Okay, your T shirt, jeans, sneakers, hoodie, and skateboard all have street cred — but what about your premium blend coffee? As mentioned earlier, I’ve become increasingly interested in the brand underground migration into mundane and bourgeois products — the XLarge beer cozy, the Supreme air freshener, etc. Via Freshness comes word of the Frank151 online store, featuring not just coffee, but Stay High Cookies and Cream bars.
Obviously, I love it.
Posted Under:
Brand Underground by Rob Walker on May 21, 2007
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Nice article by John Leland. “In contrast to the first time around, this summer’s activities will be spectator events, not participatory ones, replaying the Summer of Love as something you watch, not something you do.”
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A consumer mobilzation site opposing changes to the FDA’s “chocolate standard of identity” — that is, the definition of chocolate.
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“Boring, like pornography, is a structure that can be pleasurable or frustrating, largely because of the expectations one brings to it.” Via Marginal Utility
In a Consumed about Spykes a few weeks ago, a spokesman for the Center for Science in the Public Interest commented: “We have a chance of basically drowning it in the bathtub.”
And, in fact, Reuters reports, they have.
Posted Under:
Update by Rob Walker on May 20, 2007
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In Consumed: Terracycle: How one company strives to turn invertebrate excrement into a hip brand.
TerraCycle is one of those tiny start-up brands that get so much free publicity that it can forgo advertising. And it’s easy to see why there’s interest. The founder is a 25-year-old Princeton dropout. Its flagship fertilizer products are packaged in used plastic bottles, many collected through a nationwide recycling program the company itself has organized. And a key ingredient in the fertilizer itself, as the label announces, is “liquefied WORM POOP.” Waste packaged in waste makes TerraCycle the “ultimate eco-friendly” product, the company asserts, putting it in line with organic and earth-aware consumption trends. “We kind of ride on the fact that all these things get a lot of press, and get people interested in the product” and the “young, hip company” that makes it, explains Albe Zakes, the company spokesman….
Continue reading at the NYT site.
Additional links: TerraCycle’s “Sued by Scotts” blog. WormWoman.com. Worm Composting Basics.
Posted Under:
Consumed by Rob Walker on May 20, 2007
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Fast Company profile of the Richmond, VA-based agency that did the Geico caveman ads, and now has Wal Mart as a client. The Rob Walker quoted at the end is, obviously, not me.
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Paintings by Robert Chunn. [Via: madeinmississippi.blogspot.com]
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The Hater hates the Cavemen.
“The smarter clients I spoke to [realized] that a $2 million fine equals $120 million in publicity.”
— some marketing/PR guy, quoted in Becky Ebenkamp’s Brandweek wrapup, which also notes that Interference says the number of clients it lost as a result of the incident was none.
Posted Under:
Murketing by Rob Walker on May 18, 2007
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Elsewhere on Adrants, this:
Meredith Turner from the Rosen Group is working on a news item that will appear on a major nation news show (we know what it is, we can’t tell you but you’ve definitely heard of it) and is looking for advertising addicts. Turner is interested in “interviewing someone who can wax poetic about advertising all day long and rattle off One Show ‘Best of Show’ winners like nobody’s business.”
Rosen Group is a PR firm. A PR firm that’s “working on a news item.” Does anyone find it curious that sources for a “national news show” are being filtered so directly and openly through (and even interviewed by) a PR firm? Will the news show disclose this? Doesn’t the news show have any employees of its own who could reach out to Adrants in its search for sources for its “news item”? Who is the firm’s client? The news show itself? Or some entity that will be featured in the news item?
Maybe this is routine in TV news, but it just struck me as weird.
More evidence of … something. Via Adrants/American Copywriter.
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“Mophie, trying a new twist on product development, invited MacWorld attendees to dream up their own gizmos, scribble them down on a piece of paper, which were then voted on by others”
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“Turkey’s Garanti Bank has teamed up with MasterCard to offer the world’s first watch with a PayPass-enabled credit card built in.”
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New from past Consumed subject Jimi: “Portable gamers can use these cases to protect their media cards from damage from the elements as well as their own clumsy handling.”
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“M&M’S has put a price tag on the silent treatment: $31,000. That’s how much the candy brand will award to the couple that can spend one month communicating only via M&M’s.”
As much as I love to make fun of people for making up phony words and phrases, that’s how much I love to make up phony words and phrases.
My great triumph to date in this area, in terms of recognition, is fauxhemian, recognized by Wordspy, and used as a song title by Sonic Youth. [ “Fauxhemians,” Sonic Youth, currently the theme song of the Murketing Journal e-newsletter.]
