumption can be ating, a
way
to us now, pletely
to construct the self.
of the ads I've chosen seem so pedestrian
sometimes downright embarrassing, which may only
we have
More
And some
liber-
testify to
how com-
assimilated their content.
telling,
I
think,
is
that the great creative ads always
8
seem
so easy to create.
INTRODUCTION
This
is
They only seem
deceptive.
simple. As Aldous Huxley said, almost anyone can
write a passable sonnet, but composing a
be what
And all
it
really
as Huxley's
propaganda
namely an attempt
is,
good ad
to get
tough.
is
A good ad never seems
under your radar and drop a
contemporary George Orwell observed, while
is
not necessarily
ing the condition of popular
art.
art
all
is
to
bomb.
little
propaganda,
To me, these twenty ads are propaganda achiev-
art.
The Power of Advertising In 1917 John
Reed wrote Ten
rience observing the Bolshevik Revolution.
A lew
intellectuals.
briel time.
future.
Reeds
The
years ago
stoiy
Warren
It
Beatty's
movie
was
all
stir,
his expe-
especially
Reels resuscitated Mr.
among
Reed
lor a
compelling because he was so certain that he had seen the
is
West would depend on bloody
future of the
It
book based on
a
created quite a
moving rapidly through the Eurasian marketplace the world.
World
Dai/s That Shook the
were
political events that
of ideas.
The workers would
rule
but inevitable, dialectical, done. Capitalism was to be history
Advertising would evaporate as "use" value would push "concocted" value aside. In the Utopian workers' paradise, nothing
would come between human beings and
their
necessary objects.
Reed was wrong. Of
all
than the one that underlies hav ing things, of trading things, that
all
political
systems
and hoarding,
makes modern
more
successful
our love
of stuff, ol
the -isms ol our century, none has proved
political
the aristocracy could traffic
in
of
— materialism.
buying and
It is
selling,
even
ol talking
systems possible. Until the nineteenth century, only
extraneous things.
The
special things they
consumed
even had a distinct category name. They were luxuries, things that shone, de
With the them. While
rise
of the Industrial Revolution, however, the
we might
about
rest ol us
not have been able to have the same brand
9
luxe.
had
a
go
ol object as
at
the
INTRODUCTION
nobilitv,
we
such
system became
a
could certainly have a version of it
exchange value.
We
most of
Thev became
often forget
beyond our means water, steam,
and
is
Ford
if
not a Cadillac. Use value in
that
life's
meanings
in
having and displaying
heraldic crests, coats of arms, badges, bloodlines.
Consumption became conspicuous because
What we
a
important than prestige value or what Marx called
less
started to find
these special things.
—
it
is
was how we differentiated ourselves.
that
our love of consuming things once considered
that caused the great
machine
electricity to the engines of
age, that
rewarded us
production to make them
efficient and, in so doing, turn luxuries into necessities,
it
was our desire
still
wants into needs.
ourselves to think that machine production caused materialism.
accurate to acknowledge that
for applying
more
We
fool
How much more
for distinctive things that led to the
explosion of machine production. In a sense, the politics of the twentieth century has
how to
distribute efficiently the surplus goods of a
that the workers of the
what the Marxists machine power;
Machine-made Economists
call
it
produces
Little
wonder
it
stuff
was
that
we were
not
made
materialistic
by
was machine power that was made by our materialism. is
problematic for one simple reason:
it
is
all
so similar.
such objects fungible because thev are interchangeable, homoge-
neous. Advertisers
what
machine production.
to figure out
world wanted to unite. They would get to those surpluses. But
didn't appreciate
rather,
been an attempt
call
will
them parity
items. If
my machine
be interchangeable with yours.
If a
works
just like yours, then
producer
is
not careful,
he'll
have to eat his surplus. So not only does he make similar things, but he also has to
make
his
products seem different.
What we of instilling at
really crave
meaning
into
is
not just material, but material with meaning.
machine-made goods
the heart of commercialism.
It is
is
called commercialism. Advertising
the part that adds the
10
The process
meaning and,
is
in so doing,
INTRODUCTION
attempts to
make one
identical object
Rosser Reeves used to ing to one of them,
He would
illustrate this.
say,
"My
job
is
more valuable than
make you
to
another.
The
great
adman
hold up two quarters and then, point-
think that this quarter
is
more
v
aluable
than that one."
Commercialism involves two processes: commodification, or the stripping object of
all
other values except
value for sale to
its
someone
insertion of the object into a network of exchanges onlv
else;
of
an
and marketing, the
some of which
involve money.
Until the 1850s, commercialization was pretty well limited to commodification, since
large-volume market networks scarcely existed throughout the creation of the
first
European
colonial empires,
much
of Europe. But with
and even more with the creation
of mass industrial production, cheap transportation, and communications, the marketing of commodities took on a relentless
Marketing and
been doing
it
its
If
you
called proselytizing. Religions tend to
the next. Commercialism, gible objects of the here
them Ethic
to
more
like
it,
make
it
this
called saving souls;
you
don't,
it
is
world meaningful by creating value
in
is
specifically advertising,
if
does precisely that to the fun-
and now.
commercialize
—
to turn things into
— has been particularly Western. As and
own.
subset, advertising, should not be nasty words. Religions have
for generations.
The pressure
life of its
Max Weber
the Spirit of Capitalism (1905).
much
commodities and then market first
argued
of the Protestant
in
The Protestant
Reformation was
geared toward denying the holiness of many things that the church had endow ed with meanings. ing this
From
movement
the inviolable priesthood to the sacrificial holy w
systematically unloaded meaning.
offloaded meaning and apply
You can
still
it
to
ater, this seculariz-
Soon the marketplace would capture
machine-made
things.
see the religions roots of commercialism in advertising. Buy this
object and you'll be saved. Yon deserve a break today. You, you're the one.
11
We
are the
INTRODUCTION
company
good hands.
in
you recognize some of the twenty ads that
If
they are part of what or
You are
that cares about you.
art.
They
we
They
share.
are the world
We
care. Trust in us.
— and you
follow-
will
—
Buy now. because
it is
are the world wrought not by religion or science
wrought by
advertising.
They
are
pushed our way by a
cul-
ture "on the take."
We a
all
world
in
know
the world populated by Madge, Mr. Whipple, and Colonel Sanders:
w hich
which
raisins
green
man
and dogs sing into microphones about
cats
dance and household bugs
in a scarf,
at face value; in
w hat
to put into
that
all
all at
the
to
"silly
be a Pepper,
vour Bic, take
it all
optimism, and
lots
And
try harder," or "Quality
feel "really clean"; in
which various
99 44/ioo percent pure, what has 57
is
same time;
can master.
which "Because I'm worth
our cereal bowls and into our gas tanks;
of a cigarette being a
encouraged
in
you can be," "We
which we can
math but know what
and
a
to teach the
is
"You deserve a
Job 1" are taken
tigers are telling us
which we can
varieties,
t
do simple
and the importance
and
powerful.
lots
do
all
are
nut"
know the same double entendres;
flick
to sing,
va. It
is
a
and
to
world of feigned
of small problems and difficult
More people
we
become an "uncola
w orld
w hich we
little dab'll
lots
in
it,"
millimeter" longer than others; a world in which
a world in
off,
it is
which Mrs. Olsen, a giant
their guts; in
cookie elves, and a white knight on horseback riding through our
backyard with a lance can be trusted; break today," "Be
spill
their dinner choices: in
sincerity
7 ,
moments
eternal that
report crying over a greeting card
we
com-
pany's advertising than over any other regularly televised event.
As much
as this
wafer-thin world has
world has been pushed
come between
too materialistic, but because
we
at us,
it
We
would
we
us and mass-produced things not because
are not materialistic enough.
and knew what thev meant, there would be no need rising.
has been pulled in bv us. This
just gather, use, toss out, or
12
to
If
we craved
are
objects
add meaning; through adver-
hoard indiscriminately. But we
don't.
INTRODUCTION
First,
we
don't
we need
and, third, is
clear
that
is
may
crave
know what to
know how
most things
in
and
not be objects at
"does," one thing
by branding
is
we
to gather; second,
certain:
all
to value objects that
of
have
were referred
stores
of received
wisdom
indeed
is
this
lies in
practical use.
little
fact,
What
what we
but their meaning. For whatever else advertising to material,
by adding meaning to objects,
performs a role historically associated with
Salvation awaits not in the next world but in the next aisle.
ment
what we have gathered;
themselves do not mean enough. In
by adding value
things, advertising
like to trade
to as "cathedrals of
No wonder
consumption." Like
understanding these strange
bits
it
religion.
early depart-
or not, the canon
of commercial speech, for
the stuff that has shaken the world.
My contention
in this
book
will
seem counterintuitive
our times against commercialism, but here
it is:
I
at first,
given the clamor of
believe that, paradoxically,
we have
not grown weaker but stronger by accepting these self-evidently ridiculous myths that sacramentalize mass-produced interchangeable objects.
We have not wasted away,
but
have proved more powerful, have not devolved and been rebarbarized, but seem
have marginally improved the physical condition
consumption (note the connection
namely tuberculosis) and the
of this
of
being on
this planet.
word with the AIDS
vast wasteland of
lives
people
than most of the people most of the time
all
over the world are clamoring for what
As awful as
it
it,
and
of our told
to use
it
how you
own American
what
to
of
them
we
say the freedom to
want. Although
we
to
pay
(or
13
discomfort
wonder
in
that
the world are asked what
buy what you want, when you w ant
don't usually admit
it.
less
have, including our advertising.
Revolution. Recall the Boston Tea Party.
buy and how much
of Victorian life,
in all of history. Little
may seem, when young people around
freedom means, most
Dreaded
media babble notwithstanding, com-
mercialism has lessened pain. Most of us have more pleasure and
our
to
it,
this
We
was
at
the heart
did not like to be
As de Tocqueville observed almost two
INTRODUCTION
centuries ago, advertising rial gratification."
worked well
Now the
rest of the
in
America
world
is
as
it
appealed to our "love of mate-
having a go
at
it.
Historian Daniel Boorstin has said that Europeans used to go to market to get
what they want, whereas Americans go developed world,
we
are
all
to
market
to discover
what they want. In the
Americans now, and the market comes
to
all
consumers,
via advertising.
While we edge that
in
all
admit that the pen
our century the pen
mightier than the sword,
is
more
is
likely in the
hard to acknowl-
it is
hands of some copywriter
extolling the virtues of a nicotine delivery system to children than
wielded by some
passionate revolutionary exhorting the freedom of expression for the oppressed and
downtrodden.
But hard getting
as
it
may be
and spending,
mercialism
it
indeed, as
is
rounds objects, being
to
defend
this often
vulgar and sometimes amoral culture of
does not hurt to try to understand
adman George
it.
