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SUPERBOWL 2008 COMMERCIALS
Advertainment is Sneaking Into Music, Movies, TV and More
The very name "advertainment"
sends thrilling vibrations up the spine of anyone with marketing in
their blood or communication in their genes. And it produces a strong
shiver of disgust from many of my colleagues in the music industry.
"I don't want my songs
to be involved in advertising," they say, forgetting entirely
that by wearing branded running shoes, a t-shirt hawking Fender guitars
and a baseball cap emblazoned with the Peavey logo, their very lives
are involved in advertising. Plus, if they attend an awards show,
they happily state the brand and designer names of everything they're
wearing.
They further ignore the
fact that radio itself is a form of advertainment. What gets played
has little to do with musical accomplishment or artistic merit, but
is directly related to the backing of large corporate distributors.
I have been told to budget anywhere from a quarter of a million dollars
to $350,000 in promotional costs to obtain national radio play on
(the appropriately-named) commercial radio stations. Is it any wonder
that corporations are seeking ways to build a little brand awareness
into the songs?
Turn on any rap, urban
or hip hop station and you can start counting the product mentions
in the lyrics, some paid-for, some just happenstance. In the electronic-pop
field, I have done it myself. On my "Electro Bop" album
are songs such as "Paranormal Radio" (which begins as a
documentary about American Technology Corporation's HyperSonic Sound
system), "Sheena Sez" (about talk radio host Sheena Metal),
and "Check the Tech" (about the joys of watching the TechTV
channel).
Has this advertainment
hurt acceptance of the album? Not that I've noticed. Many e-mails
from around the world cite "Paranormal Radio" as their favorite
track. Not one person has complained about the ad messages, I assume
because the audience for my dance-oriented music is pleased to receive
information about technology and a far-out rock-talk jock such as
Ms. Metal.
Ads and entertainment go
hand-in-wallet in many other ways, some pretty strange. In music alone,
we have all wondered about Bob Dylan's "Love Sick" in Victoria's
Secret commercials (not to mention Mr. D himself smirking between
shots of the lovely bodies wearing the lingerie). But don't overlook
Keith Richards in the "Cover Girl" ad while "Honky
Tonk Women" plays, or Willie Nelson's "Red Headed Stranger"
in the Herbal Essence spot, or Iggy Pop's liquor/drug/sex-soaked "Lust
for Life" blasting throughout the Royal Caribbean commercials.
(Love to work with the Account Executive who was able to sell that
concept!) By contrast, Sting crooning from the back seat of a Jaguar
seems a very model of demographic compatibility.
And that's the point: ads
and public relations are routinely dismissed as silly, annoying, intrusive
or a waste of time right up to the moment when they are delivering
facts the reader or listener wants. Then, suddenly, the sponsored
message is viewed as helpful and instructive. Therefore, the trick
is to achieve the right match between audience and message.
One problem is choosing
your media. Just listing advertising outlets can be daunting: TV,
radio, outdoor, newspapers, magazines, transit, direct mail, Internet
banner. Many of these have subsets: paid inserts (advertorial) in
newspapers and magazines, sponsored "newsbreaks" and infomercials
on broadcast media, static or animated announcements at stadia, those
dreaded 'Net pop-ups, brand names on sports uniforms and equipment
(can you say NASCAR?), etc.
One of the most enjoyable
categories for producers of both music and advertising is viral 'Net
marketing, which has had some notable success stories such as BMW
Films, the Seinfeld AmEx campaign, and of course, Burger King's Subservient
Chicken.
We haven't even considered
cooperative advertising, which can be anything from myriad logos at
the bottom of an event poster to the branded music tones and flashing-light
Intel trademark that ends every other commercial for someone else's
computer products.
But it extends further.
Consider: Magazines that sell cover stories; product placement in
movies and TV (and yes, live theater); branded clothing; bumper stickers;
even fliers stuck on parked cars. There are ad messages on private
automobiles (and those anti-humanistic trucks that some insist are
called SUVs). Pull up behind a vehicle in traffic and you can read
an ad for the car dealership on the license plate frame, plus another
piece of public relations for the state on the plate itself. (Come
on, you don't think it's hype to put "Land of enchantment"
on every vehicle licensed in the state of New Mexico?)
You might think that this
plethora of options makes it easier for firms to get their messages
across to their targeted demographics, but a good case can be made
for the opposite view. TV audiences are turning to Tivo and pay-per-view.
Radio audiences are discovering XM and Sirius Satellite Radio. Newspaper
readership is becoming an oxymoron. Motion picture audiences can be
heard groaning, mocking or booing the pre-feature commercials.
This means there are a
lot of people working on new ways to get the product benefits into
the brains of the consumers. I do it with humorous radio scripts and
subliminally seductive music, but there are going to be some innovations
in our industry, and at the risk of appearing foolish, I'm going to
make a few predictions. Within the next few years, we'll see:
* Debit card scanners in
TV sets, so you can order during a commercial with the flick of your
remote.
* Barcodes in songs, so
you can download from iTunes by swiping your XM or Sirius player with
your Visa or MasterCard.
* Credit cards built into
wristwatches, so your "plastic money" is always close at
hand.
* Links to product sites
in every scene of DVD movies or computer games. Do you want the shoes
in the Tony Hawk Pro Skater game? Click-click-click and they're on
their way to you via FedEx (note product placement for the big competitor
to United Parcel Service).
* Broadcasts of infotainment
and advertainment will pop up everywhere: in public restrooms, at
the Starbucks, at traffic signals, at the gas pump, on your mailbox,
in the packages you purchase, in the parcels that arrive at your door,
etc.
* Captive broadcasts. Just
as you can preview the music on packaged CDs (available in EU now,
but coming soon to the USA), the product benefits, price points and
warranty information will play as soon as you lift up a product in
the store.
* Digitized logo placement
in the rebroadcasts of syndicated TV shows ("Hey, we can sell
the product placement another three times!")
* Branded ingredient lists
on menus.
* Corporate artwork that
takes you on a virtual tour of the company.
* Interactive ads, where
you get to play Jerry Seinfeld and/or Superman (or the driver of the
BMW) in a five-minute escape from reality (and from reality TV).
* Holographic projections
of commercials from postage stamps, car and house keys, magazine covers
and ad pages, etc.
And these are just the
changes we'll be seeing in the next few years. We're not even discussing
the opportunities for advertainment once we move beyond traditional
broadcast methodology; when microchips are embedded under your skin,
YOU will be the receiver for TV, radio, satellite, telephone, and
global positioning system signals. And at that point, the possibilities
for marketing communication via advertainment are going to become
truly mind-boggling.
Are these prospects exciting,
frightening, or both? My view is positive. After all, a lot of these
new forms of communication are going to need my scripts and my music.
# # #
Scott G is president of
G-Man Music & Radical Radio. His music is on commercials for Verizon
Wireless, Goodrich, Monaco Motor Coaches, BAE Systems and more. A
creative director of the National Association of Record Industry Professionals
(NARIP) and a member of The Recording Academy (NARAS), he writes about
music for MusicDish.com and the Immedia Wire Service. The G-Man's
albums are released by Delvian Records and are on Apple's iTunes.
He can be reached via http://www.gmanmusic.com.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/