The Tragically Unhip

a blog with three fingers on the pulse of uncoolness.

Hipster Ads: They’ve Gotten Sooo Commercial September 9, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Hipster Culture, Music — Little Evie @ 1:47 pm

Indie twosome Slow Club came to town the other week. I didn’t attend the show (I was out of the country and also, I hate music), but had I gone I’m not sure I could have restrained myself from yelling: ‘Play the Ritz Crackers song! Do it! Crackers! Yeah everyone, par-ty down!’

It’s not what you think. I’m not about to ream out some hard-working musicians trying to get noticed and pay their rent, and honestly, I’m just as likely as the next idiot to Google ‘need know song mac ad.’ It’s just that I’ve noticed a certain kind of music making its way into ads for everyday products. And a certain type of pale, thin, messy-haired person. And a certain kind of rough-edged font that tries not to smack of effort. And a certain type of aftereffect that bleaches everything out to the point where it looks like the sky’s painted pastel, and those skinny, beat-up jeans are practically acid washed.

Take this ad for Miracle Whip. Its approach seems eerily close to The Onion’s mock advertisement for extreeeme saltines, now with skinny rebellious spokespeople.

Say whaaat? In yo’ face, mayonnaise! I think we can safely say that that was the most embarrassing blip of all those people’s careers – the models, the editor, the marketing team, the voice guy, and of course the lady at the end who seems to equate her choice of condiment with some sort of new civil rights movement.

But even that’s just a tad too edgy to be considered a hipster commercial. Hipster commercials are about hanging with your friends and wearing vintage ‘pieces’ paired with American Apparel basics. About acting like kids (because hey, why not?) while a lilting soundtrack serenades you over to the product, about which you comment, ‘Oh that old thing? Yeah, pretty good. I’m not going to turn this into a bro-style beer commercial or anything and start humping legs, but yeah, I’ll buy it. Whatever. At least until everyone else starts buying it.’

Here’s a car commercial that fits the bill. Could that couple be any prettier or more in love? They are so pretty and so in love I want to fling myself over their balcony out of shame. They’re probably going to some cool Scandanavian festival I’ve never even heard of.

This Jetta one is pretty good, too, if only because you can picture the pitch meeting so clearly: ‘It’s about a young couple exploring the neighbourhood they’re gentrifying from the safety of their vehicle (not that there’s anything wrong with it).’

Here’s an ad for gum that combines a pretty person who works from home as a graphic designer with adorable Asian-style animation (uh… maybe a bit too Asian. Pause it at 0:12 and let me know) – the kind of cutesy art this Demetri Martin-looking dude probably puts in mismatched frames and hangs alongside a real taxidermied squirrel.

And the coup de grace: lil’ hipsters. Here’s the aforementioned Ritz Crackers* commercial, which isn’t terribly obnoxious but does present me with a conundrum – the song is actually quite nice, but now it’s tainted by cracker crumbs. Then again, would I have ever even heard it had it not been used by Ritz? (Remember, I hate music.) Also, how am I supposed to live my life when these two eight-year-olds are clearly cooler than me?

Truly bittersweet. After all, they’re co-opting whimsy and whatever the real inspiration was behind all those songs.

On the other hand… Hey there, hipster friends who make non-threatening music and/or work in marketing – Good for you! What with your jobs and your clients and stuff. There’s nothing like staying one step ahead of the game and turning a disadvantage, e.g. being inexperienced or the youngest person in the office, into a forte, e.g. knowing what the kids think is ‘cool.’ No, not that. Or that. You can’t define it… you just know.

* On a side note, I wonder what’s happened to Ritz’s sales. Those things have got to be swimming in trans fats, right?

 

Poison Pen Letter to a Barbecue June 12, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Etiquette, Manifesto, Signage — Tragically Unhip Staff @ 2:53 pm

 

Picture 3

 

Dear Weber® Q® 140 Outdoor Electric Grill’s advertising agency,

 

Thank you so much for ripping off the logo created for The Tragically Unhip by totally awesome graphic designer Laura F. Cline in August 2008.  Now that your billboards are all over Manhattan and your GIF ads are being e-blasted into the inboxes of all Flavorpill subscribers, you should have been raising our profile as the little blog that could, but instead we seem to have gone as an uncredited source of your design team’s inspiration. I hope that you’ve at least shared our URL around your impossibly sleek and modern SoHo digs so that the account managers and marketing team could read and benefit from our unhip humour. But should ever you require the services of a few brilliant, tongue-in-cheek writers, do inquire within.

