Category Archives: Advertising

Tyler the Creator’s totally planned Mountain Dew offensive

May 5, 2013

Apologizing for content has become its own strategy:

Tyler the Creator recently partnered with Mountain Dew with an ad featuring a lineup of black men,a white police officer urging a battered woman to point out the one who abused her:  the abuser is a goat named Felicia.

The Lineup

The video was criticized as racist and sexist.  I have news: the world is racist and sexist.  Black men over-index in incarceration rates, and women are most frequently battered.  Yet, advertising that satirized aspects of reality was pulled from the airwaves.  What protesters didn’t consider was that releasing, then yanking the spot was an effective strategy, and must have been planned.



Vine-tyler

Tyler the Creator owns Vine.  His bizarre videos mirror the Mountain Dew spot.  Satirical, random, and violent: the humor little boys crave and Mountain Dew’s demographic.  The type of kids who love to offend.  Mountain Dew proved themselves to be bold enough to piss off your mom.  They apologized, loudly via sponsored Tweet, to appease the inevitable protests, earning even more media and a wider audience than the spot alone could have reached using traditional targeting methods.   DONE. This isn’t even an apology:

 

Have you ever read 1984?  Have you ever read Catch-22?  These novels couldn’t predict our fractured online content consumption, or social media interaction, but they did foresee the sanitizing of reality.  The pieces of culture that reveal our destructive, misogynistic, outdated forms of social contact are barred from discussion.  Our stories support a fake construct of fairness, while reality continues to exist, in all its cruel and unbalanced forms.

Tyler Apology

Edit:  @kidsleepy at Adland.tv wrote a counterpoint/ great rant/ response to our Twitter interaction.

 

TARGET IS BEAUTIFUL

Apr 4, 2013

I admire Target’s simple grace in-store.  The various executions of wall signs, hanging signs, aisle violators, and owned-brand packaging all contribute to a mood and brand that’s unmistakably Target.

AISLE COOL
Logo

Not only is Target consistently on-brand and clean across its many incarnations (some much, much cleaner than others), the store itself signifies purity, the type of place you can feel good about learning the latest trend or walking out with a $20 birthday present or $100 trash can.

Target OJ

I loved working on Target because I got to observe firsthand how dedicated their Minnesotan marketers were to the Target Mission.  They agnonized over the perfect balance, mood, and execution of each photo, model, and facial expression.

Target Food Section Groceries

It’s interesting how clean the logo and straightforward the concept of Target is: a central vortex, once entered, that stands for success.

Target Aisle Paper Towels Toilet Paper

How simple a symbol to repeat, and be drawn to.  How many images and mood boards and nonverbal communication must happen between every individual in order to ascribe such a harmonious visual presence?

Entrance Target Fashion

The answer is:  a lot.  Target workers shared images and mood boards and paid attention to the details.  They visited Target stores all the time.  They used Target merchandise.  They lived their brand.

Target Shopping Aisles

Target attracts brand fanatics to Minneapolis the same way that Nike pulls athletic, driven workers to their headquarters in Beaverton.  The brand lives.  It’s one we’ve grown up with.  The psyedelic supermodel commercials were like nothing else on TV; I remember being amazed.

Target Glamour

Who created these images?  How were they done?  On a computer?  Where was this white and red world of beautiful multicultural people?  What was the industry and jobs and faces of the people who made this be on TV?

Supermodeltarget

The answer is: people who wanted to make those images made them.  It was a partnership formed around a circular beacon.  These opportunites to strike forth on new advertising ground, with campaigns like Target’s iconic red and white psychedelia aren’t impossible, but they are rare.  They require a unique combination of personalities and opportunity, of permission and bravery on both the client side and the agency side.

Target Hanging Signs In Store Retail Display Listerine Capri Sun M&M

When a formula works, it can create a brand standard that informs the company’s creativity and output for years in the future, much like a strong genetic strain in a species.

Target Shopper Segment Audience Orange Gillette

I believe the types of emotional work that affect people on a mass scale are created by individuals who exist in an emotional state of support.  The best work comes out of informed creativity and transparent, two-way communication.  In simple terms: everyone gets along.

Shopping Target Suzy Mae

All these things I think about while shopping Target.  And I think Target is beautiful.

xo
suzymae

p.s.
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The Blogcademy was good to me

Apr 4, 2013

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my first day as a blogcadette


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The Blogcademy is a trio of inspring women teaching aspiring bloggers to be smarter about their brands, social media, communications and content.  I’ve been looking forward to this weekend for months.  It was a beautiful drive down the street… LA is beautiful right now.

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Nubby Twiglet (above), Gala Darling, and Kat Williams are the headmisstresses.  Ladies passed business cards and chatted before class started promptly at 10am.

I haven’t even begun to absorb the day’s education.  Workbooks, report cards, new names, faces, and bags full of swag.

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Patty Hume of Grow (pattyhume.com)

I’d met and corresponded with a few, both in person and over email. One thing most women (and it is mostly women) take away from the experience is a newfound community.   Animal ears are kind of a big deal around here.

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Natalie Wiser-Orozco of The Devil Wears Parsley; Martina Padilla of Spraypaint and Glitterflake

I met ladies I’d lunched with, soul-sisters from my hometown, girls from across the globe, and two very cool owners of the McCadden Space  with a thing for vintage and campers.

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Class isn’t over yet… more on The Blogcademy later…

over & out

xo suzymae

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