This story about Bill Bernbach is probably apocryphal, meaning it's plausible but probably never really happened. A bit like Yogi Berra's famous quotation or non-quotation, "I didn't really say all the things I said."
The story I heard was a client asked Bernbach why his agency's copywriters spent so much time laboring over copy, "nobody reads it anyway."
Bernbach, it's said, replied, "Ten-percent of people read copy. That's who we write it for."
As I write this, I've been thinking as I do, about writing. Writing that moves people. That informs them. That makes them think. Words, as I posted not long ago, you could stub your toe on.
I write ads for a living. But a lot of clients seem to call me--often out of the ether--because they're looking for words they're unlikely to get from anyone else. I regularly tell clients I work in epigrams. Short, memorable statements that capture the essence of something larger.
In a way, epigrams go beyond taglines. FedEx could have used "When it has to be there overnight." That would have been a perfectly good tagline. "When it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight," added swagger, meaning, with and dimension that brought it to another level.
Good writing, good art-direction, good design can do that. It can take work beyond.
There's a line from Cole Porter's great song, "You're the Top," for instance. "You're the purple light/ Of a summer night in Spain."
Since I heard that line at 1:20, maybe fifty years ago, I've spent many an evening looking for purple light--in Spain and elsewhere. They're words that stayed with me somehow. Maybe in all my years and all the words I've heard, I've never heard "purple light before."
This is our job. Our calling. Our value-add. To make what could be otherwise disposable, indelible.
To make what could be disposable, indelible.
One thing many of us along the way have lost is the time and attention it takes to do a close-reading. To enjoy the sound of words themselves. And how sounds create creases in our brain and embed in our memory. If Dizzy Gillespie or Claude Debussey or Rachel Joyce said the magic of jazz is the space between notes, we might find similar wells of meaning between words. Meaning, feeling, purple light is how we can own a piece of real estate in someone's brain.
More simply, as friend Rob Schwartz has so often said, "Clients buy words." In any event, they're what I sell.
If you've ever wondered how people could memorize epics like the Iliad, the Odyssey and Gilgamesh (these are long books, not Archie comics) it's because they were created to be remembered. No matter their length, they were created as word-music. The sound, conjunction, shape of the words all help meaning embed. I know this is pretty "English Graduate Lecture" for an advertising blog. But advertising is about being noticed and recalled at the right time--just like art. Just like the purple light above.
I was a close reader even when I was a boy, I don't exactly know why. But at a Captain Kangaroo-age, I remember, examined and perseverated over:
Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear.
Fuzzy Wuzzy had no hair.
Fuzzy Wuzzy wasn't fuzzy,
Was he?
That seemed 60 years ago, and today, about as good a piece of writing as you're going to find.
Can you get a little Fuzzy Wuzzy in your script? A memory device, repetition, a word-play, a laugh?
More recently, my now-deceased-bestie Fred--I suppose in an act of self-elegizing--sent me a poem called "The Waiter," by David McCord:
By and by,
God caught his eye.
Have you ever seen a spot, read a headline or sat through a powerpoint with more trenchant entrenched-ness?
Back in the late 1950s, in ghetto Newark, the great African-American poet LeRoi Jones (later Amiri Baraka) wrote the poem below. I realize copy about polyunsaturated corn-oil spread, Saran Wrap or motor-oil is unlikely to make you gasp like this loaded poem does. But still.
Can we strive?
Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note
The ground opens up and envelopes me
Each time I go out to walk the dog.
Or the broad edged silly music the wind
Makes when I run for a bus . . .
Things have come to that.
And now, each night I count the stars,
And each night I get the same number.
And when they will not come to be counted,
I count the holes they leave.
Nobody sings anymore.
And then last night, I tiptoed up
To my daughter's room and heard her
Talking to someone, and when I opened
The door, there was no one there . . .
Only she on her knees, peeking into
Her own clasped hands.
It's a poem about despair.
The terror of being a father in a world gone mad.
And each night I get the same number.
And when they will not come to be counted,
I count the holes they leave.
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