In
many
respects,
Lois fatuously boasted, "poison gas."
pumped and drawn
com-
It sur-
everywhere, into the farthest reaches of
space and into the smallest divisions of time. In a less toxic analogy, commercialism
smoke
like
in a
wind tunnel of machine-made
By no means am sets standards.
I
we
often said that
it is
smoke the
ful;
devoid of otherworldly concerns,
jingle not the cigarette.
well overindulge and spoil the
There
it
a past
always
is
never turned
off.
we consume
the advertising not
is
lives for
no doubt that such a system
is
today and celebrates the body
wasteIt
may
young with impossible promises and few demands.
certainly encourages recklessness, living is
fan
drink the commercial not the beer, drive the nameplate not the
car,
ture
The
sanguine about a culture in which advertising gauges value and
On Madison Avenue
the product, that
things.
is
new and improved,
and with a perpetually rosy
beyond
one's means, gambling.
It
Consumer cul-
always bigger and better, always loud, always without future. Again, like religion,
14
which
in
many ways
it
has
INTRODUCTION
displaced,
it
afflicts
the comfortable and comforts the afflicted.
It is
a one-dimensional
world, a micron-thin world, a world low on significance and high on shine.
But you might also
you need
realize that while
understand our part
to
Fukuyama contended
in
you don't have history.
its
to like
it,
or even buy into
Almost a decade ago, Francis
"The End of History?" essay (and
in his controversial
it,
later
book) that "the ineluctable spread of consumerist Western culture" presages "not just the end of the Cold War, or the passing of a particular period of postwar history, but the end of history as such: that
(Fukuyama 1989,
is,
the end point of mankind's ideological evolution"
3-4).
Such predictions are not new. "The End
of History" (as
we know
it)
and the "end
point of mankind's ideological evolution" have been predicted before by philosophers.
Hegel claimed
it
had already happened
in
1806 when Napoleon embodied the ideals
of the French Revolution, and
Marx
munism. What
modern claim
legitimizes this
ter or for worse,
culture.
And
Let's also
said the
end was coming soon with world comis
American commercial culture
that is
it is
demonstrably
well on
its
way
to
true.
For bet-
becoming world
these twenty ads are important milestones along the way.
admit
that,
Ads "R" Us. The idea rance of history and
much
as
we
love to
blame
human
sheltered, our needs are
and the culture
it
it
has not led us astray.
that advertising creates artificial desires rests
and have always been
to codify
on a wistful igno-
nature, on the hazy, romantic feeling that there existed
some halcyon era of noble savages with purely
some other system
advertising,
and
carries with
it
satisfy
—
will
natural needs.
Once we
are fed and
cultural, not natural. Until there
is
those needs and yearnings, commercialism—
continue not
15
just to thrive
but to triumph.
BARNUM
P. T.
Prince of
IF
Humbug
AMERICAN literature,
Mark with
Ernest
as
Hemingway
said, starts
with
Twain's Huckleberry Finn, then American advertising starts P.
T.
Barnum s
masterful deceptions.
Barnum knew how
to
turn Dr. Samuel Johnson's famous definition of advertising "promise, large promise" attention. William
—
words and images that
into
Lyon Phelps,
If
when he
called
Barnum
capture
a Yale professor of English in the
1930s and host of a vastly popular radio show, saying
still
knew what he was
"the Shakespeare of advertising."
you watch enough late-night commercials on
television,
lis-
ten to enough ads on your car radio, open enough junk mail, and
peruse your share of ads in newspapers and magazines, then you realize that the spirit of
"Don't miss collector's
P.
T.
Barnum
item
at
is
it!
hear,
an unbelievably low special discount price," or last
and
Absolutely!
You
closeout sale! All
final liquidation
items must go! We're closing our doors forever!
This
you
"Limited edition
this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,"
"Going out of business,
that!
When
lives on.
Even longer than
can't afford to miss
it!"
you are
hearing Barnum. Just as
found
we
in his
attribute lines to Shakespeare that are
works,
so, too,
Barnum
shadow authorship.
If
the author in
but not in
spirit,
he
didn't write fact,
nowhere
to
be
has achieved the accolade of it,
he should have. Barnum
is
of such great marketing quips as
There's a sucker born every minute.
You can fool most of the people most of the time.
Never overestimate the taste of the American public.
LOOK FOR
WAIT FOR
IT!
IT!
•SEE rt!!-^fj In
its
Overwhelming Preponderant over any other Show Extitrore
in
•
PTBARNUM'S OWN A ON IV JO
I_"V
s s c o
o C g g
GREATEST SHOW
EARTH
OlST
Without
Rival.
a
Rerofcn.zmg
I and Regarding No
No Equal
opuo-utiOu. ftbK'h receives
GRAND OVATION
A From
the Press hdU PuM-t « h-T( saliv
t
r
.*
appear* ami
B0WIH6
THE E"
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cl''etl t;o:;. "..r
expai.tuct
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A PERFECT VAST tN ITS
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pronounced
SUCCESS & .o-g
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EXHIBITION!
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This Unapproachable Model
W ILm
of
Supreme Excellence
exhibit AX
TUESDAY, AUGUST Witho".: Dimia^tioa or C'iri*i.m«nt
>a 4.nj
Department
*r.t
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LARGELY INCREASED ATTRACTIONS! L
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l* For • » aav rrttrmu veir Other Side The Pabiic Ot*dier.t Servant >
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3RAJJD FEATURES 8« REMLMSF.fc W u>7 orhei
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MY DAY *VD DATE
Th«.-t u b\'
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ind do nol tonloaud
BAFXT'M SHOW
*••
\
billion a year
to alter natural
is
use
Body odor came from Lifebuoy
ing constructive discontent. athlete's foot
common
almost every
about
in the
skin,
it, it is
under-
dealt with
house that always
has a door and almost always has a lock.
The bathroom
development
tectural
probably the most revolutionary archi-
itself is
in the twentieth century, as
much
a creation
of the need for privacy as for the advertised need to deal with the private
self. It is
consume products television screen
behind closed doors, that we go
there,
problems created
to cure
to ritually
for the public
on the
and on the magazine page. While the Victorian
we used to meet others) has shrunk out of sight, the modem bathroom (where we minister to the ailing self) has grown
parlor (where
steadily larger.
The
stoiy of
how
came
this
to pass starts with Listerine.
At the end of the nineteenth century, Joseph Lister developed a surgical antiseptic.
It
was quite potent, however, and could only
be used with great care
lest
damage the surrounding
it
American named Jordan Wheat Lambert synthesized erful version
and journeyed
use the already famous
and said
yes.
to
name
England
product w hile also making
it
sterilizing
cleaning operation. So
was
flattered
which liquefied the
scientific.
Lambert's Listerine was used not
procedures as
pow-
he could
"ine" suffix
sound
a less
An
to asked Lister if
for the product. Lister
Lambert added the
tissue.
just for
such minor surgical
gauze bandages, but also for any kind of
it
soon became a floor cleaner, an
after-
— LISTERINE
shave, a nasal douche, a cure for gonorrhea, even a scalp treat-
ment
for dandruff
Inevitablv killing oral
it
and baldness.
was discov ered that Listerine was
germs. So in 1895
it
w as marketed
became one of the
fession,
and
ucts to
be sold over the counter.
in
1914
it
first
at
to the dental pro-
prescription prod-
American
carries the
(It still
good
also
Dental Association's seal of approval.) But no hint
use as a
of
mouth deodorant. That's because there
was no such thing
sure, people with various diseases,
unpleasant mouth odor, but sive.
a
bad breath. To be and so on, had
teeth,
was not considered
socially offen-
Recall that until the 1920s, most Americans bathed only once
w eek (on Saturday night
hair
it
bad
as
in anticipation of
was rarely washed. Soap,
still
the Sabbath), and that
made
of animal
fats,
often
smelled worse than body odor! Gerard, one of Jordan Lambert's sons, w ent about acquiring
such a smell preference, not for himself, but for the
rest of us.
Lambert
In the earlv 1900s Jordan and his wife died, leaving
Pharmacal
to their four sons.
curial tastes.
University,
For instance,
Gerard proved
young man of mer-
after having spent a
he decided he didn't
to Princeton.
a
There he majored
few days
like the buildings.
in the
good
life,
He
transferred
gaining a small
measure of campus fame by being chauffeured between a trip of a
hundred
yards.
One
at Yale
classes
thing led to another and he was
soon married, father of three children, and $700,000
in
debt
(thanks to an investment in Arkansas real estate near the current
Whitewater development).
Time ton
in
to get a job,
St.
and no better place than
Louis. His relatives
at
the family
were hardly pleased
f
ac-
to see the
return of the profligate, but they were soon mollified. Gerard
proved ing.
He
to
be a business genius, the Arkansas deal notwithstand-
saved millions
in taxes
by adding the alcohol
to Listerine
64
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
it
was then about 25 percent hooch
instead of at the factory.
He
1
cut out the
bonded
the
at
middleman
distillery
for such sim-
ple supplies as corks, and he had the perspicacity actually to talk
with the people w ho wrote the product advertising.
summoned
In fact, he
the two cop\writers. Milton Fuessle
and Gordon Seagroye. from Chicago doing
to talk about
— which was not much. Although the
known
haven
as a
breath as a
for germs,
no one had
what they were
mouth was
really
certainly
concentrated on
symptom of disease. As the three men were
discussing
the possibility of breath as an "advertising hook." Lambert called
company
for the
When
he
chemist:
came
room.
into our
asked him
I
bad breath. He excused himself
for
with a big
stood
book
looking
of
newspaper
over
for a
Listerine
was good
moment and came back He sat
clippings.
in
a chair
and
I
He thumbed through the
shoulder.
his
if
immense book. "Here
it
Lancet that
is,
in
Gerard.
says
It
cases of halitosis.
sis?" "Oh," he said, "that
[The chemist] never
is
from the British
this clipping
in
." .
I
interrupted,
"What
is
halito-
the medical term for bad breath."
knew what had
old fellow out of the room. "There."
I
hit
him.
said, "is
I
bustled the poor
something
to
hang
our hat on" [Lambert 1956, 97-98].
\-
it
turned out.
lie liuirj;
bert huns; the entire
more than
on
halitosis.
Lam-
He poured money into American mouth. Lambert made a
company on
putting halitosis into every
his hat
it.
pledge to increase his advertising each month by the same percentage as the increase of his only
when
For
as
sales.
He
claimed he would stop
this
sales leveled off.
long as he
owned
the
company they
nev er did.
From
1922 to 1929 earnings rose from $115,000 to more than $8 million.
By the time
of the
stock-market crash. Listerine was one of
— LISTERINE
the largest buyers of magazine and newspaper space, spending
more than $5 In
all
million
— almost the exact amount of yearly prof
that time the product
and formula had not
price, package,
s
its.
changed a whit.
