Entries from February 1, 2008 - March 1, 2008

151. Ads of the Week: American Living?

jcpenney.jpgSometimes the ad of the week is for being good. Sometimes it’s for being bad. This week it’s for being both. If you watched the Oscars, it was difficult to miss the Americana-inspired, patriotic, small-town feel of JCPenney’s new clothing line: American Living. The spots are beautiful actually, the music home-spun. (On one spot Allison Krauss and Robert Plant sing “Killing the Blues.”) And the feel is pefect for a line of clothing made right here in America by Americans. You can view two of the spots at the bottom of this entry. The logo (seen above) is an honest-to-God American eagle grasping an American flag. There’s only one problem: the clothing is made in China. (Look closely at the tag detail and shop grab that I highlighted.)

jcpenney2.jpg

jcpenney3.jpg


I guess the marketing department and the agency responsible didn’t think that Chinese Living and beautiful shots of rural Chinese textile mills would separate US consumers from their discretionary income. (Go figure.) Now, don’t get me wrong. Free-trade is great. But global marketplace and international trade/political issues aside, this is irresponsible marketing and one reason why, despite being an advertising art director, there are days when I really hate advertising. It’s playing off an emotional nationalism that is a completely fabricated façade. It’s condescending to think that consumers will not see through this. AND it’s cowardly of both the company and the ad agency to not, I don’t know, decide to actually manufacture the clothing line in America (given its name and all.) Then, it could have been an authentic appeal to consumers for well-made, probably a bit more expensive, American goods. Then, the well-crafted advertising and beautifully executed marketing would be more than just another example of what is wrong with advertising. Sometimes ad agencies lie, mislead, and purposely ignore product attributes and communicate falsely in order to move product. Everyone from the company’s big wigs, to the agency’s strategic and creative teams, down to the fashion/apparel designers (Ralph Lauren) should be held responsible for this ridiculous and misplaced patriotic appeal. If nothing else, just don’t call the clothing line, American Living and don’t try to showcase what is good about this country when you really don’t care enough to do something to support it – like opening a new textile plant here in the states, a la American Apparel. JC Penney is a company that I find myself rooting for to make a comeback. I think that’s because when I was a kid it was one of the few stores that was close enough, and from which I could afford school clothes – that were not Goodwill. This campaign is truly shameless. It’s frustrating. It’s deceitful. It’s wrong. Below is a grab from their website. Tractor and grandparents included.

jcpenney4.jpg

Some details.


Here’s an excerpt from a recent AdAge article by Natalie Zmuda, published on February 18, 2008: “NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- JC Penney's new brand American Living, created by Polo Ralph Lauren's Global Brand Concepts division, will get a glitzy introduction on the Oscars and is promised to be the biggest marketing initiative in the company's history...” Here’s a link to Penney’s press release. And Penney Chief Executive Myron “Mike” Ullman said American Living products could mark the largest single introduction of a brand in retail history. I guess they couldn’t have spent 1 Billion dollars supporting American Living by supporting an actual American job – that would have been too sincere. Or again, simply base the naming and marketing strategy on something that is true. Here’s “Mike’s” address – I suggest writing him a letter:

Mike Ullman, III
Chief Executive Officer
J.C. Penney, Inc.
6501 Legacy Drive
Plano, TX 54024


OR contact their press folks (which I will do.)
JCPenney Corporate Communications
Investor and Business Inquiries
Rebecca Winter or Kate Parkhouse, 972-431-3400
jcpcorpcomm@jcpenney.com


or

JCPenney Brand Publicity
Fashion and Home
Merianne Roth, 972-431-2317
mroth@jcpenney.com


In her book Unmarketable: Brandalism, Copyfighting, Mocketing, and the Erosion of Integrity, Anne Elizabeth Moore goes into similar issues with American Girl, the company that makes those ridiculously expensive dolls. Though, I’m not a fan of everything she says or how she says it – I think anyone in the communication industry should be sensitive to some of the points she brings up. Integrity in marketing is not just something you try to do – you HAVE to do it. Great brands are also the most honest. Remember ad folks - you're supposed to be using your talents for good.

