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Saturday, April 23, 2011

Stories You May Have Missed


Greetings from Easter Island. Yes dyed eggs and peeps. All of the week's big stories are here:

Geez, $14,000 on superhero capes sounds perfectly acceptable to me.

Bob Eubanks is sad: No whoopie in outer space.

"I was wondering what happened to his RSVP!" - Mr. Bean confirms attendance.

If they add Marvel to Disneyland, I'm going to move there permanently.

Yeah. Two shows were just about right.

Where's Walt Neubrand when you need him?

Coup at Dodger Stadium!

Monday, April 18, 2011

Chewing Gum at the Office


Just another day at the office.
The call from my side went something like this:

“Montana, huh?”

“You want to test your new product into Montana?”

“But, why?”

Twenty minutes later I took my directive and charted a marketing solution. But first it was time to speak with the natives. Or near natives.

I have a friend who decided it would be a good idea to save the world in Montana. That’s a wonderful concept, with the exception that I can’t possibly imagine living that far from the entertainment capital of the world. I mean to me living in Montana is like living in Edmonton. Even there they have a hockey team with five Stanley Cups. Buying media in Montana must be the same as buying media in Stockton, only easier.

So yesterday, I interviewed her to see what it’s like living in Montana. After all, how am I going to decide how to market this new chewing gum into our 44th most populous state?

---------

Media Guy: So before living in Montana, what was it like living in L.A.?

Montana Friend: Living is L.A. is the equivalent of selling your soul for a patch of good weather, movie stars, gridlock traffic and superficial tans. Best of all, it can be taped live before a studio audience.

MG: What about living in Montana?

MF: Living in Montana is a lot like being duct-taped inside a storage container with a bunch of honey badgers. It's dangerous and it’s probably going to be fatal no matter what.

MG: How can you tell the difference between dangerous mountain-people and not-as-dangerous mountain-people?

MF: At first everyone will seem like crazed-looking individuals who reek of meat-sweat and failure. Some of them will be dangerous and some will merely be your fellow Safeway patrons. After a while they will all be your friends.

MG: I hear garage sales are huge there.

MF: Beware of garage sales! They are actually traps.

MG: Traps for what?

MF: You start your morning with visions of finding those used albums in near mint condition or even a funky wooden radio from 1961. You go from telephone pole to telephone pole, guided only by those stenciled GARAGE SALE signs and then you arrive to junk heaven. Once you’re there and search the neatly organized merchandise, a delightful old lady named Gertrude will approach you. She'll say "I have the best stuff inside.” When you bite, she’ll spring the trap. "So...have you enrolled in a fellowship
yet?" Then you’re toast. One hour to wiggle out of the Baptist Fellowship trap. Save your soul, indeed.

MG: It must be easier to drive in Montana than L.A.

MF: Au contraire. If you feel the need to leave the relative safety of your home and get behind the wheel, be prepared. You’ve just entered Grand Theft Auto on chaos mode. What’s worse is how exasperated you become because no one will notice that they nearly killed you. Instead they give you that "what the f**k are you doing on MY side of the road?" look.

MG: What about the bears? Have you honed your bear-fighting skills?

MF: You will be attacked by a bear at some point in your life here. These beasts remind you of Yogi Bear without the hat and tie. Don’t be fooled! They are ferocious killing-machines that are not controlled in any way. Your best bet to live is to find a rock that is blunt on one end for bludgeoning and sharp on the other for stabbing. You should definitely watch The Edge with Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin because if the thought of beating/stabbing a monster that slightly resembles a Hanna-Barbara cartoon made you feel any emotion other than battle-rage, you will not survive. You know what? Nevermind. Bears always win, except if they are in a Hollywood movie.

MG: So why don’t you move back to L.A.?

MF: Because I love it here.

---------

So believe or not, this cynical, but loving view of Montana gave me exactly what I needed: a pure, unadulterated view of a misunderstood state. And the perfect genesis of marketing genius.

Thank you Miss Montana!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

MGS Cusine: Vanilla Cloud Cosmos

Drink of the Month. Enjoy!



3 oz Absolut Vanilla Vodka
1 oz Contreau
2 oz Cranberry Juice
Fresh squeezed lime
Shake well with ice in cocktail shaker, strain and pour.
Garnish with fresh lime.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Advertising: Edgy or Over the Line?


Spirit Airlines had quite a 2010. Holding 200 passengers on a New York tarmac for hours and refusing to give water or bathroom breaks. Charging $45 for a carry-on bag. Stranding 16,000 passengers with a seemingly impromptu strike. Now the low-cost airline is making a new name for themselves: Frat Boy Advertising.

Edgy and crude, their copywriters are pushing the envelope towards adolescent and chauvinistic. Two online ads caught my attention.

1) Notice the headline:

Many Unbelievably Fantastic Fares to Diving destinations.