Once he found effective as
out that the halitosis claim was four times as
Lambert focused with
others,
all
were relinquished. The germ-free mouth be-
All other claims
longed to Listerine
just as the
Odorono, the perfumed skin oils,
not animal
and clean" foot It
fats),
to
Louis for
The agency was and
from Chicago
to Palmolive
(made from vegetable
Mennen talcum powder. to
"own" the mouth. In
New
York and
called
Lambert
league change his Fuessle),
deodorized underarm belonged to
the shaved face to Gillette, and the "fresh
was no simple process
left St.
pit-bull persistence.
name
Lambert
up shop with Milton Fuessle.
set
&
Feasley.
(thinking Feasley
Gerard made
his col-
sounded better than
he brought Gordon Seagrove
after Fuessle died, to finish the job.
fact,
For
six
years he never changed the
campaign, only the renditions.
Lambert made
it
a point never even to retouch any of the pho-
tographic images that
made up
the halitosis campaign. Although
he would do minor experiments, go
as
life.
Who
really a pathetic one. Like
We
was
to marrv."
the
wedding garments
"If
you want the truth
were young adults
to a child," his usual targets
parenting stages of
with
in
the pre-
can forget Edna, "whose case was
even woman, her primary ambition 7
see her kneeling before her bureau, clutching
announces the price of
that
would never be worn. The headline
halitosis:
"Often a Bridesmaid but Never
a Bride."
The
setting of the standard Listerine ad
matrimony.
One
or the other young eligible
is
is
just at the
yourself,
I
be happy with him it
[halitosis] ruins
in
spite of
of
having to deal with
the problem that "even your best friend won't
"Could
age
tell
you" about:
that?", "Don't
(ool
romance," or the simple "Halitosis
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
above: Often a Bridesmaid but Never a Bride opposite: Halitosis
and Could in
I
Be Happy With Him
the 1920s.
in Spite of That?:
The hard
sell
Makes You Unpopular
and
halitosis find a
home
LBSTERINE
makes you unpopular." The copy the 1930s
—
is
style
— called "whisper copy"
in
always the same, a mimic of True Story advice to
the lovelorn.
Lambert knew All his advertising
receipts.
town
in
his
niche because he was a stickler for testing.
was carefully screened using coupons or store
He would
send boxcar loads
of Listerine off to
some
midstate Iowa and upstate Maine, run a saturation series
of test ads, carefully correlate the results, and then launch nationwide.
He would try anything. During the
that halitosis
was a reason
Depression he suggested
for firing workers.
During Prohibition
he thought that alcohol content should be stressed. The company developed what he called "saw-toothed" campaigns
in
would drench, and then quickly remove, advertising bert determined
how
long short-term
which pitches would work
best.
w hich they until
memory would
Lam-
last,
and
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
Lambert hated salesmen; they
He
ing.
never employed more than
man he had
the only
just got in the six,
way
and was fond
ol advertis-
saying that
ol
ever fired was a sales manager.
W orse
still,
salespeople were always tinkering with the retailer s price and dis-
play of product. Gerard's aim was to get the end-user into the
pharmacy, demand the brand name, and then stomp out
if
not
satisfied.
hard to assess Gerard Lambert's genius
It is
easy,
but
it
looks so
was a combination of staking a claim on a body
knowing how tool,
fairlv. It
to use constructive discontent
part, of
(shame) as a selling
of realizing the power of research, and then of hammering
home. Although Lambert
who made
millions
from
is
almost always disparaged as "the
halitosis," his later life
shows
it
it
man
was not
luck alone.
Lambert's real contribution
may somedav be acknowledged.
CEO
of Gillette (while waiting for his
Although he did
a stint as
divorce to go through), where he introduced the famous Blue Blades, wrote
some middling murder
mysteries, and innovated
with tax-free funding for low-cost public housing, his real talent
was II
in realizing
the
power of opinion
he developed techniques
to help
surveys.
During World War
understand the psychological
resistance to various military campaigns. After the his expertise (usually neglected) to help
Willkie,
and
From
later
his
war he offered
Tom Dewey, Wendell
Dwight David Eisenhower.
home
base in Princeton, he befriended George
Gallup, funded polling experiments through
numerous academic
and governmental agencies, and provided seed money Institute for International Social Research. his time,
Gerard understood the power
tioning. In the stock
of
A man
for the
well ahead of
consumer-based posi-
market he never fought the tape,
in
market-
ing he never fought the consumer, and in polling he never
second-guessed opinions.
LISTERINE
When
he succeeded almost too
that
ine
vou look hack on Gerard's Listerine advertising, you sec well. In retrospect,
perhaps Lister-
w as too well positioned. By creating the mouth
as a
cauldron
of antisocial germs that could be tamed only by strong medicine,
Lambert
left
open the
possibility that
& Gambles
staked out. In the 1960s, Procter
Scope positioned
itself
mouthwash
terrific
that
Scope did
just that.
as the feels-good, tastes-great, smells-
—
in
the
"medicine breath." Although
the times
spirit of
Meanwhile Warner-Lambert was
new
competing claims could be
the\"
— "had
it
all."
with Lambert's legacy
left
l
have tried to battle back with a
generation of Cool Mint Listerine (blue) and Freshburst Lis-
terine (green), the tough-guy claims of the amber-bottle parent
remain.
germs
The
heritage
that cause
deep
1
of "tastes bad, but its
bad breath," and "the anything
in
unprecedented 99 percent
of
day"
is
as
as
Original Listerine. That's
taste
American all
good
for you," "kills
people hate twice a
culture. Amazingly, an
mouthwash
now the problem:
If
by convincing consumers that mouthwash must
users have tried Listerine excelled taste
bad
to work-
He
tried to
good, what can a good-tasting Listerine do
Gerard ran into the same conundrum introduce Listerine toothpaste that his
Warner-Lambert has
—
in
a sensible
the 1930s.
enough flanker brand
not been able to give up. But,
still
customers could not accept bad
taste as a prerequisite for
clean teeth. So far no one has figured out a
customer on the horns least for a while.
of this
dilemma. But
Gerard Lambert was able
horns of a dilemma and then
sell
alas,
way as for
to
to position the
bad breath,
at
manufacture the
the horn-removal equipment.
THE QUEENSBORO
CORPORATION Advertising on the First Electronic Medium
on Monday, August microphone noon.
at
WEAF
He would
in
1922,
New
M. H. Blackwell stood before
York
City. It
was 5:15
speak for filteen minutes and
What he
fifty dollars.
L8,
said
was
to
it
in the after-
would
be the "mayday"
a
cost
him
distress call of
high culture.
Here
is
how he was
introduced:
This afternoon the radio audience
to
is
be addressed by Mr.
Blackwell of the Queensboro Corporation
who
will
words concerning Nathaniel Hawthorne and the fostering the helpful
fined
home
men:
Mr. Blackwell.
life
community
spirit
and the
since Nathaniel
Hawthorne had
the Queensboro Corporation had
ment "Hawthorne Court" slow-moving
I
desirability of
healthful,
uncon-
and
gentle-
that were Hawthorne's ideals. Ladies
Alter reminding the audience that
it
was
say a few
just fifty-eight years
died, Mr. Blackwell noted that
named
its
most recent develop-
in the writer's honor.
Then came
pitch:
wish to thank those within sound of
ing opportunity afforded
me
my
voice for the broadcast-
to urge this vast radio
audience to
seek the recreation and the daily comfort of the home removed from the congested part of the
city,
right at the
boundaries of
God's great outdoors, and within a few miles by subway from the business section of Manhattan. This sort of residential environ-
the
THE QUEENSBORO CORPORATION
ment
strongly influenced Hawthorne, America's greatest writer of
fiction.
He analyzed
charming keenness the social
with
spirit of
those who had thus happily selected their homes, and he painted
homes
the people inhabiting those
One
cannot help but notice that Mr. Blackwell,
had a perceptive sense Nathaniel Hawthorne. ica's
I
greatest writer of
urban angst, had
of
fiction"
of Seven Gables, or any
in
home
little
(what of Twain, James, Foe,
read The Scarlet Letter, The House
a high level of nervous anxiety
Hawthorne's miasmic world are loonies and crackpots.
between the good
made
and the natural
life
the romantic connection
life,
and he had
pipe" between suburban space and family happiness.
Let
about
American suburbanites? The only happy
life of
But, no matter, Blackwell had
upped the
sense of
the short stories and think that
of
Hawthorne had anything but the happy
who may have
daresay he'd never road a word of "Amer-
And how one could
Melville?).
people
with good-natured relish.
"laid the
Now
ante:
me
enjoin
upon you as you value your health and your hopes
and your home happiness, get away from the brick,
solid
masses
where the meager opening admitting a slant of sunlight
mockingly called a
light
shaft,
of is
and where children grow up
starved for a run over a patch of grass and the sight of a tree.
Apartments ures.
in
congested parts of the
The word "neighbor"
is
city
have proved
fail-
an expression of peculiar irony-a
daily joke.
Thousands want
to
remove
know and they situation
of dwellers
in
to healthier
can't
seem
the congested district apartments
and happier sections but they don't
to get into the belief that their living
and home environment can be improved. Many
balk at buying a house
in
of
them
the country or the suburbs and be-
coming a commuter. They have
visions of toiling
down
in
a cellar
he
—
.
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
with a sullen furnace, or shoveling snow, or of blistering
palms
pushing a clanking lawn mower. They can't seem to overcome the pessimistic inertia that keeps pounding into their brains that
crowded, unhealthy, unhappy
their
living
conditions cannot be
improved....
Those who balk
at building a
need not remain deprived
built
house or buying one already
of the blessings of the
home
home surrounded
within the ideal residential environment, or the
by social advantages and the community benefits where neigh-
means more than
bor
Let
me
home near
a word of eight letters.
.
.
close by urging that you hurry to the apartment
the green fields and the neighborly atmosphere right
on the subway without the expense and trouble of a commuter,
where health and community happiness beckon-the community
and the
life
[in
environment that Hawthorne advocated
friendly
Archer 1928, 397-98].
Three weeks
Queensboro Corporation had
later the
sold
all its
property in Hawthorne Court in Jackson Heights in present-day
Queens.
No one had predicted
In fact, the one thing that had
this.
predicted about radio was that
medium. sity
It
of the
assured
all
was going
that
if
be an educational medium
— the univer-
Commerce Herbert Hoover had was "inconceivable that we should allow so great
it
a possibility for service
and
would not become an advertising
Secretary of
air.
that
to
it
been
...
to
be drowned
in advertising chatter"
important messages ever "became the meat
wich of two patent medicine advertisements,
it
in a
sand-
would destroy
broadcasting." Besides, at the
same time Mr. Blackwell was speaking, Cyrus
Curtis was selling 2 million weekly copies of his Saturday Evening
Post and pocketing
some $28
million in advertising revenues
astounding figures for those times. Curtis had claimed that once
THE QUEENSBORO CORPORATION
he got a circulation of 400,000, he could afford zine
away
anyone who would pay postage.
to
magazine grew so plump on advertising that
it
to give the
He was
The
right.
was bought, newly
published but undistributed, as scrap paper. By 1929, the Post weighed in at two pounds.
maga-
December
7,
272 pages contained
Its
twenty-one hours of reading matter, showcased 214 national
and took
advertisers,
Nothing would tures, as
in
rival
such magazines, with their glossy pic-
an advertising medium, certainly not a
only of sound. So
it
would be up
had been thought and rational,
ad revenue of $1,512,000.
the government and
its
to radio to transmit the best that
Radio would be verbal,
said.
even ponderous.
them or
intellectual,
would open the floodgates between
It
people, between the universities and
their students. In fact, almost half of the
were granted
radio stations
medium made up
first
to universities,
licenses for early
whether they wanted
not.
