I'm not sure what's going on here, but it smells like some bizarre form of
mind control...

http://slate.msn.com/code/Moneybox/Moneybox.asp?Show=6/26/00&idMessage=5575

The Strange Appeal of the Rice Krispies Treats Ads
By Rob Walker
Posted Monday, June 26, 2000, at 11:53 a.m. PT


Several weeks ago, the Wall Street Journal noted a small trend in what it
called "ouch ads"--that is, various bits of print and broadcast advertising
featuring imagery that makes you wince. A guy with a disk drive slot in the
top of his bald head. Someone with their eyes pried open. That sort of
thing. Another example: an ad for Rice Krispies Treats that's set on a
subway and involves the loss of a limb. (You can see the ad here, via the
Web site Adcritic.com, which requires the use of QuickTime.) And there's
another Rice Krispies Treats ad that's perhaps even weirder. (See it here.)
Actually I don't think either of these ads is wince-worthy, but they're both
pretty fascinating.

The ads: In the first spot, a man is standing in the middle of a grubby
subway car, gripping a strap. "Do you hate going to work?" asks a voice-over
in an accent that sounds vaguely European. The rider loses his balance and
takes a tumble, landing flat on his back. Fellow passengers sit by with
Bergman-esque detachment. "You can make the commute more pleasurable with
Rice Krispies Treats squares," goes the voice-over. So the man mashes a
sticky Rice Krispies Treat into his hand, and grips the strap with that.
Again the train lurches, and our strap-hanger loses his footing. The good
news is the Rice Krispies Treat holds. The bad news is the guy's arm
doesn't, and it snap-crackle-pops off his body at the shoulder, leaving him
to tumble once again. The announcer chimes in, "Rice Krispies Treats: Great
for grip. Best when eaten." The commuter bites into a treat, held by his new
prosthetic claw. Hungry?

The second spot opens with a shot of a heavy, pale, bearded man, floating in
an above-ground pool. A cheesy, 1970s-ish tune plays in the background. "If
you're lonely," says the same droll announcer from the subway ad, "and don't
have any friends to go swimming with, consider making one with Rice Krispies
Treats squares." The fat man is now floating in his little pool--with a
woman made of Rice Krispies Treats. She's wearing a bikini, and is instantly
reminiscent of a life-size inflatable doll, like the one Dennis Hopper's
character lived within River's Edge. Soon he's putting suntan lotion on her,
then squirming around under her outstretched hand, as though she were
slathering it on him. In the background music, the word "Kelly" is sung
repeatedly, and I think we are to surmise that this is the Krispie-doll's
name. "But remember," the announcer says, as the fat guy comes strutting out
of the house in sunglasses and a robe, holding two drinks in coconut
shells--"never to leave your friend alone by the pool." A dog is standing
there with the Kelly's head in his mouth. The fat guy is shown from above,
cradling his decapitated friend in his arms, and crying "Keelllly!!" to the
heavens. "Rice Krispies Treats," the announcer says brightly, as the image
switches to the fat guy's mouth, chewing a treat. "Great for making friends.
Best when eaten."

What they're trying to say: Shock tactics are nothing new in advertising, of
course. Someone from the agency that did the commuter ad explained to the
Journal that the goal is to get the attention of teen-agers. If that's the
case, then the ads seem to be trying to associate Rice Krispies Treats with
a certain sensibility--hip and knowing, but not above low humor. So the
treat is being sold less as a treat than as a kind of signifier: If you
"get" these ads, then perhaps Rice Krispies Treats are an appropriate
addition to your "lifestyle."

What could they possibly mean? On the other hand, maybe it's not a signifier
at all. Certainly there's a total disconnect between the people in the ads
and the product--you don't want to be the fat guy in the pool with the
Krispies doll. So maybe the idea is just to get a kid's attention in any way
possible, and then slip in a brand name and hope it sticks. In that case it
doesn't really matter what the ads are about, as long as they stand out.
Actual product attributes are explored only in the least conventional manner
possible, which is maybe for the best, since my vague recollection of Rice
Krispies Treats is that they tasted like something that might have been put
to better use as a packing material. Anyway, they ads certainly hold the
attention. The commuter spot is very funny; the other one is certainly
memorable, kind of in the way that Blue Velvet is memorable.

The grade: Let's say B+. That's probably overly generous, since I'm kind of
skeptical that these ads will move Krispies units. I'm not sure if these
spots will stand out for teen-agers or not, but I think they're great.


  �2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
================================
Robert F. Tatman
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jenkintown, PA, USA
"Y Gwir Yn Erbyn y Byd"--Y Bardd Cymraeg
"The Truth Against the World"--motto of the Welsh bards

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