My sense when I watch an event like the Superbowel, or even the presidential election and the purported speeches and debates leading up to giant events, is that something is dramatically wrong with much of our nation.
The "dramatically wrong-ness" isn't our politics, or our climate-denial, or some ingrained-unfairness in the system, or inequitable distribution of wealth, the wrong-ness is more fundamental and ontological that those things. The wrong-ness emanates from our very core.
As a nation, we are no longer reality-based.
We have a president who thinks the Gaza, which has been battled over for 6,000 years, can become the Cote d Azur. He redraws weather maps to change the course of hurricanes. He fabricates and lies.
The list is nearly endless--and empirical--not political.
The same can be said for our industry.
Advertising is no
longer reality-based.
By that I mean the messages in our work, and the people we show in our work, are not real. They worry about running out of chipped and formed potato products. We act as if stentorian affirmations about yessing will compensate for the closure of american freedom. We pretend celebrities live lives like ours, wear funny clothing and care about coffee so much they actually immerse themselves in a slurry of coffee sludge.
The driving goal
of our political discourse and our advertising discourse is no longer to
communicate what we do or how we can serve people--how we can make a problem
better--it's to create a spectacle, most often ridiculous (like immigrants are
eating our pets) so that we dominate the news-cycle.
We no longer inform.
We entertain.
Don't get me wrong. Entertainment is valuable.
But in politics and advertising entertainment should serve a purpose. To promote or make more palatable something--an idea or a product--you want to sell.
Most of the spots played on the superbowel, told me nothing. Or their high-octane glib-grab overwhelmed any definitional sense of a brand or product's reason for being. I believe the impact of most of what I saw will disappear like your fist when you open up your hand.
I'm not picking
on the pringles work but the pringles work is a good example. First, pringles
are gross. An ersatz potato product in a can--the words chopped, processed,
reformed and shaped come to mind. Does anyone since the beginning of time think
anyone since the beginning of time will be so bent out of shape because there
are no pringles left that they'll a) care, b) say something, c) yell into a can.
Not only was the spot devoid of any truth--people care more about pringles than
everything else in the world--flying mustaches is about as unappetizing an
association you can make with a finger-food. I can only picture little hairs on
my artificial chips.
The spectacle was
there.
A party nicer than one I've ever been to.
Better looking people than I've ever seen (and not a single heavy person though
amerika is the world's fattest nation.)
Flying mustaches.
Celebrity a-go-go.
And a re-scored and re-recorded pop-tune from 1967.
A spectacle.
I might be unqualified to judge advertising these days.
99.89-percent of my clients come to me not knowing how to define what they do or how it's different from anyone else.
They've not done the work, nor have their previous marketing partners, of marking out like a dog a playground, its territory. They've not done the work of un-parity-izing their offering.
In politics, too.
If you're the same as everyone else by definition it means you have nothing to say.
So stand on a chair and scream it.
I am perfectly bland and I stand for nothing, pick me!
In other words, make a spectacle of yourself.
GeorgeCo., LLC, a Delaware Company is doing the opposite. And entering our sixth year in business, we are earning more revenue by defining and differentiating clients than 186 of Ogilvy's 144 offices.
I don't want to choose a beer, or a vacation, or a car, or an anything based on spectacle. I might remember your name for a bit. But there's a good chance I'll associate you with excess, profligacy and waste.
I like a good joke.
I like a nice production.
I even like celebrities.
But if those things aren't linked to an idea and a message, you're pissing money away.
I don't like that.