Friday 31 October 2008

Too Much Soap - Not Enough Hope

The Obamamercial - a paid 30 min spot on prime time tv - in the U.S. has understandably attracted a lot of comment. Now I have as big a man crush on Obama as the next guy (unless the guy's name is Joe the Plumber) but I found it a bit disappointing. Five families were featured and (as Obama said on The Daily Show) they were "all hopeful but they all faced challenges, yadda, yadda, yadda". I found all this a bit depressing and tuned out half-way through. One of the things I like about Obama is his sly sense of humour ,which comes through in his book "The Audacity of Hope". This includes the mustard story. You have to remember at this stage state senator Obama was just traveling around Illinois, solo, meeting folks, without any expectation he would one day be the Democrat Presidential Nominee.

 I am hoping that it is just his advisers trying to make him look serious and Presidential.

Someone Here pointed out that the opening of the Obamamercial featured the flugelhorn. On listening again I am not so sure. It sounds a bit like a French horn to me though if it was a French horn I am sure Fox would have run with the story by now.

The flugelhorn is of course famous for the opening bars of Aaron Copland's sublime "Fanfare for the Common Man", or so I thought. When I was at music camp in the 1970s we played this piece for our final concert (I played the trombone) and the opening fanfare was played by the flugelhorn player. He was also the Australasian Junior Euphonium Champion. He was my music camp bestie and then this slutty flautist got his attention and it was clear that I was a "third trombone" and so spent the rest of the time practicing on my 'bone alone - well I was 12. I still have a photo of him, me and that girl in concert.

Anyway. Checking out the wikipedia entry Here it lists, inter alia, the trumpet and French horn as the main instruments playing the fanfare. You can see a video of this piece being played Here. I see that it is indeed played mainly by trumpet and French horn without a flugelhorn in sight. In case you are wondering the flugelhorn looks like this. It was allegedly invented by Alfred Sax who invented the.... guess what?

The Copland is one of my favourite pieces of music, especially as the theme of his Third Symphony and everytime I have listened to it down the years I have imagined the opening bars being played by a solo flugelhornist.  I hope that this doesn't represent the first of many disappointments that Obama's presidency might bring.

Flugel means wing in German and it is not inconceivable that had Obama grown up in Germany (and hence have been a secret Nazi. Maybe he was! We need to be told the truth etc.) his nickname would have been flugelhorn as that is the German equivalent of "wing nut"or "jug ears"*.

We'll soon have this resolved though as the Copland piece is sometimes played at the Presidential Inaugration ceremony (e.g. Clinton's first). If I can take my eyes off President Obama for a minute I'll see if I can spot a lone flugelhornist. Possibly standing on a grassy knoll.

* Okay, I made that bit up.

Friday 24 October 2008

Post Ad Hoc

How come I have to walk 15 minutes to buy stamps for a letter when there are mail boxes everywhere? So here is an idea. No, not stamp vending machines on mailboxes. How very last millenium. But what about allowing people free postage provided they let advertisements be stuck onto their mail? There is a lot of real estate on an envelope. Unlike junk mail the recipient will actually look quite favourably on the advertiser who is after all paying for the letter from their dear friend who is too lazy or cheap to buy a stamp. And for the advertiser the recipients address and possibly gender is a goldmine of information for targeted advertising.

 

The only problem would be to stop direct mailers sending out junk mail for free. With extra ads!

Wednesday 22 October 2008

Atheist Bus Ad Campaign


God may move in mysterious ways but atheists take the bus. In a move which will hopefully infuriate the evangelically religious a campaign has begun to to raise money to put ads on London buses to counteract several campaigns currently run by Christian groups.

Richard Dawkins, the prominent atheist, has promised to match all donations up to 5,500 pounds. I have donated. Despite only running for less than a day they have raised nearly 50,000 pounds on a target of 5,500 so already hugely successful. It cost 5,500 pounds to run the ads on thirty buses for one month. I hope this spreads globally. If you have been in London and seen the original ads you will realise they are rubbish unlike the cheery message of the atheists' ads.

Tuesday 21 October 2008

Existential Advertising

Here at the Existential Advertising Agency we have a simple philosophy. You are our customer and our product is You. In buying us you are buying yourself. And what could be more comforting than that?

As an special introductory offer we are offering new customers an extra 25% of themselves for Free*.

*conditions apply. offer available to existing customers only.

Monday 20 October 2008

Guardianistas - !Uglies No Pasaran!

Is it generally considered true that left wing = young and good looking or is that just my perception from looking at The Guardian? If you go to the website of this British left-wing newspaper Here you might think so. If you look to the far right column (they probably call it the center right column as there are no far right columns in The Guardian) you will see an advertisement for "Guardian Soul Mates" which aims to bring like-minded Guardian readers together, for, errmm, romantic purposes. Now The Guardian is about as politically correct as you can get and in the UK "Guardian Reader" or "Guardanista" is shorthand for a liberal, angsty, bean munching peacenik. Such people are of course distributed equally across the spectrum of human loveliness at birth but frequently pride themselves, through self mutilation, op shop cast offs and lack of attention to basic grooming, on just how little they care about such things. I am not saying they are ugly but, you know, they certainly appear that way.

