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Decent Quality Since 1847

The Wild, Wild West

10/28/2022

4 Comments

 
A couple of days I wrote about Kanye West and his ongoing virulent and violent anti-Semitic comments, and how the issue isn’t about Kanye West, but about the Republican Party which has not only been silent about it all, but has continued to back him and Trump’s own recent anti-Semitic rant.
 
I stand by that.  But I do think Mr. West does deserve some attention of his own.
 
(Quick side note:  I know well that he’s now referred today as “The former Kanye West who legally changed his name to Ye.”  But what he didn’t seem to bother to change was his Twitter account, for which he doesn't use "Ye," but still posts as Kanye West.  So, if it’s good enough for him, it’s good enough for me.)
 
This comes because, after having been pummeled by his business partnerships, notably losing his deal with Adidas who he basically dared cut ties with him, and they did, he’s be acting very desperate lately.
 
As I said before, Kanye West will be fine financially.  If he loses 90 percent of his income, with the remaining 10 percent he’s still doing great.  (Assuming he had a billion dollars – maybe more, maybe less – that still would leave $100 million.)  That said, we don’t know his financial ties and if he’s leveraged and has outstanding loans, and how losses from other business cutting ties will affect his finances. 
 
What we do know, though, is that after Adidas dropped him, Forbes magazine almost immediately removed West from their billionaire's list, significantly plummeting his net worth to $400 million.  That's a huge loss of wealth.  It's also still a massive amount of money.  Though whatever real-life problems it may cause him, I don’t especially care.  Because this isn’t about money.  It’s about a virulent, violent anti-Semite. 
 
But as much as I don’t care about Kanye West’s finances, he clearly does.
 
The other day, he went uninvited into the corporate headquarters of Skecher, trying to get a new deal to replace the one lost with Adidas – and not only didn’t get the deal, but was escorted out of the building, getting the company to put out a press release explaining that they would not be working with Kanye West now or in the future, saying among other things, “Skechers is not considering and has no intention of working with West.  We condemn his recent divisive remarks and do not tolerate anti-Semitism or any other form of hate speech."
 
He's lost partnership deals with Adidas, Balenciaga, Skechers, TJ Maxx.  His talent agency CAA dropped him as a client.  The MRC Entertainment production company has shelved a documentary that already completed about it.  Vogue has cut ties with him.  Gap has said it’s removing his Yeezy Gap products and shutting down the Yeezy Gap website.  Apple Music announced that while it’s not removing all his music, it is, however, removing the Kanye West Essentials Playlist some material, along with his biography.
 
By the way, going back to Gap a moment, Kanye West put out a weird social media post yesterday – one of many, so that’s par for the course – that included a small comment that hasn’t gotten much attention:  “As to Gap, the non-compete expires December 15, 2022.  You own the Yeezy name and all trademarks associated with Yeezy.”
 
He lost the name and all trademarks for Yeezy??  Well, that can’t be good.  Most especially for someone who went to the trouble of legally changing his name to Ye.
 
Also not good were all the social media postings he put out yesterday.  The most notable one, though, was ostensibly sent to his former agency, writing –
 
“ARI EMMANUEL
"I LOST 2 BILLION DOLLARS IN ONE DAY
AND I’M STILL ALIVE
THIS IS LOVE SPEECH
I STILL LOVE YOU
GOD STILL LOVES YOU
THE MONEY IS NOT WHO I AM
THE PEOPLE IS WHO I AM"
 
"The people is who I am."
 
Just not all the people.  Just not the people he wanted dead and to go “Death Con 3” over. And has been virulently attacking for many weeks, in fact months and perhaps years.  (A news story yesterday told how in 2018 he apparently wanted to title his album Hitler.  And had to be talked out of it.)

Fun fact:  Writing "love speech" doesn't make people (and business partners) forget one's hate.
 
And that’s the point of this all.

Kanye West can cry out that he’s all about love and The People, but his words and words and relentless words come tumbling out before him.  He can’t claim his was misquoted.  They were his own social media postings he himself wrote.  (And never claimed anyone else did.)  They’ve been his own relentless, ongoing words.
 
And beyond his own virulent and violent words of anti-Semitism that have been picked up by white supremacists  and neo-Nazi groups, he even has taken on his own black community, wearing “White Lives Matter” t-shirts and claiming George Floyd wasn’t killed by a now-convicted police officer kneeling on his neck for eight minutes, but rather died from a drug overdose.  (A “claim” the Floyd family has sued him $250 million for.)
 
