Have you noticed that the past is making a comeback? 1980s-inspired shoulder pads have been spotted on the runways, and are (I swear it’s true) this year’s newest fashion trend, despite “Designing Women.” And ad after ad in Vogue seems to reference Marilyn Monroe, Helmut Newton, the ’70s safari look and hippie chic. What’s going on? Let’s do the time warp again! I even fell for the hypothetical, outlandish “The Butterson’s.” No, it’s not a forgotten 1950s sit-com; it’s a commercial for “I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter.”
Madison Avenue believes that nostalgia may be the antidote for consumers worried about the present and the future, and therefore are eager to beat a hasty retreat to the safety of the past--any recent past decade will do.
Remember the ’60s, when good mothers gave their kids Instant Tang and Strawberry Pop-Tarts for breakfast? Well, five Big G cereals from General Mills, among them Cheerios and Trix, (which as it turns out is not just for kids) are being sold in throwback boxes in Target stores, accompanied by a T-shirt offer. I guess eating cereal isn’t good enough, you have to wear it, too. Note to friends and family, if I get a Count Chocula T-shirt for my birthday, there will be trouble in paradise!
In a commercial promoting McDonald’s new sweet tea, a man walks home through an urban neighborhood reminiscent of the ’70s. Damn you ABC for canceling my favorite TV series of this decade, “Life On Mars,” which also happened to be set in the '70s. I swear I’ll get my revenge on you yet.
Pepsi just began an eight-week campaign for “throwback” versions for two of their soft drinks, Pepsi-Cola and Mountain Dew, which evoke the groovy ’60s and swinging ’70s, when life was “sweet.” Note to Pepsi: Vietnam and Watergate are notably absent. “It’s about yearning for the past, a simpler time, even though the ’60s and ’70s were not simple,” said Frank Cooper, chief marketing officer of Pepsi-Cola. “They just seem simple, looking back.”
Resuscitating vintage slogans and catchy jingles, as well as iconic package designs, combatant and competitor Diet Coke will not be undone. They’re re-promoting their classic “Just for the taste of it…Diet Coke!” campaign. First used by The Coca-Cola Co. to introduce their soda pop way back in 1982, when Reganonomics and the AIDS crisis added their wistful signature to the tenure of the times.
And as part their “back-to-our-roots” campaign for Nationwide Insurance, Eric Hargrove, a company spokesman in Columbus, Ohio, said there would be a prominent role for the “Nationwide is on your side” jingle to return to the airwaves. Truth be told, that jingle is as insidious as the Mr. Softee ice cream truck jingle that New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg outlawed recently. Thank you Mike, on bended knee…I thank you!
“In a time of anxiety, people are seeking out brands they’re comfortable with and they can trust,” said Ric Hendee, vice president for marketing services at Cotton Inc., which is reintroducing it’s ’90s jingle, “The Fabric of Our Lives.” Are we so lost that the ’90s are nostalgic too? Research found that women in their 20s and 30s, the intended audience for messages about cotton’s benefits, “remember the song and understand what it means,” Hendee says.“Even teenage girls had some memories of it.” Creepy and condescending assessment not withstanding, to make sure the cotton jingle “is relevant to a new audience,” said Cassandra Anderson, creative director at DDB New York, it is being performed by contemporary musicians like Zooey Deschanel, Miranda Lambert and Jazmine Sullivan rather than the previous cotton crooners, Richie Havens and Aaron Neville.
The best part of the past is that it’s over. I lived through the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s and ’90s. They were great, but I wouldn’t go back. I prefer the present, and look forward to the future, where we’ll all work for Spacely Sprokets like George Jetson, fly to school in jet packs like Elroy, walk our dogs on outdoor treadmills like Astro, and wear Saturn bikini’s like Jane. What is a Saturn bikini you ask? Two rings around the right places!
--Ron Knoth, Guest Blogger

Home»»
Comments