Sound
familiar? Just a
few years ago the Internet was going
to
be a conduit carrying a never-ending supply of knowledge from the centers of power and learning out to the most distant monitor.
The World Wide Web was most
definitely not going to
be
filled
with blinking banners and "click on me! click on me!" icons. This
new medium was going lize.
There
is
no need
to improve, to
for
me
lift,
to recite the
to
make
better, to civi-
most popular
Web
sites
and who sponsors them. Mr. Blackwell's fifteen minutes of no fame generated $27,000 the Queensboro Corporation, and in so doing pretty
in sales for
well sealed the fate of radio, television, and
Web. While
it
now
the World
Wide
become
colo-
took about twenty years for radio to
nized by commercial interests, television never had a chance.
Web went
in
months.
Radio was the
do with
it.
The
}ust as
the Web," and
first
electronic
medium. No one knew what
to
today our kids spend countless hours "surfing
just as
those
ol
us over
fifty
years old concentrated
73
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
on the unblinking Indian
in the center of the video test pattern,
our grandparents dedicated their quality time to turning the trying to hear something
—anything! —of even minimal
What they heard before Mr. gious, educational, sports,
dial
interest.
Blackwell was a mishmash of
and government programming,
reli-
jum-
all
bled up on the same frequencies.
What
they heard in the decades after Mr. Blackwell was a
highly organized broadcast day supported by commercial interests,
each trying to reach the widest possible audience.
The
history of radio
outbreak of World
War
instructive.
is I,
Radio started because,
had wireless operators been on
duty),
been avoided
and the army needed
to direct troops in the trenches (using
barbed wire
many separate
that too
the
the navy needed to communicate with
ships at sea (the Titanic tragedv in 1912 might have
The problem was
at
a
way
as antennae).
many
patents were in too
corporate hands. Rather than nickel-and-dime the patents loose, the Justice Department essentiallv stripped industry and repackaged
"Radio Group"
The war on
its
—
them
them from
private
inside a consortium called the
Radio Corporation of America.
later the
over, national interest
no longer
a concern,
RCA went
merry way. Patent holders realized there was more money to
be made by staving together than for patents back.
in
breaking apart.
Nobodv asked
However, Westinghouse, one of the dispossessed
patent holders, had
made
a pile of radio stuff
— tubes, amplifiers,
— that needed unload. So November 1920, Westinghouse started KDKA — "Build and they Pittsburgh on the Field of Dreams principle transmitters, crystal receivers,
and the
like
to
it
in
in
it
will
come."
R
worked. Once transmitters were
built,
the surplus
receiving apparatus could be unloaded.
You could even make was
a radio receiver at
a spool of wire, a crystal, an aerial,
duced by Westinghouse. Patience and
home.
All
vou needed
and earphones
—
all
a cylindrical oatmeal
pro-
box
THE QUEEN SBORO CORPORATION
were supplied by the hobbyist. By July 1922, four hundred
"vol-
unteer" stations had sprung up.
People didn't seem to care what was on,
When
receiving something.
as long as thev
were
stereophonic sound was introduced
in
the 1950s, the most popular records were not oi music, but of the
ordinary sounds of locomotives and cars passing from speaker to speaker. People on the East Coast used to marvel at television pictures of waves breaking in California, just as
stood in awe in front of the junior,
now glued
to the
first
printed letters. Bleary-eyed
computer screen,
only the most recent electronic.
radio was that everyone was broadcasting
on the same wavelength. together, the signals
is
made
evolutionary development of ancient awe
The problem with
monks undoubtedly
When
were placed too close
transmitters
became mixed and
Bv 1927 there
garbled.
were so many broadcasters
that they petitioned
them
By 1934 Congress updated the law
sort out the airwaves.
Congress to help In-
passing a full-Hedged Communications Act, which established the
Federal Communications Commission.
Ever eager
New York
to help out,
AT&T
subsidiary already had a
suggested a solution. Their
hub
station,
WEAF
(for
Wind,
Earth, Air, Fire) in Manhattan, and they would link stations
together using their alread\ -in-place phone
would hear
They envisioned
clearly.
tying
Soon everyone
lines.
some
thirty-eight sta-
tions together in a system they called "toll broadcasting."
word
"toll"
was the
tip-off.
phone company suggested ests
and they called
this
Someone was going that time could
live
from
1
be sold
The
to private inter-
subsidy "ether advertising."
Broadcasters had tried broadcasting
to have to pay.
The
all
kinds ol innovative things, even
a football
stadium and a dance
floor, to
gather an audience, so "ether advertising" didn't seem so revolutionary.
Why
not
ucts, especially if
let
companies buy time
such
talk
was done
in
to talk
good
about their prod-
taste?
It
wasn't really
76
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
no mention of where the products were, no samples
advertising:
offered,
no store
and never, p.m.)
—
during the "family hour" (from 7:00 to 11:00
ever,
just a
few words about what
sound
listeners got clear
Ma
Why
phone company. So
In return,
come all
But she
attractive.
out for the cheese.
should they pay the
"ether advertising" were
offer.
"free."
couldn't get the mice to bite.
you
that
it is
knew she had something
Bell
wouldn't
no comparisons, no price information,
locations,
toll?
Ad
just
agencies
The monies from
going to the long-lines division of the
AT&T did
the only sensible thing.
The com-
pany offered the same 15-percent commission that the agencies got for buying print space just for sending business their way.
The agencies
got the
(soon called a rebate) even
word of copy! Not
didn't prepare a
AT&T
money
they
on
it,
They even provided the
for free.
Whereas Westinghouse thought sell
to put too fine a point
essentially bribed the agencies.
announcer
if
radio sets,
AT&T knew that
that
the big
you used broadcasting
money was
to
delivering listeners to advertisers. Agencies soon
be made fell
to in
in line.
William Rankin, an adman, bought one hundred minutes of time to discuss Mineralava moisturizing soap, just to see if radio real.
The product
flew off the shelves.
simply because they had heard about
is
it
on the is
where the phenomenon
make the connection between
for
Consumers bought the soap
knows why the phrase "As Seen on TV" chase, but here
was
radio.
No one today
a motivation to purstarts.
Somehow we
a product being advertised
and
a
product being worthy as one and the same. Soon Rankin enlisted his other clients, like
Goodrich and
Gillette, to
have a go
at
broad-
casting their message. Others followed.
The most what
listeners
pressing problem for advertisers was to find out
wanted
to hear.
under-enrolled, to say the
The
least.
By
Universities of the Air
were
the late 1920s, agencies had
found out what gathered an audience. The public wanted music,
THE QUEENSBORO CORPORATION
all right,
but not classical music. They wanted to hear a
of music you could dance
to,
swing and sway
new kind
This popular
to.
music, which centered around well-known "hits," elbowed aside classical music,
which was too long and undanceable. The audi-
ence for "long-hair" music
just sat there.
But the audience for
popular music wanted to be active. Not only was
music exciting to the young (who were starting consumers), but advertisers could attach their the players
this short-hair
to
be the prime
clients'
names
to
— something you couldn't do with the New York Sym-
phony and the Metropolitan Opera. So there was the Goodrich Silvertown Orchestra, the Cliquot
Club Eskimos, the Gold Dust Twins, the Ipana Troubadours, the
A&P
Gypsies, and the
Kodak Chorus.
or "indirect selling" didn't do there."
It
didn't sell
Alas, this "gratitude factor"
more than put your name "out
your product. What
it
was
really selling
was
popular music.
And
popular music was creating an uproar. Rather
on the Internet expected of
today, boogie tunes
this
were
clearly not
medium. So what about those
like
smut
what was
universities?
Weren't they supposed to make sure the airwaves would be
full
of
"the best that had been thought and said"? Weren't they supposed to
keep the greedy fingers of advertisers out of the pie and these
carnal sounds off the airwaves?
While there were more than ninety educational
stations (out
of a total 732) in 1927, by the mid-1980s there were only a handful.
What happened? The
university stations
had sold their
new breed of executives who saw that the big money would come from advertisers. These executives, like
licenses to a in
radio
William Paley, the urbane impresario of CBS, had been merging individual stations into networks
"webs"
—called
"nets"
or,
better yet,
—emanating from Manhattan. ABC, NBC, and CBS were
the results of this consolidation. In
one of the few attempts
to recapture cultural control
from
77
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
commercial exploitation, the National Educational Association the early 1930s lobbied Senators Robert
Henry Hatfield of West would forever be available to
Wagner of New York and
Virginia to reshuffle the stations and
them
restore a quarter of
advertising-free,
Madison Avenue, and
it
These
to university hands.
stations
making "sweetness and
The lobbying power of the
all.
in
NEA
met the
light"
clout of
was no contest. The Wagner-Hatfield
bill
died aborning, defeated by an almost two-to-one margin.
One
of the reasons the
emergence of
a
new
bill
cultural
foundered so quickly w
as the
phenomenon, the country-wide
hit
show. Never before had an entertainment been developed that an entire nation
homes had
— by
at least
V Audi)
Amos
AT&T
at
1937 more than three-quarters of American
one radio
NBC
—could experience
had shown what
noted that phone
calls
at
a hit
the
same
time.
show could
do.
dropped 50 percent during the
broadcast, and water departments found that pressure decreased just after the show.
But these were not the important registers
of concern. Hits
could make millions of dollars in advertising revenue. In sodent, the sole sponsor of
Amos
V Andy,
saw
its
fact,
Pep-
fortunes soar
with the show's popularity. Although not yet called a "blockbuster" (that II),
would come with the high-explosive bombs
of
World War
the effect of a hit was already acknowledged as concussive.
Nothing would stand
What
in its way.
show
the hit
really
aiiwaves. Section 304 of the tion of public or
blew up was the myth of the
"public"
Communications Act makes no men-
government ownership. Onlv
regulator)"
power
sited with the
government, not ownership. "Public aiiwaves"
catchy phrase,
all
right,
be regulated bv the
but
feds,
it's
a myth.
The
is
is
a
airwaves were going to
but thev were going to be ruled by the
highest bidder, and the highest bidder was going to be related to
Mr. Blackwell.