Now, today, my April 2006 use of “mocketing” (as a bit of a throwaway in a Consumed column) has been recognized by the Double-Tonged Dictionary. Imagine how proud I am. Imagine!
And yet, it’s all bittersweet.
One of my favorite coinages, “phad,” has never been endorsed by any controlling linguistic authority.
And, somewhat incredibly, neither has “murketing,” which is not only a much better word than mocketing, but also easily the most widely cited word I’ve ever made up. And yet, no Wordspy entry, or entry anywhere else.
What’s up with that?
The most recent episode of The Weekly Drop was a pretty good interview with the founder of XLarge. I had some knowledge of the brand as an early Southern California player in what’s now called streetwear, but I knew less about it than I do about some other brands. (As it happens, I own at least one XLarge t shirt that I like a lot, but this is one of many examples of how my own taste doesn’t necessarily dictate my reporting.) Listening to the interview inspired me to click over to the brand’s site. I assume the T’s now on sale are from the out-going season, and some new batch of stuff is on the way, but a couple of designs stuck me as interesting for various reasons.
This item, Hi-Jacked Tee, jumped out at me. (In this and all cases, click on the image to go the item’s listing in the XLarge site’s store section if you’re interested.) Note the Arabic-ish treatment of the XLarge name. Seems like wearing this would be asking for trouble. But perhaps that’s part of the idea. Will Urban Outfitters bite this? I don’t think so.
Since I’ve been on this logo remix kick, I have to highlight this. They have a couple of t shirts with a similar theme, but I always enjoy seeing mundane products — a beer cozy, in this case — get the brand-underground treatment.
As a Warhol freak, I’m slightly tempted by this one: “Pop Cultural Revolution,” amusing.
But this one was my favorite. Apart from the sort of PE (as in phys ed, not Public Enemy) look, remixed with a rat, I’m probably feeling vaguely nostalgic about NYC. Of course, I’ve had the experience of moving away from NYC before, so this time my nostalgia has a somewhat different flavor. (The only T-shirt I presently own that’s NYC-specific is one I bought just before leaving town the first time, in 1999: Purchased on St. Marks, it’s one of those shirts that says, “Welcome To New York: Duck Motherfucker,” with a huge gun graphic. I love that shirt.)
Mostly I think I like the fact that the “XL” gets their branding done in a relatively subtle way. The fact is, I like a lot of brand underground designs, but I’m not any more anxious to be a billboard for their supposedly super-cool logos than I am for mainstream logos. I mean, it’s not like I’m idiotic enough to believe that anybody who looks at me will think I’m down with latest whateverblahblah, because I’m wearing thus-and-so brand. (In fact, in my case, the more obvious it is that I’m wearing a supercool-brand T-shirt, the more obvious it is that I’m a dope in denial.) So I like how the “XL” here presumably accomplishes whatever the XLarge crew wants it to accomplish in terms of spreading the XLarge name — but at the same time I could almost certinaly wear it without anybody realizing it was a brand at all. In a de facto sense, it’s un-logo-ed.
At least that’s my rationale for buying it. Which I just did.
In light of yesterday’s logo remix entry, I thought I may as well pass along this Staple/Bobbito bit. MLF apparently stands for major league footwork.
Posted Under:
The Designed Life by Rob Walker on May 17, 2007
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I think this is not-at-all new, but I still like it. The relevant link.
During the dot-com bubble, you needed $5 million to do stupid ideas. Now you can do stupid ideas for 12 grand.
— Guy Kawasaki, for whom I have newfound respect and admiration after reading this interview.
The Geico cavemen sitcom has been picked up by ABC, and will air Tuesday nights at 8 Eastern. So reports the NYT:
The half-hour series will have a different cast from the seven commercials that have appeared since the campaign was introduced in 2004…. But the premise of the sitcom is the same as the campaign: The cavemen, living in contemporary America, seek to counter what they perceive to be prejudice against them….
ABC hopes that the popularity of the caveman campaign will translate into ratings, [some network guy] said, as part of the network’s plans to reinvigorate the lackluster sitcom genre by “taking real chances” with premises and plot lines. ..
ABC and Geico “may collaborate on some form of integration,” [the guy] said, referring to interweaving references to Geico into story lines.
Search that articles the “previous coverage” links in vain for a reference to this Consumed on the subject.
Also: AdRants has posted that the early word on the sitcom is not good.
Finally: Here is a clip and some hype from ABC’s site.