 

Yours respectfully,

 

The Tragically Unhip

 

Picture 4

 

Funny Signs: Hipster Moves Edition May 10, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Home, Neighbourhood, Signage — Genevieve D. Markle @ 2:55 am

Spotted along the escalator in the 3rd Street E/V Station in Midtown Manhattan:

Words by some jaded advertising exec, photo by Genevieve D. Markle.

Words by some jaded advertising exec, photo by Genevieve D. Markle

Wow, somebody did their homework! Every single New York hipster stereotype has been mentioned in this ad for Flatrate Moving, from the skinny jeans to the ironic facial hair to the daddy issues. Zoom in and read for yourself. But don’t laugh, because real hipsters don’t find anything funny.

 

Rant Control: How to List Your Apartment on Craigslist April 23, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, City Living, Home, How-To, Manifesto, Neighbourhood — Little Evie @ 11:52 am
And you say you'll SELL me your used futon? 25 percent off?

And you say you'll LET me buy your used futon, too, if I take the place? At 25 percent off? Where do I sign?

 

As July 1st, aka ‘Moving Day’ approaches, Montrealers are looking for places to live, like so many hermit crabs exchanging one dirty rotten husk for another. Between overcrowded open houses and Facebook pleas for help, it appears we’re getting desperate… but not that desperate. In my hunt for a clean, livable property I’ve come across more than my fair share of hell holes. But I swear – sometimes half the battle is just slogging through the Craigslist ads (or Craig’s List, if you prefer). Don’t these people WANT to rent their places out? Don’t they know they could get a few more bucks a month if only they put in a little effort? It boggles the mind.

 

Anyway, as is my way, I’m using my first post on The Tragically Unhip to complain loudly and to tell other people what they’re doing wrong. In this case, it’s listing and renting (or, god forbid, selling) a Montreal apartment.

  • Include photos. It’s the internet, people, not the back of the Mirror. If you can’t afford the $75 needed to buy a basic digital camera, borrow one.
  • Include good photos. You don’t need to be Annie Leibowitz, but fer chrissakes use your head. Offer shots of the kitchen, the bathroom, the bedrooms and whatever else potential tenants might actually need to see to help them evaluate a property. It’s really great that you sprang for a fancy crystal doorknob when you moved into the place pre-WWII, but offering three shots of it instead of, say, a snap of the bathroom just won’t do. Same goes for those of you who think detail pics of toilet plungers, Italian tiles, water meters, etc., are more important that shots of the kitchen.
  • Also, enough with those low-angled shots that stretch out tiny spaces, making them appear immensewe just might get wise when we actually visit the location. (And can someone please explain the reasoning behind including nothing but exterior shots? I can’t help but assume that these ads are posted by hobos with internet access who just snap facades at random and put them online in the hopes of conning people out of deposit money. Because if you were honestly trying to sell or rent a place, wouldn’t you be allowed inside?)
  • And hey, how about cleaning the fuck up? I’m not even asking you to paint over your delightful aqua and neon yellow walls or trash your precious used beer bottle collection (though, again, either would up your price significantly), just try taking your drying clothes off the door before you let me in for a viewing. Or shove all your old pizza boxes from one corner to the other, if only for a second, when you photograph that snazzy ‘European’ living room.
  • Oh, and please keep your creepy roommate out of the photos.
  • Include relevant information. Sure they may seem like minor details, but many potential tenants like to know little things like the apartment’s general location, the number of bedrooms, whether or not utilities or appliances are included, your contact info, etc. Trivial stuff. The whole 3.5/4.5 system used to denote number of rooms in Montreal apartments is mildly retarded, I agree, but that’s why you get a whole description along with your post’s title. Remember, you aren’t paying by the word – in fact, if you’re posting on Craigslist, you aren’t paying anything at all.
  • Don’t make me trek to HoMa and tell me it’s the Plateau. It seems, this year, that crafty landlords have dropped the term ‘Plateau-adjacent’ in favour of straight-out lies. No wonder so many are reluctant to list specific addresses – they know we can just GoogleMap that shit. I’m particularly amused by how many listings include magical areas like ‘Plateau North’ (Laval) and ‘Plateau West’ (NDG), which, oddly, don’t seem to exist outside of Craigslist’s real estate pages. Oh, and you might want to find out if I’m from here before lying your ass off about how long it takes to get to St. Laurent Blvd. from the east side of Lafontaine Park.
  • In the same vein, enough with your ‘creative’ interpretations of the word ‘room.’ A doorway is not a room. A balcony is not a room. And don’t get me started on what I’m supposed to consider a ‘bedroom,’ including door-less alcoves and 5ft x 5ft spaces containing washer and dryer hook-ups. Quebecers got so tired of this shit that they made it illegal to pass a window-less room off as a bedroom (or maybe it was just the fire hazard), leading many kind property owners to install plexiglass squares to let the sun shine in on your miserable existence.
  • That balcony? It’s a death trap. Honestly, I am telling you this for your own good. Don’t say I should have a BBQ out there because it will collapse, I will die, and you might feel bad for a second. (I think I might actually do a whole photo essay on the phenomenon of terrifyingly unsound Montreal balconies. That or the alarming number of Xmas trees and wreaths only now making it to the city’s curbs.)
  • Remember, this is Montreal. We’re cheap bastards. No one’s renting your one-bedroom for $3500, no matter how much work you put into it. (This is the part where the New York-based readers all laugh at how cute Montrealers are when they get angry about a little hole in the drywall, low water pressure, and paying over $1 per square foot.)