That’s the problem he faces.
 
Given all he’s said about Jews and even blacks and for so long, it’s very difficult to apologize and say, “Gee, I didn’t mean it.  It was hurtful and wrong, I’m sorry.”  Because clearly he did mean it, and meant it repeatedly.  Bluntly.   You don't accidentally want to title your album Hitler.  Single “oops” statements can be apologized for with a mea culpa.  But this is about core beliefs about who a person is.  Such things require acknowledging who you are, explaining the hurt and harm it caused – giving comfort to white supremacists, understanding why it is wrong and why you have been wrong for so long and what you are going to do about the long process of changing who you are right now and for the rest of your life. 
 
And even that doesn’t erase what is on the long record of what you said.
 
That’s the problem he faces.
 
By the way, the added problem is that I don’t see most people, and most especially Kanye West, given who he’s showed himself to be his long public life, going through such a complete public cleansing of his past.  And even if, for some miraculous reason, he did, it would likely be seen as being just an attempt to reclaim is lost partnerships and money, not a public rending of his soul.  But even if – beyond even miracles – his words and actions are so profoundly powerful that they are seen as deeply heartfelt to the extent that he’s gone through a personal conversion…those words he’s long said still live on.
 
And though people at that beyond-miracle point could forgive him, it would still be hard for businesses to want to risk being associated in any way with those early and relentless, hate-filled, violent words.  And hoped-for album titles.
 
To be clear, I think it’s possible some people, maybe many, would be able to forgive Kanye West and keep listening to his music, and would want to buy his products if they could find them being made and sold somewhere, even if he only gave a moderate apology. 
 
The hurdle for West is that it’s hard to see he has even that in him.  And further, while it might be enough to win some or many fans back, it wouldn’t be enough to bring businesses back.  He’s much too toxic to the corporate world for just a mild “I’m sorry if I offended anybody” apology.
 
And his business deals are the core to his wealth now, not his music.  And music trends are short shelf lives.  The public often can forgive egregious, but simple transgressions, however those tend to take a while, let’s say five years.  The music world in five years (let alone more) may not likely have much place for a Kanye West, other than in the Oldies bin.  And the fashion world is even more fickle, often changing from season to season.  And now make it, what if the mea culpa comes in 10 years?
 
I’m not saying Kanye West won’t be able to turn around how he’s crashed and burned his life.  Or that he will be impoverished by his actions.  Financially, he should be better than fine, just perhaps at a less-grandiose scale.  And depending on how he chooses to respond to everything, he may stop being a pariah.
 
But “should” and “may” are tangential terms.  And they come up against a monumental wall and onrushing tsunami that he himself created.
 
That he himself created, and then dared Adidas to do something about it.  Not recognizing the obvious that his world revolved around so much more than just Adidas.  Who, in the end, had utterly zero interest in understanding that it was far more in their corporate interest to move to higher ground.
 
There are so many biblical quotes one could throw around here, starting with “Pride goeth before the fall.”  But it’s one other that most stands out --
 
We have not yet reached the point where this deeply-ironic biblical phrase has taken on brand new meaning, but it’s up to him to avoid it:
 
Abandon all hope Ye who enter here.
4 Comments

We'll Be Right Back After This Very Long Commercial Interruption...

10/7/2022

4 Comments

 
Well, this is quite the joy.  A full 14 minutes of uninterrupted TV commercials. 
 
No, really, it's pure joy because they're not just any TV commercials, but ads made by the master, Stan Freberg.  Some of these, many people will remember.  A lot will be fresh.  All will be a total treat.
 
A few items of note as you watch.
 
1:30  -- This was one of Freberg’s more popular campaigns, for Sunsweet Prunes.  Very low-key for his work, and very funny.  That’s Freberg as the offscreen voiceover interviewer.  You can see it in the freeze-frame below.
 
7:20 – One of Freberg’s most-famous and off-beat campaigns was for the introduction of Jeno’s Pizza Rolls.  The series of thoroughly offbeat ads initially began with a satire of a commercial then-running for Kent cigarettes.  For those, signs were held up on the street saying “Show us your Kent cigarettes” while the William Tell Overture played, and the public “supposedly” grabbed their Kent packs to show to the passing camera.
 
