At least in Puerto Vallarta, both beer and tequila were advertised
as good for you and good for what ails you. It was fun to see those ads
just after having read about Johnson & Johnson's announcement
that they are introducing "straight talk" about risks into
their advertising. I strongly suspect that the straight talk will pay
dividends for them in sales, as well as brand image. A new study from
Rodale Press shows that consumers are more likely to ask doctors about
advertised drugs when they perceive that the risks are not hidden.
Just home from my R&R week of good-for-you tequila ads in
Mexico, I visited a wonderful second-tier show at the Philadelphia Art
Museum (where the fabulous Dali is, of course, getting center stage
attention). The second-tier show is called "Quack, Quack Quack: The
Sellers of Nostrums in Prints, Posters, Ephemera and Books."
It's a great show for anyone interested in what consumers do and
don't believe, full of lavish pronouncements, grandiose claims,
cure-everything elixirs, and products that would look right at home in
today's marketplace.
The Quack Quack exhibit reminded me of how much of ourselves and
our immediate experiences we bring to advertising messages. A recent
conversation with an exterminator about a mouse problem was probably why
I was intrigued with the Quack Quack ads for Human Exterminating
Bitters. My Mexican experience with the feel-good tequila ads made me
especially receptive to ads for a cure-all called Vin Mancini, which was
made from a mixture of Bordeaux and cocaine and was sold with
endorsements of dozens of celebrities, all of whom probably felt
fabulous after drinking it.
Those ads seemed honest, because drugs and alcohol do make people
feel better (in the short run). They weren't so different from the
Mexican ads claiming that you feel great when you drink the best Tequila
(if you are actually going to test tequila claims, be sure to use the
high-priced stuff made from blue agabe!) They weren't so different
from the ads for homeopathic remedies to cure everything from aging
joints and aching backs, to today's elixirs that contribute to
weight loss or prolonged youth. They weren't so different from the
ads for Viagra and all its competitors either.
Besides all the fun, there is a serious opportunity here for food
and drug marketers: Next year is the centennial anniversary of the Pure
Food & Drug Act, which was enacted in 1906. It's a great
platform for consumer education, telling your quality and cold chain
stories, or good old merchandising of pure food.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Happy Spring,
COPYRIGHT 2005 Consumer Network,
Inc Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.