 

(And to anyone who ever read my old, crappy blog – god forbid – yes, this is a slight rehash. No one listened the first time around.)

 

Strictly Forbidden: Kijiji HATES Fun February 14, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Manifesto, Shopping — Brooke D. @ 3:54 pm

Phew! Wow….I sure have been busy writing lately!! What with all the food, art, and music reviews; travelogues; memoirs; photo essays; clever daily observations; snarky social commentary; and assertions of unhipness, I feel like I’ve been contributing to society on a pretty consistent basis, all while being a great team player for this very blog!

 

PSYCHE. Just kidding.

 

I’ve been holed up in my dark apartment writing and posting Craigslist and Kijiji ads 24 hours a day for the past three weeks.  Mostly because I am broke and also because Craigslist and Kijiji are like the poor man’s (or Tragically Unhip) Facebook.  I stalk, I flag, I’m obsessed.

 

I have also perfected the art of the repost.  As you may or may not know, Craigslist and Kijiji will kill your mother for reposting the same thing over and over to “top” your ad.  Jerks.  Therefore, I have been forced to finely tune my writing tactics in order to evade their stupid restrictions and  completely flood both sites with desperate advertisements for useless crap.  I see this as an exercise in Creative Writing for Commercial Appeal. (Yes, I just made that up. No, you cannot use it unless you pay me mad royalties.) A thesaurus, if I had one, would have also come in handy, but in times like these who the hell would spend money on a dumb book? Anyway, what is posted once as “Vintage” in Montreal is reposted as “Retro” in Parc Extension, etc.  Also, listing one thing in the title and including keywords for other stuff in the body works too… tricky.

 

Example:

Search for a Drink Mixer and you will find exactly 10 completely unrelated ads all by me!! Mwaaahahahahhha…Victory!!!

 

world domination

 

Easy, right? WRONG! This is actually quite exhausting and labor intensive when you factor in the time it takes to photograph each item (taking into consideration appropriate lighting and backdrops); edit photos; upload photos; write ads; edit ads; enter titles, photos, emails, phone numbers; skillfully solve the often poetic “Captcha” puzzles; agree to terms; confirm email addresses, and finally publish each ad.

 

I managed to post 90 (yes, NINETY; I told you I was obsessed) different ads between the two sites, in categories ranging from clothes and furniture to DVDs and appliances for basically all the same crap, before actually getting busted for attempting to repost.

 

Kijiji red alerted (not a real phrase) one ad and sent me this List of Restricted Items, telling me that I had violated their terms by posting ads for one or more of the following Restricted Items, but not specifying which:

(I’ve highlighted the really good ones so you can just kind of skim them; we’re almost done, I promise.)

 

* Alcoholic Beverages

* Baby Walkers

* Blood, Bodily Fluids and Body Parts (What. The. FUCK. Why not? I mean, if I don’t need my kidney and am asking a fair price/O.B.O.)

* Burglary Tools (Which would be totally sweet.)

* Counterfeit Currency, Stamps or Coins

* Counterfeit Products

* Electronic Surveillance Equipment deigned or used primarily to illegally intercept/record the private actions or interactions of others without their knowledge or permission

* Embargoed Goods

* Escort or Accompanying Services

* Government and Transit Uniforms, IDs and Licenses

* Illegal Drugs & Drug Paraphernalia (You mean I can’t buy crack rocks on Kijiji? WTF?!)

* Illegal Services

* Hazardous Materials

* Fireworks, Destructive Devices and Explosives (So I can’t list my red faux alligator shoulder bag as EXPLOSIVEly awesome?)