THE QUEENSBORO CORPORATION
So, in a generation, radio zines, a
became
medium supported by
like
newspapers and maga-
advertising. In fact, unlike print,
radio was soon totally supported by commercial interests. Its "free"
When
all right, if
television
moving
pictures.
you don't value your time and
appeared
The
in the late 1940s, all that
Internet and
Web TV
greater audience control. But Mr. Blackwell
attention.
was added was
increased speed and is still
there,
behind
the winking pixels, picking up the tab and banking on renting your attention for just another
"word from our sponsor."
—
THE KID
UPPER 4
IN
The Birth of Advocacy Advertising
most of the TIME,
advertising does just what
it
claims to do.
It
draws attention (ad-vert: to turn toward) to a product. But
sometimes advertising
tries to
draw your attention away from
the product.
Advertising starts in earnest in the nineteenth century as pro-
ducers
start to pile
up large surpluses
that they cannot profitably
Like the sorcerer's apprentice, machines don't
sell.
enough
is
know when
enough, so advertising becomes the sorcerer's agent
try-
ing to distribute the mess the apprentice has produced. "Here, look at this
one-of-a-kind product," the
fact that
adman
says, trying to
thousands of these things are pouring out of the factory.
Innovations in advertising usually happen
most out of deals
control.
when beads
onized,
new
So the
of flop sweat start to appear.
first
the Civil
— becomes not
on, the
first
creativity
is
rule of victory
is,
When
do the
simple: After war. is
that the
winner
the side that can produce the most war material. To the victor
go the
spoils.
The problem
is
that often the spoils are
worthless. Ironically, the winner The Kid in Upper 4
machine-made
by Nelson Metcalf
soon made to the
Jr.:
and
just prized but a necessity.
question in advertising histoiy
War
surpluses are
New media are col-
selling techniques are tried out,
most unruly surpluses occur? The answer
is
when
Salesmen always make the most interesting
whatever that may be
From
hide the
is
now
pretty
stuck holding the bag of
blankets, boots, ball bearings, bazookas
A call is
men on Madison Avenue.
"Exvertisement"
for the
New Haven
Railroad, 1942.
The most the Civil
War
creative times in advertising culture in the
North with the
rise
were
just after
of magazine culture, and
£
The ft* *f v-^ cJ
Men
Two
^
cve
i«
upper
"
a-
,;Ac
°° C
c vcry a in
triP-
nary
avva* c
*
bc ,hcir "fj, the war-
• •
•
bigness.
'".he
W
Tonȣ .
lot
Tbc .oian" nt k J 5 e.
(W
named
Spot
The
Too eye,H bis
Kid-
"
'
it
V
" s too
„»v
ft
N
I)
CONNECTICUT
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
then immediately after both the World first
W ars with
the explosion of
radio, then tele\ision.
Converselv. the most boring times in advertising are usually
No
times of dearth.
When
tising.
surplus equals no reward for creative adver-
the war machine
draining production from the
is
civilian sector, advertising agents start
reminiscing about the good
old days and creating ads like "There's a Ford in Your Future."
Advertisers &et anxious during two events: economic depressions
and wartime. In economic hard times the
expense to get cut
is
advertising
—
if
advertising reallv
And during wartime, governments begin
as advertised.
tion the function of advertising for frivolous items
about
business
because vou d think that
ironic,
businesses would increase advertising,
first
worked
to ques-
and wonder
deduetibilitv as a necessarv expense.
its
As the war
Europe raged. President Tinman mentioned the
in
unmentionable: advertising costs should be deleted
as
a de-
ductible business expense, or at least reduced, because there was
no need
to advertise.
Mention
to an
Xo
surplus equals no need to advertise.
adman what would happen
if
tax laws treated
advertising as extraneous, and vou will see pure panic.
Same
for
businessmen. Given a choice between paying taxes and using those monies to buv advertising, albeit worthless advertising, most executives
make
the
would choose the
companv
feel
latter.
good about
At least such advertising can itself.
As a consequence, the agencies offered to turn their attention to the war ef fort tising
if
Truman would
how
thrill
of enlistment, and. most interesting in terms
they w ould later behave, the encouragement of
enter the workforce. All pro bono, as the the
The War Adver-
Council encouraged die purchasing of war bonds, the donat-
ing of blood, the of
turn his elsewhere.
War
Council, the
Ad
Council, likes to
modem sav.
women
to
reincarnation of
almost truthfullv.
At the same time, to protect their billings, the agencies
encouraged their
clients,
plump with cash
that they did not
want
THE KID
UPPER 4
IN
taxed as "excess profits," to continue to buy media space and at least
with high-minded, altruistic advertising. Needless to
the agencies
Most was a
war advertising did not go
of the
war
NBC
ported the
say,
material.
Most
Orchestra. U.S.
of
it
paper
into print, since
went
GM
into radio.
Rubber backed broadcasts
sup-
of the
York Philharmonic, and Allis-Chalmers underwrote the
Boston Symphony. Therefore the war advertising we see advertising on plish
it
collected their 15 percent for this contribution.
still
crucial
New
lill
two
its
best behavior, treading
goals: protect the
products
lightly. It
had
in print
is
accom-
to
company and support
of the
the war effort.
That implicit contradiction
makes is
ad for the
this
of
being naughty/being nice
New Haven
ing,
And
the clients lousy product.
the door for a whole
new genre
It is
call
ing,"
ball.
The
which does give them
big chemical company, see
industry calls
a nice tone.
how
if
they
righteously suggest
own
opened
it
this
the First
knowing "when
.
.
.
or worse.
you to
try to get
them
"issue advertis-
Look over here,
poor family
napalm. The cigarette companies truck the the country as
doing
of advertising, advocacy advertis-
them "exvertisements" because they
take your eye off the
drawing attention
in so
placed by companies that have misbehaved I
w hat
The ad
Railroad so interesting.
not selling anything, just the opposite.
away from
is
Bill ol
is
says the
cooking with Rights around
Amendment; beer brewers
to say
the time they are telling von that this
is
when" w hile the
rest of
"the beer to have w hen
you are having more than one"; liquor companies advocate equivalent taxation for hard liquor, beer,
The Ad
and wine. The
Is
memorable campaigns
a Terrible Thing to Waste," "This
the Crash
Dummies,
the
Weeping
Is
Ad
as
"A
Your Brain on Di ngs,"
(oxer pollution] Indian,
the Bear, and Rosie the Riveter. Detractors are loud out that the
goes on.
Council, a confederation of agencies, has even institu-
tionalized the genre, producing such
Mind
list
ol
Smokey pointing
Council has neglected such problems as birth and
83
84
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
gun
control, automotive safety, corporate pollution,
and alcohol addiction, preferring more
Most advocacy Railroad
is
client-friendly topics.
bloodless, but this ad for the
is
different. First, of course,
more Norman Rockwell and
jot
and nicotine
is
New Haven
would go over the
it
One edge. Ed
the guileless artwork.
Georgi, the famous illustrator, has just the right composition.
The
two bottom bunkers (appropriately facing away from each other)
young cub looks heavenward,
are clearly in dreamland, while our free of aly
is
all
shadows, yet the light
a key to unlocking the
The
text
who wrote
was
road, the advertising
knew
Metcalf's boss
behind him.
power of the
when he
manager
sent a
change our point go,
we
asking us to
of view, to
make
Nelson Metcalf
jr..
to the rail-
was "something wrong."
The copy panel needed
perpendicular to the boys and hence is
anom-
think this
dummy version
said there
the problem.
small matter, as the ad
I
text.
originally set horizontally, but
says that
it,
is
tilted to the reader.
move
to
This
is
be no
aside for these boys, to
allowances. Right from the get-
do.
we get to the text, a word about the client's problem. The New Haven Railroad always had lousy service, in part beBefore
cause
it
had two opposing
says, the railroad
Rhode
As the small print
tasks.
the bottom
served the industrial states of Massachusetts,
and Connecticut, but
Island,
at
its
chief job was as dailv
schlepper of commuters into Manhattan. So, of course,
bad rep among
New
Now, with the war Metcalf,
Englanders
on, that service
who was
suits.
not getting a seat in the dining patient,
make
it
had a
as a shuttle service.
was going from bad
fresh from college,
ment: Quiet the complaining
more
who used
it
to worse.
was given the
assign-
Damp down the whining about
car.
Make
the waiting passengers
the outraged less eager to berate manage-
ment. Write an exvertisement. His small Colton agency in Boston had tried stressing "Right of
W ay
for Fighting Might," in
which they argued
that expediting
THE KID
freight
trumped shunting passengers. They
tried
UPPER 4
IN
"Thunder Along
the Line," in which they switched the argument to foreground the
long hours and hard work of railroad men. But nothing worked.
He vowed he would write an ad that "would make even/body who read it feel ashamed to complain Metcalf was undeterred.
about train service" (Metcalf 1991, 24; emphasis
The minute you read
the text you see why.
in original).
Here we have the
invocation of shame, that most painful of social controls, directed
toward whoever had the temerity even
to think nasty thoughts, let
alone say something, about the crappy service.
Under mawkish Note how the
sentimentality
slightly patronizing
immediately becomes a "man"
my
poetic jargon on
Then
verse.) "It is
notice
the kid in
something Ulysses
is
part,
but
how he
Upper
4."
is
is
pure exvertising genius.
word
"kid" in the headline
in the first stanza. this
ad
really written in blank
is
made mythic
Then
as ancient as the
(Forgive the
a few lines later with
the invocation of the catalog,
Homeric
epic.
Here's what our
leaving behind: hamburgers, hot rod, soda pop, Fido,
girlfriend, dad,
mom,
in
ascending order of magnitude.
By the time he readies "mom,"
the
lump reaches
Metcalf says that the agency secretary put the "lump"
and
it
gets to the kids throat just as
The
it
his throat.
in the copy,
gets to ours.
bardic voice then quickly finishes off this stanza by letting
the kid cry while not losing any dignity. "It doesn't matter. Kid," intrudes the all-knowing narrator. is
really
happening
is
"Nobody
that we, too, are
But what
will see...."
overpowered w ith
feelings.
Synch ronicity. This kid, our kid,
my kid,
is
leaving us.
We
arc saying good-bye
to him, in a sense our only begotten son, so that others
prayed for
his arrival
You may begin
max be saved.
to see
what
is
redeemer, for he, and he alone,
and freedom"
who have
going on here. This kid is
going to bring "now
to the fallen world, the
world
tired
is
cast as the
hope peace
and bleeding.
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
and
lie will bleed for them, will give
them peace.
in so
doing he
Now you can understand
why, although the light
behind
is
head
his
in
the illustration, this lad looks just like the
famous version
Supreme Court took
Sallman. Until the
down,
image was hung
this
American was
in
school. Sallman
it
in almost even-
Head of
s
most every Christian church,
in
Christ
presen-
on bulletin boards and calen-
tation Bibles, dars.
