I ran into the kitchen not too many minutes ago and saw a half-used bottle of the Stop-N-Shop brand dishwashing liquid leaning against a new bottle of Dawn dishwashing liquid that I bought at the store just a few hours ago.
My wife and I both grew up with Depression (and depressing) parents and try as we might, neither she nor I can 100% get over the "re-using ziplock bags," "saving bakery string," and buying store-brand soap. A few weeks ago, I was in the city. Some friends and I were going to dinner at a place in midtown--a place I'd never heard of. But nonetheless, when I opened the menu, there was a steak listed on it for $87.
When your first apartment cost you $90/month in rent, I don't think--even if Mackenzie Scott for whatever reason decided to give me billions, I don't think I could ever spend a rentsworth on dinner. Even if the agency or the client was paying.
Despite my impecunious side, I'll tellya something about Stop-N-Shop brand dishwashing liquid.
It sucks.
It comes out like bubble soap, thin and watery. It doesn't foam. It doesn't clean. It doesn't even smell good.
I don't really give a hoot or a holler about it, but it sent me down a spiral. You've heard me rant and rave about how major advertisers stopped advertising. They stopped telling people why their dishwashing soap was better than the store brand. They stopped letting people know about the R&D they do, and the secret ingredients they add that cut washing time by 22%. They stopped all that in favor of meaningless garbage. Now when you see their brand in the store for $7 and the store brand for $4, you buy the store brand. The georgesurvey estimates one trillion dollars of brand-equity has been destroyed over the last thirty digital years--all in the name of saving on advertising expenditure.
The thing I did notice on the Stop-N-Shop brand dishwashing liquid was how they named the scent of their blue SLO (soap-like-object.)
I silently applauded the copywriter, or the committee, or the "naming team" that came up with "Waterfall Mist." What a perfectly evocative aerosol of verbal nothingness.
When I was a boy, still in college, I worked as a writer for the Montgomery Ward catalog, specifically in the shoe department. The worst part of that horrid $225/week job was when the featured photograph on a catalog page showed a pair of women's pumps, or a slingback or something, that came in a variety of colors.
Because the type had to be "dropped out" (white over a color photo) you were in a lot of trouble if you got one of the colors wrong or left one out. It cost a lot of money to fix that sort of printing bollocks.
One catalog season, the task of demarcating color names fell to me. It usually went to the women in the department. They wrote more of the women's pages. But I was either "moving up," or being punished and it became my job.
I've had a career full of pressure. I've been towered over by 6'10" Chris Wall. Growled at by Pytka. And maniacked at by Tony Kaye.
Nothing came close to being on the wrong side of Rocco Imbriale, the catalog's Joe-Pesci-like production manager.
I quickly figured a way out of ever being asked to write the colors again.
I typed
Black
Navy
Red
Yellow
Pink
Green
And then I thought and rewrote.
Black power
Navy bean
Red scab
Yellow jaundice
Pink elephant
Green mucus
I handed the copy in to Rocco and left for the day.
He never said anything, but they never gave me the color job again.
I missed my chance at Waterfall Mist.