* Identity Documents, Personal Financial Records & Personal Information in any form, including mailing lists

* Items which encourage or facilitate Illegal Activity (Hmmm…a little help here?)

* Lottery Tickets, Sweepstakes Entries and Slot Machines

* Massage Services (Heh heh. “Massage”.)

* Obscene Material and Child Pornography (SHIT! I have so much of that stuff to get rid of!)

* Offensive Material (Not at all subjective.)

* Pesticides

* Pictures or Images that Contain Nudity

* Police Badges and Uniforms

* Prescription Drugs and Devices

* Prostitution or Ads that Offer Sex, Sexual Favours or Sexual Actions in Exchange for Money

* Recalled Items

* Satellite Products that Violate the Radiocommunication Act

* Sexual Services, including camming

* Solicitation of other users except by placing an Ad

* Stocks and Other Securities

* Stolen Property

* Tobacco Products

* Used Cosmetics (Darn…I ‘ve been looking for lipstick that perfect hue of Herpes for FOREVER!)

* Weapons and Related Items, such as firearms, firearm parts and magazines, ammunition, BB and pellet guns, tear gas, stun guns, switchblade knives, and martial arts weapons (What if it’s a “Vintage” or “Retro” I.E.D., hand grenade, rapier, etc.?)

 

This is really disappointing, I mean how can they hate FUN so much? Plus, I have a huge collection of films made with illegal surveillance equipment of massage therapists with fake identity documents violating the Radiocommunication Act and scratching off lotto tickets. It’s pretty hot stuff; I guess I’ll have to set up shop elsewhere.

 

Thanks for nothing Kijiji.

 

More Like “Rainbow Brite Does Dallas” February 14, 2009

Filed under: Advertising, Body, Books & Mags, Fashion, Hipster Culture, Shopping — Meagan Burbidge @ 3:12 pm

If I were to experience that incredibly irritating and deluded reverie in which a genie or sorcerer or Jesus tells me that whatever it is that I want, he’ll grant me it, I would immediately wish for the interior layout of the place of which I am employed to be switched around.  That is all.

 

I am not entirely assured in regards to the mental stability of whoever happened to establish the design of this particular space.  However, I do suspect an underlaying affinity for neo-Dadaism at the heart of it.

 

I spend forty waged hours a week in a medical professional’s office.  Most of you, I presume, are familiar with the ideologies of such a place: white walls, teal countertops (sometimes chocolate or Pepto-pink), framed art prints, and a visually communicated “front” or reception desk.  Traditionally, this desk is situated in a non-specific location within the waiting room area, sometimes in an enclosed space.  Its only unified position, in being that it faces the entryway and floor, procuring the respectful fear—through preemptive, paranoiac observation—of the occupants in hypertensive anticipation of an impending and scientific doom.

 

My situation is, of course, iconoclastic and individualistic of its own accord.  The front desk (albeit in name only) juts out of the middle of one wall, causing the door to be idiosyncratically stationed behind the desk.  This postulation for alternative or anti-order operates as the catalyst for patient befuddlement and my haphazard contortionism capabilities.

 

There exists an element of disquietude that far supercedes the spinal discomfort ensued.  As a result of limited activity (typical chiropractic patients are ‘sporty’ and in fair health, meriting little to no urgency in the acquisition of our services), I am often left to my own devices.  These devices typically involve hours of Facebook, Myspace, last.fm, and Vice magazine online.

 

Vice is fantastic because it renders various articles and literary tidbits that you wouldn’t often find in predictable publications such as Time, Newsweek, or O.  It also merits alternative versions of advertisement; the kind that could convince the creative minds behind the Coca-Cola campaign to buy clever Vitamin Water.  This is all fantastic, unless of course every person that passes by your computer screen is guaranteed to be privy to the contents of your desktop.  So, for example, when your boss comes up behind you, and you happen to be reading a review with album art in the left column, and that album art consists of a pink filtered photograph of tucked-back genitalia: nobody looks “good”.

 

I’ve always been a fan of the visual arts in the media.  Album art, tasteful and interesting upcoming film posters; I am the sort of person who still buys Vogue to simply peruse the advertisements. (Articles about which Prada bag to wear to which Libertarian luncheon or mid-afternoon movie, or, what sort of Bermuda shorts best describe me as a person on my next Mercedes Benz-drawn safari really don’t speak to me directly.) I have never really been able to pull off the dark and twisted alternativian/hip/un-jive/over-jive/under-jive/artist’s “Damn The Man and his attempted assuage of my preternatural lust for consumerism and the finer things in life” ideology.  (I am unsure if that is the exact dubbing of practice, but you should get the idea if you have ever met a person who enjoys Phish or only listens to record on vinyl.  Only.) The advertisement experience can be visceral as I pick through the pages while wearing Banana Republic or GAP or something from Target (very much in the spirit of when I would watch Julia Child prepare lobster something or other while eating McDonald’s).