So how come everytime I look at the website the photo in the Guardian Soulmates advertisement is of a young, attractive person with the picture taken in the "slightly from above" angle favoured by professional photographers trying to get the "natural look". Is it possible that The Guardian is deliberately seeking to misrepresent the attractiveness of the singles available in order to get people to click through, perhaps, in the misguided belief that their own general hideousness and sheep-like body odour will be overlooked by that young, left wing, beret wearing PPE major who is clearly only interested in their soul and not their looks?

Advertising The Truth

I was shown to the TED website which for those who dont know contains videos of a lot of smart people giving short talks to other very smart people on topics that could best be described as cool or left-field or futuristic. What they have in common is that hardly anyone thinks these problems are simple or easily solvable. Whether it's the pursuit of happiness, supersymmetry or global warming these guys have their finger on the zeitgeist and man are they pressing hard to burst that zeit.

But wait. Are they really just standing up there, sheepishly delivering their version of The Truth? It would seem to be the case but in fact I think they are really just delivering advertisements for their particular version of the truth. One guy who gave a short talk on the E8xE8 model of supersmmetry ended his talk by showing what a well rounded person he was with pictures of his girlfriend and his passion for surfing. Accompanying his talk were some beautiful graphics illuminating the concept of supersymmetry. Now here's the thing. He could be a baby eating monster and it would make not a jot of difference as to the truth or otherwise of his theory. The universe is neither cool nor basically decent deep down. It doesnt wear hand-knitted jumpers or recycle diligently each Thursday. It wears brown when in town. And pretty much everywhere else. It doesnt eat its greens or apologise for its farts in public. The universe just is. Of course he wasnt claiming that we should believe his theory because he was a cool guy. In fact quite the opposite, he said that in case the theory turned out to be a colossal waste of time at least he would have lived a decent life. What with the surfing and the girlfriend and all. But isnt that how modern advertising really works? I just happen to be a cool guy AND drive this car. Doesnt mean nothing. Except it does.

So what we are really seeing here is a form of advertising like any other. McDonald's would be proud of this guy. I'm sure even if he doesnt discover the GUT he seeks he could get a job in advertising.

If this all seems a little harsh I have to admit I admire the guy's intellect, envy his surfer lifestyle, his chick and his van. (He is not the only one at TED "working a look", as they say in fashion circles - in a inadvisable move, redolent of late-life alcoholism, Lord Rees, the British Astronomer Royal, appears to have adopted a bow-tie. I have quitely observed Prof Martin Rees, as he was before his enoblement, for nearly 20 years and this latest development is unfortunate. Until Harold Bloom dies there should be no additions to the Order of the Bow Tie. Unless Harold Bloom has died in which case I guess it is okay. UPDATE: H.Bloom is still alive so take off the bow tie Marty and step back from the edge).

But there have been other periods in history when large groups of intellectuals, like TED, gathered and used their lifestyle to advertise the veracity of their opinions. I refer to the Middle Ages in Europe when monks and other religious were sure that they pretty much understood (a) how the Universe worked and (b) how to be happy. It was all there in the teachings of the Church. Call it the GUT or God's Undeniable Truth. God made the world, his son Jesus came to earth etc, try not to sin and if you do seek forgiveness via the Church. Pretty simple. And to aid and encourage acceptance of these ideas there were some pretty neat graphics - mostly in the form of illuminated manuscripts and stained glass windows. Of course, even then, there was nothing like a bit of viral marketing to focus peoples attentions on this view of the afterlife but in those days viral marketing meant fear of catching bubonic plague through sinful acts.

This view of the universe and how to live happily in it was complete. There were no doubts as there are today. Indeed had the intellectuals of the day kept their heads down and their hoods up we might still happily believe in it. But they couldn''t and it was the intellectuals that stood outside the mainstream who eventually tore it down from Wycliffe denying transubstantiation in the late 15th century (for which heresy his bones were dug up and burned some 20 years after his death) to Martin Luther some 100 years later nailing his "95 Theses" to the door of Wittenberg Cathedral in 1517. While these men did not act alone they certainly acted outside and against the vast tide of accepted intellectual opinion. I suspect that the people in TED see themselves as inheritors of Wycliff and Luther's iconoclasm but may in fact be more like the monks who argued about the legendary number of angels dancing on the head of a pin. I am a monk AND I believe in God. It doesnt mean anything. Except now it does.

Trying to understand that (dis)connection is what this blog is about. The way we send messages about the things we believe in and also act as personal advertisements for those beliefs, even when when we don't realise it, or even necessarily believe in them.

I wonder if some day, when we all exist inside interlinked virtual worlds, we will look back on the current time and our preoccupation with The Truth and wonder why we bothered with such trivalities and we will be pitied for our ignorance and, perhaps, envied for the simplicity of our lives in the same way that we might look back at people living in medieval times, in blissful ignorance, and both pity and envy them.