50 checks the FTSE

VitaminWaterAd.jpg

This is another ad I've been puzzled by (what can I say, it's been happening a lot lately). In this case I feel more like a sucker for writing about it, because merely by hiring 50 Cent to be a spokesman for Vitamin Water, I think they must be going for some kind of studied absurdity.

In the photo, 50 is reading the Wall Street Journal with his Vitamin Water beside him while women in bikinis dance in the background. This, with the accompanying text, appears to be suggesting that behind all the champagne consumption of his public image, 50 needs to focus and take care of business without any distractions, and Vitamin Water is the beverage of choice for that hour. And here the questions begin.

First, it's pretty funny that even during his 'focus' time, 50's not going to actually leave the room in which the groupies dance in bikinis, presumably with loud music playing. Or is their presence figurative, showing that even though they are available, he is ignoring them, but not that they are physically behind him?

Second, does 50 read the Wall Street Journal? Maybe, maybe not. A lot of top artists are pretty business-savvy, some after having learned the hard way that it's a good skill. I know far too little about 50 Cent to say whether the photo is a plausible scenario; maybe someone can help me out with that. But is this how his fans want to picture him? I thought the idea in hip-hop was to make it look easy to be so successful. Odd, but I guess praiseworthy, that he's willing to be shown this way.

Lastly, wouldn't this be much funnier if it were a WSJ ad?

* * *

Bonus edition: the moronic Washington Mutual ads in which archetypical aged white executives in suits are shown unable to countenance the idea of free ATM withdrawals (example). A while ago WaMu, as they like to be called so that one sounds like a baby or as though one's mouth is full of food when referring to them, had a policy that customers of other banks could use WaMu ATMs with no fee (although they might still get charged by their own bank). This always seemed strange: a policy that benefited everyone except than their own customers. Evidently the strategy was just to get these people into their banks and liking WaMu so that they would become customers, even if they knew that the policy would cease to benefit them as soon as they did. It must have worked, even if it seemed irrational, otherwise why would they do it? But then they eliminated the policy, so maybe it didn't work after all, or stopped working.

Now they expect us to believe that executives have fits over no-fee withdrawals from WaMu ATMs by WaMu customers, a service offered by every bank in existence? And they also expect us to believe that their own executives are not like the ones shown in the ad? Their own page suggests otherwise. Two out of twelve execs are female, and twelve out of twelve are white. All in all, it's a solid record of insulting the customers' intelligence.

Comments (1)

jv:

a friend of a friend in college co-produced one of 50 cent's albums, he graduated (my year) from umich B-school...maybe taught him a thing or two (or maybe 50-cent is a republican).

Post a comment

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.autonoetic.com/cgi-bin3.3/mt-tb.cgi/326

 

Archives

Photos

www.flickr.com
mihalis' photos More of mihalis' photos

Colophon

Validation:
XHTML Validation
 
CSS Validation

Feeds:
RSS2
Atom

Powered by Movable Type 3.33
Hosted by Cornerhost