Warner
of Christ painted In
Millions of wallet-size reproductions
were made
carried this image with of this
Our doughboys
for servicemen.
ad knew
it
them and the readers
— although
perhaps not
consciously. If there
stanza.
The
any doubt what
is
text
is
lifted
is
being invoked, read the
from countless
recitative
between minister and congregation. Invocation and hortation and response. ers
about
rail
service
The
last
readings
refrain, ex-
readers of this ad and the complain-
would have one thing ©
common: thev
in
j
belonged to a Christian culture that each Sunday practiced a litany that
calf
had the same rhythms. Before going
had prepped
He knew
at St. Paul's.
If
you have to stand enroute-/r
If
there
is
no berth
for
you-/r
is
so he
You can hear the ancient echoes also suffered that
amongst us
is
we might be
more than some
this stuff
may have
so that he
is
kid,
of
is
may
insertion in the
initially
New
run
in
by
Met-
heart.
a seat.
sleep.
He who
man who now moving
is
our "most honored guest,"
and no gratitude on our part can ever match
The ad was
Han ai d,
an earlier voung
saved.
he
to
his sacrifice.
November 1942
as a single trial
York Herald Tribune. Needless to
say,
it
l
THE KID
thi
UPPER 4
IN
New Jiisj/m-Gock''
%spira-J$imp
I]'/,
I!
'',>,»
SUNDAY SCHOOL
5 »V« TjH
never stopped running. Elmer Davis, head Information, ordered that
it
be run
in
"Ml
HICH
W 95
»C»0SS
4
..~(M
.....
War
of the Office of
newspapers around the
.-^
Head of
and sponsored to
make
it.
and service companies picked
The Pennsylvania
it
up
Railroad asked for permission
three hundred posters of it for their stations.
The
text
was
read on radio stations, pinned to countless bulletin boards, and enclosed
in letters.
New Haven
More
est,
short,
at
the
Railroad office.
The "Kid" appeared movie
than eight thousand letters arrived
and
in Life,
as a song.
Newsweek, Time,
More important
however, the ad was used to raise
money
in
an
MGM
for the national interlor the
Red
Cross, to
War Bonds, and by the U.S. Army to build morale among servicemen. After all, this ad made sacrifice into religious ritual.
sell
U.S.
It
work
also
showed
off surplus;
it
advertisers that a
can tamp
had run so smoothly.
down
good ad can do more than
complaints. If only the railroad
Christ as
popular culture icon in
country. Railroad companies
iNi
r»CM
w
1
INTERMEDIATE TEACHER!
87
the 1940s.
DE BEERS A Good Campaign
THE PIVOTAL INSIGHT tising dollars are
in advertising
being wasted,
I
Forever
Is
know
"I
is
that half
my adver-
out which half."
just can't figure
This truism, coined in the late nineteenth century,
is
attributed
to,
among others, Lord Leverhume of Lever Brothers and John Wanamaker of the famous Philadelphia department store. It describes the central axiom of sponsored speech: veiy gets through to the consumer.
You
little
of
it
hear the sentiment
still
expressed today, with the percent of waste raised. This
is
what makes the N. W. Ayer campaign
for
De
Beers
Consolidated Mines Limited so remarkable. For half a century this
campaign, selling polished transparent rocks as instruments of
romantic love, was probably the least wasteful advertising ever created. Eveiy dollar spent
was worth
it.
While advertising cannot create demand, reformat desire, and
when
this
can intercept and
it
happens, watch out!
New
markets
open up overnight. While we usually think of De Beers' dominance
as the result of controlling supply,
in
cartel
— which now contributes only the most successful
Finding rocks
is
the
Rocky Coast of
achievement has
them on your
fingers
15 percent of supply
monopoly on
easy Selling rocks
years two markets have Honeymoon on
real
manipulating demand. Thanks to Ayer, the South African
been
become
its
earth.
is
tough. In the
last fiftv
for stones.
You wear
are in love, and you put
them over
been opened up
when you
— has
the body of a loved one after death.
The
latter
category was mas-
Maine, painted by Nicolia Cikovsky for
De Beers, 1948.
tered by the Rock of Ages Corporation, which captured the
umentality argument and franchised
it
mon-
under the barely disguised
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
aura of religion ("Hock of Ages cleft for me." the Church built on
concept
rock, the
same time
of rock as
life
almost the
common man. diamonds
testimonials for the
were being positioned
at
memorials were being turned from head-
that granite
stone markers to
covenant with God). But
unthing love
as the signifiers of
for his life
partner.
Was
responded
that ter
happenstance that the same war-ravaged generation
it
Thompson
w as
to these stones
Agency's imaging
Rock of Gibraltar
also
of
comforted by the
Prudential Insurance as the
world perceived
In a
mon-
as susceptible to
there w as great comfort in aligning oneself with rocks.
strosities,
Although the wealthy
of
both sexes had been accustomed to
displaxing these colorless crystals, they
commodity
in
became an investment
the late nineteenth centurv. You would buv raw dia-
monds and put them away the
Wal-
J.
for safekeeping. After the Depression,
diamond trade crashed; too many of them came out of
keeping
all at
fragmented diamond industry that
clear to the
were seen
once, and speculators glutted the market.
as tradable
and not
as
market would alw ays be subject This
is
because
seems
quality that
to
diamonds
buy and hold, the
such wild gyrations.
make them
so valuable
is
precisely what
must ultimately render them worthless. Not only do they ever,
grind
became
paradox unique to these stones: the very
of a
to
to
something
as long as
It
last for-
but diamonds have almost no practical use. All you can do
them up and put them on
drill bits.
Unlike gold or
monds
just sit
supply and
demand were
would diminish bv
diamond All
held
there and sparkle.
that has
through
at bav.
so
much
dia-
ever the Draconian laws of
applied, every
preceded
diamond dug out
of the
the value of everv still-existing
it.
history, the law
First thev
If
is
silver,
carbon allotropes aren't malleable or electrically conductive:
earth
safe-
s
of supply and
demand have been
were pushed aside by what were called
DE BEERS
sumptuary
meats
laws. Certain kinds of
(like
the king's deer), bev-
erages (such as exotic teas and coffee), styles of fashionable particular fabrics, rare spices to live,
and the
like,
and sweeteners,
were simply placed
styles
livery,
of wigs, places
off limits to
commoners.
Ditto diamonds. These laws against consuming what was called "luxury" used to be administered by the ecclesiastical courts. This
was because luxury was defined
as living
above one's
form of insubordination against the concept of "copia" that God's
world
is
already
full
Though the proffered and greed
— luxury
— the idea
and complete.
sins
behind such laws were gluttony
were by definition sumptuous
objects
truth the prohibitions
station, a
were
social.
—
Sumptuary laws wore part
in of
an elaborate symbolic system designed to keep class demarcations in place.
We now
use excise taxes on cigarettes, expensive
automobiles, yachts, liquor, and gasoline, and our purpose to separate groups, but to
make consuming
not
is
certain materials a
burden.
Diamonds had been such
a protected luxury. In fact, until the
fifteenth century, only the elites
Diamonds appeared on a kind of blinking
Then,
mond
in
were allowed
to display
heads and on top of their scepters
royal
reminder of who wielded the big
1447,
ring to his girlfriend,
Man
of Burgundy, placing
hand, apparently
left
in
as
stick.
Archduke Maximilian of Austria gave
the third finger of her
them.
a dia-
on
it
lienor of the
ancient Egyptian belief that the vena amoris (vein of love) ran straight
from the heart to the
of that finger. As a distant
tip
harbinger of what was to come, the rock w as becoming something
more than
amorous
politieal signage;
royal
mond
was becoming a symbol
of
intention.
The diamond market was by
it
and
ecclesiastical
dealer famously put
inching away from one maintained
power it,
to
one maintained,
as
one
dia-
"by the male erection."' Hut the para-
91
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
dox of worthlessness remained: the only value of diamonds can be attributed.
If
made
they have to be
War
After World
monds were on
diamonds are not
best friend."
girl's
I,
no one was doing the
attribution. Dia-
Young swains were promising
out.
undying devotion by giving automobiles, oceanic
and fur
opals, topaz,
exotic
Other
coats.
and
W orse
their
watches,
rocks, such as rubies, sapphires, turquoise,
more
colorful,
erotic than diamonds.
new fields of diamonds were being discovnow known as Zaire, Ghana, Namibia, and espe-
vast
still,
Botswana. Even bigger
fields
Argyle mines of Australia, bigger ones
would be found still
in the
in Siberian Russia.
much
of the
were facing every producer's worst
night-
Diamonds were anything but v
travel,
and onyx were more romantic, more
ered in the lands cially in
what
a king's best friend, then
"a
way
their
is
rare,
and hence
lost
alue they might have had.
Diamond
suppliers
mare: increasing supply, decreasing demand. Three things had to
happen:
First,
thought of like
and most important, diamonds had
as a
gold or
to stop being
commodity. Thev should be bought, but not
silver,
sold,
because that would invoke the iron laws of the
market. In economic terms, they had to be
made
unfungible. Sec-
ond, the diamond had to be tied to some more regular use than sticking in a crown, a scepter, or
be made
ritualistic,
even
in a ring.
totemic, metaphoric.
Diamonds had
They had
to
to
be made so
meaningful that they could be bought to be given. In other words, the after-market, the secondhand market as destroved.
Buy
accomplish the
buy, buy, but never first
it
were, had to be
sell, sell, sell.
And,
third, to
two, the producers had to promise not to
deviate from either the controlled supply or the controlled
ing of their product.
down
Thev had
a single channel in only
as the buy-hole.
to
one
form a
mean-
cartel to funnel the rocks
direction:
toward what
is
known
DE BEERS
The amazing transformation ber
1938, a
6,
when
full
year before the
New
a partner of a
&
N. W. Aver
diamonds began on Septem-
of
advertisement appeared,
first
York bank phoned
a viee-president of
Son, Inc., to arrange a meeting between the
ageney and representatives of Ernest Oppenheimer. This subsequent meetings, had
meeting,
like
arranged.
Oppenheimers
was
all
De
firm,
be carefully
to
Beers Consolidated Mines,
more than 90 percent
a cartel, already controlling
first
of the
market. American laws forbid monopolies from having offices on U.S.
Hence, almost
soil.
Africa or in London, and
all it
future meetings occurred in South
was there that budgets were
set
and
campaigns arranged. N. W. Ayer was the obvious agency to do the it
the granddaddy of American agencies,
shoe" of staffed
all
by the scions
of
well-heeled
also the
wanted, and
it
WASPs. The
out, they
desk drawers and forgotten. These
women
was
Not only was most "white
the major firms. Oxer the years, Ayer had
when paychecks were handed
class
it
job.
become
story goes that
were often dumped
men knew what
was not more
upper-middle-
golf clubs.