2) How about this one?:

Many Islands Low Fares

Oral sex and sexy moms. There's no wonder who their demographic is on this campaign.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Why isn’t packaging this hot anymore?


I remember going to dad's office - he was Mr. Public Relations once upon a time - and watching the secretaries change the ribbons in the typewriters. (I wonder how many of us actually used a real typewriter in our lifetimes.)

Anyway the best part of them changing the ribbons was they gave me the incredible tins the ribbons came in. I saved a few of these incredibly designed packages. It’s sad that everything now is downloadable or in plastic clamshells and neat designs are extinct.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

The Anti-Sweetheart



Last time I talked of the pleasure of meeting up with Diane Lane. This time, the anti-sweetheart of the ad world is chronicled. You don’t know him by name, but you know his type oh too well. He’s the kind of guy who can ruin Valentine’s Day, Christmas and the Fourth of July in the same year. The kind of guy who squeezes a penny so hard Lincoln cries.

For a man from Joy, Illinois, Jeffery Crowe is one of the least happy people you've ever met.

If he's not The Most Hated Man in Advertising, he's in the running. His appearance is typically that of a man with hemorrhoids and acid indigestion. He looks everywhere but into your eyes. It's even money as to which he enjoys more – sneering or yelling.

Once, in his first year at the agency, an hour before the American Music Awards, iconic Dick Clark was trying to explain something to Crowe about program flow and stage direction. Except Crowe wasn't looking at Clark. He was tuning his two-way walkie-talkie.

"I'm trying to talk to you!" Clark objected.

It didn't help. Crowe was head down deep in though. Finally, Clark slapped the walkie out of Crowe's hands, smashing it to the floor.

He paid attention after that.

One time, a nameless CBS executive thought it would be helpful for Crowe and positive thinking guru Tony Robbins to have lunch. He let Crowe drink in some of Robbins' perspectives.

The three of them united at a Santa Monica eatery. Robbins, positive and outgoing as ever, tried to convey some insight. Except Crowe wasn't looking at Robbins. He wasn't looking at the CBS executive, either. He was looking at the stock report. The whole time. With his Wall Street Journal handy to take notes in. Robbins did not leave impressed.

Only one problem. He’s a genius. A creative director’s dream and an agency executive’s nightmare. So when a new agency head hits town, before they set their Samsonites down, they’re already redlining Crowe from the agency masthead. Funny thing is, almost no one stands up for him.

Crowe was boxed up and booted from the New York agency scene and landed in Los Angeles. Awards aplenty and an attitude to top it. It's a huge moment for Crowe, if only because his disdain for making nice means everything rides on brilliance.

"In New York, they want to kick you in the b***s," says his new creative director Donald Cassidy. "In Boston, they don't care about you. But in L.A, they want to love you. They want to make a connection with you. Any kind of connection. But Jeff doesn't really care."

Crowe could own L.A. if he wanted. In a city that is so laid back, you are horizontal; Crowe could have his name on half the billboards and all the awards. My goodness, the Enigma as he’s called, doesn't even try. He has zero loyalty from all of the people he’s made wads of cash for and doesn't want any. If there is such a thing as a Jeffery Crowe Fan Club, he is having a membership drive -- to drive them out.

If you're a client marketing director looking for a helpful answer out of Jeffery Crowe, good luck.

Marketing Director (in a conference call): What happened in that focus group, Jeffery?

Crowe: We tested the product.

Marketing Director: Right, but what did you see developing there? Take us through it.

Crowe (archly): It seemed like a good place to understand likes and dislikes.

Crowe is the kind of guy you just want to pick up and throw into a swimming pool, which is exactly what Dennis Hopper and Margeaux Hemingway did one year after a Friars Club Roast.

"He's an conceited little jerk," Hopkins, once said on a national show. "He's a little wuss."

Harsh? Yes.

Heard before? Yes.

Crowe's new L.A. agency teammates will defend him, when asked. "It's surprising to me how people form a belief of a guy who've never even met him," says new copywriter, Marisa David, a close friend.

So what's the truth?

"He is what he is," David says.

Not exactly something for your tombstone.

So why is Crowe as popular as cancer?

Is it because he never makes eye contact?

Is it his seeming inability to answer a question without displaying his massive amount of ego?

Is it jealousy from all of his awards?

Is it his penchant for making things difficult?

"Deep, deep down, I think he's a really good guy," David says.

Maybe.

But why do we have to look that deep?

Friday, February 18, 2011

World Portraits: Sandstone Citadels

In the southeast corner of Arabia lies the Sultanate of Oman, a charming blend of the old and new. Near its capital in Muscat is one of the most amazing sites: immense sandstone citadels that were carved naturally from the wind and have petrified over the last four centuries to remain in nearly the same form you would have seen in the 17th century.