Take a look at two of these gooshy samples of faux-patriotism and false-nationalism: It's a real shame too, because I would have been proud to have done these myself were they communicating an authentic message instead of a lie.





Posted on Feb 25, 2008 at 11:01AM by Registered CommenterJason | Comments8 Comments

150. Inside Out.

bearsb.jpgI've seen these posted a few times in various places, the most recent on HOW. These bears, created by Kent Rogowski are eerily transfixing. Simply by turning an ordinary stuffed animal inside-out, he has created works of art that have a personality far different than the originals. (Some still remain cute, surprisingly.) There is a design/art lesson in here. Taking ordinary things and looking at them in a new way can bring about possibilities that usually lie hidden and unseen. It's nothing novel in concept - but when you see that process applied in a passionate manner, the results are usually amazing. These bears provide an excellent example. My favorites are below.

 

bears2.jpg 

 

bears3.jpg 

 

bears4.jpg 

 

bears1.jpg 

Posted on Feb 20, 2008 at 10:46AM by Registered CommenterJason | Comments2 Comments

149. Leopard. It’s The Little Things.

dock.jpgI’m not one of those crazy Mac geeks, who worships Steve Jobs or still has a Newton; but I really am enjoying my new MacBook Pro and it’s Leopard OS. I could go on and on about a lot of important aspects to the system and performance and whatever. But the best thing – to me - is one of the smallest. The stacks feature in the dock allows you to have quick access to a folder of files – and is a convenient little design no doubt. But when applied to software alias links you can really clean up your dock in a way that is clean and eye pleasing. It allows me to show only the rainbow hued icons of Adobe’s CS suite in the main dock and create a stack of all the other (not-so-nice) icons in a separate folder. Will this lend to more productivity? No. Does it deserve it’s own blog entry? Not really. But for an obsessive compulsive, uber-minimalist, type-A art director-designer personality – it is very pleasing. Almost peaceful. Am I the only one that feels this way?

Ahhhhh. So simple.
dock2.jpg 

And when needed, I can just jump to all those web-2.0, over-designed icons of microsoft and other companies. And then they go away. When you sit on a computer for 60 hours a week - this kind of stuff is important. (Though I probably need help, eh?) Wallpaper via Madolux.

dock3.jpg 

Posted on Feb 15, 2008 at 07:25PM by Registered CommenterJason | CommentsPost a Comment

148. Historic American Sheet Music.

chorus.jpgDuke University currently has an online gallery of historic sheet music covers from 1850’s – 1920’s. Some of the songs' titles are hilarious, but more striking is the craft shown in the typography. More than a few of them are simply amazing and the gallery as a whole is worth slacking off for an afternoon or two. What a resource.

 

Posted on Feb 13, 2008 at 05:03PM by Registered CommenterJason | Comments2 Comments | References1 Reference

147. Free Letterpress Webinar.

press.jpgQuick. Sign up now. Space is limited.  Full Circle Press and PaperSpecs are offering a LetterPress webinar on February 26th. Should be good. Judith Berliner, owner of Full Circle has a great gallery of work on their site, so be sure to take a peek at that too. (Link via How.)

 

Posted on Feb 12, 2008 at 10:46AM by Registered CommenterJason | CommentsPost a Comment

146. Ad of the Week. Toyota Sequoia.

toyota.jpgIt pains me to say anything positive about Toyota let alone a Toyota SUV – but their new ad for the Sequoia is just a great example of how well TV can be done. It’s difficult nailing feel-good advertising as a lot of it ends up patronizing or fake, but this spot has a beautiful short-film feel and doesn’t hammer home the product benefits. Instead, it attempts to tell a (bedtime)story complete with a perfect Pete Droge soundtrack. This beats most of what we saw on the Super Bowl by far and away. Take a look via YouTube.

 

Posted on Feb 4, 2008 at 12:10PM by Registered CommenterJason | Comments1 Comment