Better yet, Ayer would keep things quiet, respectful, out limelight. In fact, the
agency w as named N. W. Ayer
though N. W. never participated
Wayland
Ayer, thought the
title
into
in the agency.
&
of
the
Son even
His son, Francis
sounded more established, more
genteel.
No doubt ucts.
travel
about
it,
the agency was good with difficult prod-
Thev had introduced not
just
the Foul
but also the Ford Tri-Motor plane and
sold the National Biscuit
Model T and car
air travel;
they had
Company's products by emphasizing the
In-Er-Seal packaging, not the foodstuff; they had launched cigarettes
and coined
"I'd
walk a mile for
a
Camel
Camel"; they posi-
tioned coffee as a drink worthy of a "break," and, perhaps most importantly, the agency had created the masterful
AT&T
cam-
93
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
paigns that protected the phone monopoly long after market conditions
had w arranted new competition.
Aver would have
be discreet for another reason than the
to
government suspicion of monopolies. Most of these diamonds were coming from South
Africa.
Everyone knew how Cecil
Rhodes had run the Kimberlev Mine. that the "diggers"
It
was
common knowledge
were treated abominably. You
a reader of the National
Geographic
to
didn't have to
know how
was done, with humans scraping the ground
like
be
"dry" mining
dogs after bones.
And you didn't have to be a reader of The New York Times to know how- closelv this apartheid svstem was coupled with our own racial past. (Needless to sav Ayer also kept its distance vears later when De Beers "lent" our erstwhile enemv. the Soviet Union, more than SI billion in order to make sure thev funneled
diamonds
their
into the cartel's euphemistic Central Selling
Organization.
Before the
ad.
first
Ayer conducted one of the most thorough
market studies ever done. Here's what thev gleaned from carefully interviewing 2,073 married lege
women, 2,042 married men. 480
men. and 502 college women. The
first
col-
postwar generation
did not associate diamonds with ritualized engagement to be married,
let
alone with romantic love. Another problem was that
young men were confused about how much
diamond had direct sale
to
be
to satisfy "her concerns."
between
De
to pav,
And
and how- big
finally,
since
a
no
Beers and the end-user could occur (the
monopolv problem), the advertising must be done
for the entire
category not for the proprietary version.
Category advertising cuits, shoes, cigarettes,
Ritz. Nike,
it
almost never done. You don't
sell bis-
automobiles, or computer chips. You
sell
Marlboro. Chevrolet, or an Intel 586. If everybody's
biscuits are in the
same,
is
same
barrel,
and
if
probably doesn't reward vou to
But diamonds are
thev look prettv tell
much
people to buv
different, thanks to the cartel.
the
biscuits.
DE BEERS
The only that
its
research showed that
would
ing system before they that
Harrv Winston or
wood
stars.
De Beers was that Ayer insisted men needed to know the exact pric-
sticking point with
bite.
Tiffany's
Drenching a
starlet
generating value by association a
girl's
Yon often hear how savvy
would lend
their stones to Holly-
with brilliant baubles was a
—
way of
"Diamonds
for both parties,
best friend," cooed Marilyn Monroe.
refrain continues, "Marilyn
was
it
To the
are
cartel the
diamonds' best friend."
is
Unfortunately, what the merchants lent with one hand was
may
taken with the other, for while the mechanic's sweetheart
have thought,
wish
"I
thought, "Marilyn
way too expensive
a practical system
down and
had what Marilyn
men would be
Because ica,
is
I
get
them
had
to
me
for
doing almost
has," the
mechanic
to afford."
the buying in
all
Amer-
be concocted that would calm them
safely through the buy-hole.
Hence
the
scientific-sounding voodoo about carat weight, color, cutting, clar-
of the stones, and prices that invariably appeared in the bottom
ity
margin of the early
body copy of the
Women looked at the picture and read the Men were shown the small print over in the
ads.
ad.
corner of the page. Prices
were only vaguely mentioned. Since De Beers couldn't
control what the jeweler charged, they did not want to be con-
fined by advertised prices. Ayer told control the wholesale prices, small-time,
to worn': rigidly
remove the after-market, and the
downtown jeweler would
even encouraged
them not
fall
into line. In fact,
local jewelers not to advertise
because they
would only cheapen the process by having competitive
De
Ayer
sales.
Let
Beers advertise for you. In so doing, the cartel essentially sold
direct to the consumer. In a
still
moved and
much
for a
more clever adaptation, the
prices
were
later re-
stated in terms ol wages. "Is two months' salary too
diamond engagement
rhetorical question!
ring?" asks
one
ad. Talk
about a
95
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
The
next aspect of the Aver ads was the illustration and eopv.
French
artists, for starters.
If
von are going to borrow value
for
your product, begin with the best. Aver went with Maillol and
The
Derain, then later used Picasso. Matisse, and Edzard.
below the painting makes sure you know title,
and
date,
almost from the
a-r-t;
is
it
has a
viewed signature. Four-color was used
easily
not just to give the limited-edition art-book
start,
but also to
illusion,
that this
citation
make
sure that the
little
stones in the lower
margins would stand out big against a tinted background. This
is
the same reason, incidentally, that diamonds are often
displayed in store windows under
give the illusion of greater substance.
current "Shadows" lost
TV
umbrellas: the shadows
little
And
campaign (from
}.
this explains as well the
Walter Thompson: Ayer
the account) in which the stones magically appear on the fin-
gers of dark silhouettes. In the
background we hear the surging
"Shadows Theme" performed by the London Sym-
strings of the
phony Orchestra. So many people think that the
that the
Diamond Promotion Seniee now
music
sells a
is
classical
tape for twelve
dollars.
A generation ago the high-culture schmaltz w as borrowed not from ersatz poetry.
classical art
The guys would
and music, but from ladies-magazine
look
at
the stones, they might glance at the
artwork, but thev would pass by the purple prose that
women
would
treacle.
Here
read. This text
is
not really prose or poetry;
it's
are samples:
How true
fair
.
.
.
has been each precious moment of
their silent
meeting at the
their plans
come
altar steps, their first waltz at
the gay reception, and now, these wondrous days together
world that
sured
in
seems
the
their very
lovely, lighted
own. Each
memory
in
turn
is
in
a
trea-
depths of her engagement diamond, to
be an endless source of happy inspiration.
DE BEERS
Or:
Each memory her
turn
in
is
treasured
engagement diamond,
costly or of
many
carats, but
lovely, lighted
depths of
be an endless source of happy
to
such a radiant
inspiration. For
the
in
role,
her
diamond need not be
must be chosen
it
with care.
Or:
There
is
only tomorrow for young couples newly engaged. Heed-
lessly they
spend the present,
flinging the
days
like
along time's changing shore. And each, as
becomes
Where service to it
come up
#S, published
unseen,
with this? In Educational Services
by The Saturday Evening Post
young copywriters, the process
related to the L948
tion
falls
it
a yesterday.
did they
Case History
golden coins
—19
campaign.
is
unfolded,
First the
Board decided that the general idea
as a
at least as
Creative/Produc-
for
this
campaign
would be either springtime scenes from around the world or famous honeymoon
spots.
They gave the general
idea to the
copywriter w ho was supposed to spin the cotton candy.
A
writer explains:
In
working
poetic
this out
I
found that
and emotional mood.
I
It
was turning out copy just
seemed impossible
develop the springtime theme without getting poetic.
eymoon copy I
it
was easier
with a
to get lighter, gayer
and
In
to
the hon-
brighter copy.
talked this over with Plans and Art people and they agreed, so
we decided among ourselves be the better one and
to
that the
recommend
theme [Educational Services 1948,
9].
honeymoon theme would that over the springtime
copy-
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
writing out the
Iii
longhand
honeymoon
copy, she
would compose four
she went along, trying to link
drafts, free-associating as
the rock in with the ring in with the romantic mood. "This was
something
honeymoon and
the
(
Ibid.
the problem was
how
to
engagement and thus have occasion
of the ).
my theme was
working a crossword puzzle because
like
Once she
got the text,
went over
it
work
to
in the subject
mention the ring"
to artwork
where a
suit-
able image was sketched, to be later commissioned.
mention
I
this
process because
was from the exhaustion
it
writing such carbonated prose that the most compressed
of
diamond
headline was formed. In April of 1947. Frances Gererv was
of a
laboring mightily to get the puzzle of purple prose into the proper
crossword boxes. She was exhausted from a
new line
that
would bring together
qualities of the
As Gerety remembers
ever.
"Dog line.
diamond and have
tired.
"
I
put
He must
it
come up
to
my head down and
with
the intrinsic and romantic
not
make any sense whatso-
Ayers promotional
for
it
all
tmng
said. "Please
literature.
God, send
have because she wrote. "A Diamond
Is
me
a
Forever."
Next morning she had brought forth "something good." And indeed she had. Geretv's phrase precisely catches the synecdoche. This tiny
diamond
forever,
is
your huge love
think you could pull
demand
turns to
them
apart
mush before
is
forever,
The
how
can you even
iron law of supply
these four words.
More
and
incredibly
the line works as powerfully in the twenty-nine languages into
which films
it
Even the makers of James Bond
has been translated.
know
that while the British
Empire mav crumble. Diamonds
Arc Forever.
W hat
is
amazing, of course,
diamond may
last forever,
is
but vou
that
so patently untrue.
it's
will die
The
and so goes vour undy-
ing love. Mortality cannot be revoked, even with great advertising.
So that diamond and the love
it
signifies
must stay
in
your family
.
DE BEERS
testament to your immortal love. Someone must care for
A
it.
stone becomes an heirloom. If
you read the copy
of other ads in this series,
see the case subtly being
NEVER
even think of
made
selling
for
"keeping
your jewel:
it
you
in
will often
the family."
how unromantic, how
sacrilegious.
And how wonderful
for
De
Beers!
They had made the pur-
chase of their product essentially a one-decision mystical blue-chip stock, the only question it,
when you
not
sold
it.
act.
Like the truly
was when you bought
They had mopped up the
aftermarket.
So when the male buys the diamond he memorializes undying
love.
silly criteria,
He
throws away Consumer Reports and
he follows
meddling mind
his heart (or
to sleep.
well, at least as long as a
he enters the central it
just before
hood,
Remember, diamond.
rite of
He
buys
ter of his
He
buys
before parent-
buys something
which he may not be able to
him
.
in this next
to
chap-
life.
Nothing Is
just
He
.
rock just before
this
he becomes seriously sexual,
and which has no possible value
afford,
mond
this act of love will last
passage in Western culture.
totally worthless as a material,
their
all
other glands), and puts his
before big-time responsibilities.
just
this
else in advertising history has coin pared with "A Dia-
Forever" and the engagement
ring. But, as befits a para-
dox so central to human existence, one can see that no culture can withstand ding
it.
rituals
In japan, for instance,
which had no elaborate wed-
other than the ancient Shinto
from a wooden bowl and,
in fact,
rite
of drinking rice wine
even prohibited the importation
of diamonds until 1959, the engagement ring
percent of brides
— about the same
as in the
is
now worn by 80
United
States.
