bjarvis: (Default)
[personal profile] bjarvis
If an advertisement uses a celebrity and you have absolutely no idea who that person is or why should you care, is that a failure of the ad or cluelessness on your part (or both)?

How about when the ad is over and you still don't care about the product or the celebrity?

This has been rolling around in my head for a while but listening to the radio on my way to the data center today brought it all back to the surface again. One commercial is for web design & services; the personality talks as though I'm clearly supposed to know who he is and by extension how much he values his online presence and therefore align myself with the service he's endorsing.

I confess however that when I hear the ad on the radio, I miss most of the content because I'm asking myself who the hell is this and why should I care? When the ad is finished, I'm no closer to the answer, missed the content entirely and within 15 seconds I can't even remember the name of the would-be celebrity.

And that ad has been playing for months.

Recently, there's been another advertisement on the same radio station for some satellite television service. I guess I'm supposed to know who the spokeswoman is because she tells us point-blank she's a star and from the general context of the overall ad. Once again, I can't remember her name long enough to look her up: I simply have no context in which to place this person, nor a means of recording it while I'm driving.

I'm the first to admit most of western civilization and culture has simply passed me by, but I'm not entirely out of sync with the 21st century. If I can't identify these celebrities, is it really my fault, a poor choice by the ad agency or simply a budget constraint by the client that they could only afford D-list or lower celebs?

Date: 2011-04-12 07:58 pm (UTC)
zipperbear: (Default)
From: [personal profile] zipperbear
Welcome to being over the hill! Ads are aimed at young people, who haven't become set in their ways, and are still easily swayed by marketing. If you're over 40, you're older than most of the market.

I don't know who the latest teen idols are (although I've heard of Justin Bieber), and that's OK because I'm not a teen.

On the other hand, if you're shopping for a luxury car, of the midlife-crisis kind that young people usually can't afford, you should expect that any celebrity endorsers would be more recognizable.

I'm just hitting the age where TV stars of my childhood are dying off. Anyone who was 40 in the mid-1970's, when I was 10, would be 75 years old now. I was just reading a tabloid at a recent dance, and poor Susan Lucci is worried about her career if they cancel All My Children after 41 years -- At age 64, she could probably retire and enjoy her golden years, I think!

Date: 2011-04-12 08:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bjarvis.livejournal.com
Well, perhaps. But in both commercials, the spokescritters sounded to be in their late 50s/early 60s. I could easily understand if some 12 year-old Disney channel star escaped my notice entirely, but it would odd for someone to have a supposedly high profile career for potentially decades and still run under my radar.

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