9:20 – the fellow on left is Bill Idelson, who’s an interesting fellow. He began his career as a kid playing the son ‘Rush’ on the radio classic series Vic & Sade.  As an adult, he became a TV writers and wrote a lot of episodes of the Dick Van Dyke Show. But he is probably most recognized today for appearing in a few episodes of the Dick Van Dyke Show as Sally Roger’s sometime boyfriend Herman Glimscher.
 
10:25 – another of the Jeno’s ads which takes a lot a digs at other commercials which were running at the time.
 
11:30 – This may be Freberg’s most famous TV ad, although a lot of others compete for that honor.  But it definitely got the most press attention, and, at the time when it was made in 1970, it was the most expensive TV commercial by anyone, costing $154,000.  (Again, that's in 1970 dollars, so probably around a million dollars today.)  It’s to introduce Heinz Great American Soup, which were trying to compete with  Campbell’s Chunky Soup.  The ad feature MGM legend Ann Miller and had choreography by Hermes Pan, who most-famously worked with Fred Astaire on 17 movies and won an Oscar with two other nominations.
 
12:30 – Freberg usually did voiceovers in his ads, but he appears on camera here.
  
4 Comments

Whistle While You Work...

9/29/2022

0 Comments

 
The other day, CEO Joy Gendusa of PostcardMania, which is based in Florida, told employees that they should keep working through Hurricane Ian (in order to have a good end of quarter) because the hurricane was likely to be a "nothingburger."  Unfortunately for her, the comments were made on video, and it became public.  What I love is that, as a result of the public response and within the company, their president Melissa Bradshaw backtracked by saying that the CEO's words "weren't official company position"!!

Employee reaction was, not shockingly as I said, not positive, not just for the initial statement, but also the reversal. “There is no company worth sacrificing for,” one worker said. And another employee commented -- “She speaks for the company. She is the company. She is the boss.”

I have no idea if Ms. Gendusa is Republican. I do know that "nothingburger" has become the beloved term of disdained dismissal by the far right, after Don Jr. used the term to disdainfully dismiss meeting with with Russian agents during the 2016 presidential campaign.

You can read more about the story here.
0 Comments

Happy Labor Day

9/5/2022

0 Comments

 
I like posting material from the great Paul Robeson, so I thought his recording of the famous union song "Joe Hill" would be appropriate today.

And then this morning, I saw on the news that a new Gallup Poll show union support not only up, after decades of dropping numbers, but it being 71% is amazingly the highest in 57 years, since 1965.
0 Comments

You Don't Know Jack

8/10/2022

0 Comments

 
Rather than post these over a few days, I think they'll be more fun as a full group of four videos here.

​Jack in the Box has a new campaign, and it's fun, though mostly pretty clever .  I was trying to figure out which to post first -- the "surprise" introduction of the campaign, or the video that probably started it all.  I've decided on the video.

This is a clip from James Corden's late night show three years ago, when his two guests were Bradley Whitford and Mark Hamill.  It's pretty entertaining on its own, but as you'll eventually see, likely lead to something more.


What I suspect is that someone at Jack in the Box or their ad agency was watching, and it probably got people laughing.  And the laughter likely lead to some people thinking, "Hey, you know what would be fun...??"  And then lead to others taking it seriously -- and then reaching out to Mark Hamill.  And finally, after three years, it all worked out.

The ad campaign starts this way, more of a teaser.  Having written TV ads myself, what I most love is the tag line at the end.


This then is the first, full ad they put out.

And finally, it was only natural that they take the joke to its logical conclusion, and Hamill actually did get his second chance to fulfill his dream.  Rather than a TV ad, this seems more like a slightly longer video they put out on the Internet.  (Though I suspect they cut it down to ad-length.)  There's a wonderful moment near the end with someone who I assume is the store's general manager.

0 Comments

Last Week Tonight the Other Night

6/21/2022

0 Comments

 
If you didn't see Last Week Tonight with John Oliver last night, the Main Story was on the skyrocketing costs of renting.  It's a problem that far too many Americans are aware of, and they tell the story and its hurdles well, along with a good deal of humorous ridicule.
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    Robert J. Elisberg is a political commentator, screenwriter, novelist, tech writer and also some other things that I just tend to keep forgetting. 

    Elisberg is a two-time recipient of the Lucille Ball Award for comedy screenwriting. He's written for film, TV, the stage, and two best-selling novels, is a regular columnist for the Writers Guild of America and was for
    the Huffington Post.  Among his other writing, he has a long-time column on technology (which he sometimes understands), and co-wrote a book on world travel.  As a lyricist, he is a member of ASCAP, and has contributed to numerous publications.



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