Having learned the power of translating time worked testament of love,
male
is
De
into a
Beers upped the ante While the American
told he should
budget two months'
salary, his
Japanese
99
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
100
How Can
You
Make Two Months' Salary Last Forever?.
1997
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When
you've found
woman
tin.-
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last forever?
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The world* diamond expert*
fincc
told to devote three or lour months' earnings to the
counterpart
is
purchase of
his
undxing love svmbol.
Although "nothing grass," the cartel
is
will
bring hack the hour of splendor in the
eagerly trying to ritualize anniversaries. So.
along with the tennis bracelet and ear studs, w hich eat up other-
DE BEERS
wise worthless supply from Australia and Siberia,
"10th
Diamond Anniversary Band" and
Diamond
the
the "25th Anniversary
Necklace." Price? Simple, according to the ads.
much do you
"How
love her after ten [or twenty-five] years of mar-
riage?" Naturally,
it's
ten or twenty-five times as
ten or twenty-five times as
ment
we now have
deep
as the
much. So you dig
two-month-wages engage-
ring.
Now,
just for
the fun of
it,
take those "brand-new
gem
stones"
(already millions of years old) back to the store ten seconds after
you have bought them, and see what they're worth. to get 18
percent of what von
sible isn't the point,
from the
Home
is it? If
just paid.
only
it
You'll
be lucky
But doing something sen-
were, w e d be buying zirconium
Shopping Network.
101
COKE AND CHRISTMAS The Claus That Refreshes
TO MOVE YOUR PRODUCT it
out of the store, you
need
first
to
move
into the consumer's imagination. For, as social scientists have
shown,
it is
Very often
hard to
this colonizing
some calendar jumps out
an enemy
tight
—
event.
like the
The
is
who
has outposts in your mind.
done by positioning your object near
big hand strikes twelve and your object
clockwork cuckoo. You don't have to break
through, you're already there.
The
brass ring in advertising
without detection.
Some
is,
of course, to carry this off
products have gotten themselves so deep
inside the clock that they
seem
have been there forever. Take
to
the rhythms of passing through a day, for instance. Breakfast was a creation of the cereal start the day),
companies (we used
to eat dinner scraps to
the coffee break used to be at four in the afternoon
until the coffee roasters
ing, the cocktail
hour
moved
is
it
away from tea time
to the
morn-
an invention ot the liquor industry, the
Ploughman's Lunch was introduced to the English
in the 1960s,
not in the sixteenth century, and so forth.
As with a day, so with the
year.
Events
like
Super Bowl Sun-
day, the Oscars, Secretaries' Day, Spring Break,
interests.
Day have been taken over by commercial Anthropologists call the phenomenon by which one
system
laid
and even Saint
by
is
Patrick's
down over another
syncretism. Advertisers call
it
nirvana.
Coke's Santa
Haddon Sundblom
for the Things
Cinco de Mayo,
Observe Halloween. Halloween started
Go
Better with Coke
campaign, 1964.
festival, this
one having
to
as just
another pagan
do with the harvest and the coming of
cold weather. Bonfires were
lit
and chants sung
for safe passage
COKE AND CHRISTMAS
mas"), an elflike creature runs about on Christmas
He
presents.
is tiny,
small
When what
to
enough
little
knew
I
in
a
sleigh,
Thomas
cartoonist
and
moment
eight tiny rein-deer;
must he
it
the chimney.
eyes should appear,
and
old driver so lively
Nick was plumped up into a
St.
come down
my wondering
But a miniature
With a
to
Eve delivering
quick,
Nick.
St.
by the
full-sized Santa
editorial
Nast. In 1869 he collected his images from
Haiyer's Weekly and published them in a book called Santa Clans
we have Moore to thank for the reindeer (and reindeer names), we have Nast to thank for fatten-
and His Works. all
their great
ing
II
up Santa and sending him
By the end
He was
in
to the
North Pole.
of the nineteenth century, Santa
newspapers,
magazines, as a toy
in
was everywhere.
doll,
on calendars,
in
children's books, and, thanks to the great chromolithographer
Owing
Louis Prang, on Christmas cards.
"chromo," he Santa
is
appears
still
he needs a big
needs a
belt, a
needs a beard-trim
The not
in a
multicolored suit sketched by Nast.
not ready for prime time yet. He's too severe, too judg-
He
mental.
first
to the innovation of the
jolly
old
come from
little
little
letting out there,
red coat, he needs those buccaneer boots, he
— most of
St.
tuck here, a
all,
he needs
to get
warm and
fuzzy.
Nick that we know from countless images did
folklore,
nor did he originate
in
the imaginations of
He came from the yearly advertisements of the Coca-Cola Company. He wears the corporate colors the famous Moore and
Nast.
—
red and white
—
for a reason:
of the North Pole.
Hollywood
talent
And
its
soft
is
working out
of Atlanta, not
out
while his polar bears max conic from a
agency (CAA),
In the 1920s die selling
he
his
marketing comes from MBAs.
Coca-Cola Company was having
drink during the winter.
cold-weather beverage. "Thirst Knows
They wanted
No
to
difficulty
make
Season' was their
it
a
ini-
106
TWENTY ADS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD
tial
winter campaign. At
personage
like
first
how
they decided to show
a winter
Santa could enjoy a soft drink in December. They
showed Santa chug-a-lugging with the young soda jerk with the Coke
(the addled
bottle cap jauntily stuck
They
head). But then they got lucky.
Boy
Sprite
on
his
started showing Santa relax-
ing from his travails by drinking a Coke, then
showed how the
kids
might leave a Coke (not milk) for Santa, and then implied that the gifts
coming
in
from Santa were
in
exchange for the Coke. Paydirt.
Perfect positioning! Santa's presents might not be in exchange for a Coke, but they
were "worth"
a Coke. Coke's Santa
aside other Santas. Coke's Santa
From
was
blom had spent much of the year preparing the D'Arcy Agency in friend,
Lou
Sundblom went
died,
Haddon H. Sundcuddly Santas for
his
Louis. First he painted a salesman
St.
Prentis from
"own" Christmas.
starting to
the late 1930s until the mid-1950s,
was elbowing
Muskegon, Michigan, and
to the mirror
Lou
after
and painted himself. Haddon
was a big man and a big drinker. Mrs. Claus was based on Mrs.
Sundblom.
Sundblom would do two or three Santas The Saturday Evening
azines, especially billboards,
and maybe another
ings almost always
Coke, sharing
his
for
Post,
mass-market mag-
and then one
for point-of-sale items.
showed Santa
Coke with the
The
for
paint-
giving presents and receiving
kids
surrounded by
toys, playing
with the toys and drinking the Coke, or reading a letter from a kid while drinking the
Coke
left like
the glass of milk.
They Knew What I Wanted,"
read,
Now
"It's
My Gift
The headlines
for Thirst,"
the Gift for Thirst," or "Travel Refreshed." He's a
"And
little
mis-
chievous, not above lifting a turkey leg from the fridge and sitting
down
a spell in Dad's
soft drink"
comfy chair with the soon-to-be
of the season.
Sundblom was quick
to
glom on
to
any passing motif. After
Disney made Bambi, a fawn was worked into the after
"traditional
Gene Autry sang "Here Comes Santa
illustration,
and
Claus," a reindeer soon
COKE AND CHRISTMAS
made
his
way
happy scene. After
into the
all,
the provenance of
Rudolph the Red-Xosed Reindeer was pure commercialism. Rudolph was created by Robert
gomery Ward, and
L.
May, a copywriter for Mont-
proved so popular that 2.3 million
his story
copies of the musical score of "Rudolph" were sent out with the
Ward
catalog in 1939.
So complete was the colonization of Christmas that Coke's Santa had elbowed aside
all
of the 1947 movie Miracle on 34th Street
He
the recent film The Santa Clause. cards, he
tion
Army
he
just as
is
is
the department-store Santa, and
lie is
has celebrated
it
ot this
one of Coke's agencies. W. ner, Blitzen,
& Co.),
Coke
Classic,
to mall
is
is
come
is
site, is
on one
Decem-
owns. In
fact,
Co. (no relation to Don-
December
now on the corporation's Christmas
part of an art
show
that
is
trucked around
to the Louvre!), has
licensed to the Franklin Mint lor a collector is
on special Christmas tree decorations,
star of a special television alive
&
each holiday season (even
plate selling for $29.95,
and
Doner
it
hired almost exclusively for the
Sundblom's Santa
own Web
his
is
B.
Darwinian
success each
its
ber by putting Sundblom's creation on everything
from mall
even the Salva-
Santa!
struggle of images, and
cans of
the Santa of
the Santa on Hallmark
Coca-Cola has been the happy beneficiary
hi jinks.
is
the Santa
the Santa riding the Norelco shaver each Christmas
is
season, he
He was
comers by the 1940s.
commercial
in
which he seems
to
of the advertising panels of a delivery truck.
The Sundblom Santa
lifts
drink bottle
his soft
in a
holiday toast
and winks. As the horror films promise
Keep watching the
skies.
.
.
.
he'll
be coming around again.
Every Christinas,
poor Pepsi. Thev must dread Christmas.
he'll
be baaaack.
Pits
107
THE VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE William Bernbach and the Fourth Wall
ONE OF the most PROVOCATIVE ways tising
to
by considering individual ads
is
approach
modem
adver-
in the context of
what
Harold Bloom has called "the anxiety of influence." Adapting the Freudian idea of Oedipal
conflict,
poet must struggle for his
own
Bloom argued
that any major
voice with a great predecessor
whose strength both shapes and threatens
to
overcome the poetic
"son." So Milton wrestled with Spenser, Keats with Shakespeare,
and Wallace Stevens with Keats,
Shelley,
and Wordsworth. The
poetic canon in English can thus be presented as an interfamilial struggle, with the successful "sons" breaking loose
and becoming "fathers" past them.
And
so
What makes
it
this
to the next generation,
from the father
which must push
goes.
mode
of interpretation rewarding
is
that
it
can be applied to any creative family. So moviemakers like
Quentin Tarantino are aware they are rewriting films of Hitchcock; architects are forever recasting the shapes; painters are
retouching canvases; musicians are ers.
The
struggle
is
humming
not just to be different;
the tunes of othit
is
to
be more
powerful.
What makes
advertising interesting in this regard
creative presence sign his
is
usually
again.
is
(the copywriter does not
out there for
all
to see.
for),
Again and again
As Howard Gossage, the iconoclastic paterfamilias of
San Francisco advertising Think Small, 1962.
that the
name, nor do we usually know what agency he works
but his selling technique
and
anonymous
is
"The object
of
in
the 1960s, once said sardonically.
your advertising should not be to communicate
ft
IH1 VOLMWMIN
Of iwiaic*. >N