Marketing & Strategy Innovation

The Most Memorable Ads Mad Ave Ever Sold - New York Magazine

by on 14 October, 2008 - 12:54

by: Scott Goodson

The New York Magazine has come out with their list of best ever ads from Mad Ave since 1968. You can find all the ads on the NY Mag site.

Madison Avenue has spent the past four decades refining the art of the big sell. To determine the very best ad campaigns developed since 1968, we polled four generations of creative directors to create a long list of nominees. Then two dozen contemporary Mad men (and women) ranked their favorites. The jury favored high-concept spots over simple slogans, and fell for a disproportionate number of strange-looking actors.

1. “Fast-Paced World” Click to Watch CLIENT: Federal Express AGENCY: Ally & Gargano, 1981 Speed talker John Moschitta Jr. plays a type-A businessman making rapid-fire decisions, straightening out Pittsburgh with Pete, and conducting a Dallas deal with Dick, Dave, Don, and Dork (“Dick, what’s the deal with the deal? Are we dealing? We’re dealing. Dave, it’s a deal …?”). Moschitta’s machine-gun chatter became synonymous with the “done yesterday” business mentality the brand has aligned itself with ever since. “FedEx could run this spot today and it would still feel contemporary,” says Scott Vitrone, co–chief creative officer of Y&R NY.

2. “Big Fluffy Bun” Click to Watch CLIENT: Wendy’s AGENCY: Dancer, Fitzgerald, Sample, 1984 Eighty-one-year-old Clara Peller and friends inspect a hamburger bun—“a very big fluffy bun,” one admits—and upon finding a tiny patty, Peller exclaims, “Where’s the beef?” Director Joe Sedelmaier (who also shot “Fast-Paced World”) used hyperbolic patty-size comparisons to take on the Whopper and the Big Mac, chief rivals of upstart Wendy’s. “Where’s the beef” was adopted by Walter Mondale in the 1984 presidential-primary debates and has since been used by countless disillusioned Americans from Leonard Cohen to Homer Simpson. “It’s arguably the best line in a commercial over the past 25 years,” says David Apicella, a vice-chairman at Ogilvy

3. “Mama Mia” Click to Watch CLIENT: Alka-Seltzer AGENCY: Doyle Dane Bernbach, 1970 A beleaguered actor shooting a meatballs commercial tries to get his lines straight, flubbing them again and again, each time eating another forkful. He finally nails it after taking an Alka-Seltzer—“Mama mia, that’s a spicy meatball!”—until the oven door falls open and the take is ruined. The spot fades with a call to break for lunch. “This is one of the first ads to make fun of the making of advertising itself,” says Bob Kuperman, former CEO of DDB. It cleverly positioned Alka-Seltzer as an antidote to the daily grind.

4. “Funeral” Click to Watch CLIENT: Volkswagen AGENCY: Doyle Dane Bernbach, 1969 David Ogilvy called it the funniest commercial he’d ever seen: a funeral procession for billionaire Maxwell E. Snavely, who, in a voice-over reading of his will, ruthlessly shafts those who spent his money liberally. (“To my sons Rodney and Victor, who spent every dime I ever gave them on fancy cars and fast women, I leave $50 in dimes.”) Nephew Harold, though, whose little Beetle is the tail of the procession, always said, “It sure pays to own a Volkswagen” and receives all of Uncle Max’s $100 billion. The thrifty shall inherit the Earth, we learn, and Volkswagens are for people who get the joke.

5. “Absolut Bottle” CLIENT: Absolut AGENCY: TBWA\Chiat\Day New York, 1980 “When people used to say, ‘Advertising doesn’t work on me,’?” says Ari Merkin, executive creative director of Toy New York, “I’d ask them what kind of vodka they drink.”

6. “Blow-Away Guy” Click to Watch CLIENT: Maxell AGENCY: Scali, McCabe, Sloves, 1979 A sunglass-sporting badass is settled back, arms high on his chair, when a butler appears, producing a Maxell tape. “The usual, sir?” the butler asks. The high fidelity delivers, and our protagonist’s tie, hair, lamp, and glass of wine all blow back to “Ride of the Valkyries.” Classy, cool, and proto-eighties, the spot reinforced Maxell’s hi-fi brand message. “This is one of the best examples of hyperbole, both visually and sonically,” says Steve Novick, former vice-chairman of Grey Global Group.

7. “I © NY” CLIENT: New York Commerce Commission AGENCY: Wells Rich Greene, 1977 Milton Glaser’s pro bono logo is among the world’s most recognizable, initially concocted to boost tourism to New York State as the city teetered on the brink of insolvency. Glaser had first suggested a pair of ovals with NEW YORK inside and admits he approached the job as something to “bang out” quickly. But since its debut, the campaign has achieved an international ubiquity rivaling that of McDonald’s Golden Arches. “The symbol struck a chord far beyond whatever could have been expected,” says Scott Donaton, publisher formerly of Advertising Age and now of Entertainment Weekly. “It may have been designed to boost tourism, but it went beyond that: It revived New Yorkers’ pride in their city.”

8.“Gorilla” Click to Watch CLIENT: American Tourister AGENCY: Doyle Dane Bernbach, 1970 A handler tosses an American Tourister suitcase into a cage with a ferocious ape, who proceeds to give it the business. A voice-over dedicates the spot to “clumsy bellboys, brutal cabdrivers, careless doormen, ruthless porters, savage baggage masters, and all butterfingered luggage handlers all over the world.” “Torture tests are a tried-and-true advertising technique that’s usually boring,” says Kevin Roddy, executive creative director of BBH New York. “But this one”—a slightly smug comparison between heavy-lifters and apes— “engages, entertains, and sells.”...............

Original Post: http://scottgoodson.typepad.com/my_weblog/2008/10/the-most-memorable-ads-mad-ave-ever-sold---new-york-magazine.html

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