 

I find it necessary to iterate this appreciation for advertisement because, despite the confusion that gold pants and unitards bring me, I often find myself considering various solid color additions to my wardrobe that could be easily obtained by American Apparel.  The problem is that every time that I have such a thought, American Apparel just has to go ahead and fucking ruin it.

 

Being in New York City, land of the eternal billboard, as well as on various hipster-driven websites, I am unquestionably exposed to the marketing campaigns of prior-stated apparel companies in droves.  Perhaps I’m just a tad more prudish than I give myself discredit for, but the photographic concepts provided by American Apparel just slay me.  There’s some aspect to each and every one of its campaigns that just makes me feel morally unclean.  There’s something remarkably trashy (but not in a fun way), and dirty (but not in a consensual way) about it that I have yet to unearth.  I’ll give it this much, it has the capacity to make me feel exactly the manner in which I imagine that I would feel if I were ever to be exposed to incest or kiddie porn directly.  Engaging in an American Apparel advertisement is like watching soft core porn scenes that take twenty minutes of dialogue in regards to “Cheryl” using the shower: get to the point already.  And then, it happens: that pivotal moment when you realize that you don’t have to wait anymore; that all of the secrets of the universe may not be answered, but they are well on their way, as a direct result of the event that you just witnessed.

 

Phlebotomizing along the right-hand side of a cannibal’s interview was everything I never knew I always needed: a breast.  Granted, this breast was attached to a woman.  This woman had only a pair of white pants on.  There was no notation, or labels, or emblems, or headers, footers; no text or icon-based branding whatsoever.  She was simply topless, in pants that occupied a mere 5% of the bottom right corner.  And yet, somehow we all knew exactly what we were supposed to buy based off of this simple image that, in varying degrees obviously, has been threading through Occidental art history for centuries.

 

One cannot measure the intensity of such mitigation.   Finally!  “Cheryl” (American Apparel) is “taking her clothes off and emulating the act of sweet love-making to the torso of someone” (no analogy required). And just then, in our greatest moment together, a new patient walks up from behind me in the office.  Naturally, this was at the precise moment that the Flash application starts to stick and the brief “American Apparel” that appears has given up hope, leaving the breast permanently frozen on my screen.  It is aware that God will always resent me, and accordingly abandons me, leaving me with this total stranger and a particularly gratuitous angle on screen.

 

I did what all other creepy, porn drenched computer nerds would do, which was react in an uncoordinated and overly flustered manner, ex-ing out of the page and pretending that I was doing something respectable, like donating money to the poor children of somewhere or ordering a sundeck umbrella.

 

I thought that the situation might have heightened as my boss entered the room.  However, I think that we have reached a point in our routine that no longer warrants incredulity, or even so much as a disrupted glance.  I think I need to improve upon my knitting abilities or learn to carve radishes into orchids and intricate fishes, something to occupy my time and my hands.

 

I remain perplexed by the nature and by the nurture of the million and one American Apparel colors. But now, having been bested by it, I do feel compelled to wear (in the Scarlet Letter sense of the word) a Golden Unitard: the bitch tag for the bright and splendid cotton adorners of this generation.

 

Blame Canada – For Being So Awesome December 18, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Culture & Society, Television, Video — Genevieve D. Markle @ 12:17 pm

I was an hour late to meet Marianne and friends at the sexy, saxy jazz show at Le Parc Des Princes last night. There was no excuse for my tardiness; I live directly across the street. But I did have an excuse, and it was that I got distracted by the CBC’s broadcast of four-time Olympic champion Kurt Browning’s holiday figure skating special, A Merry Celtic Christmas. I mean, the guy was jigging on ice! It made me proud to be Canadian and 3/8 diluted Irish.

 

The fact that watching figure skating on the CBC caused me to be late for a cool social event got me to thinking about what else makes Canadian television so unique and awesome (and me so lame).  I came up with three reasons.

 

“A Part of Our Heritage” – Superman Edition

 

Okay, so in retrospect, the Heritage Minutes clips score way high on the cheez-o-meter, but this one seemed like the least painful to watch. For everyone in New York who wondered where I got all my obscure facts about who was secretly Canadian (Superman, Winnie the Pooh, Saul Bellow, et al.), well, the cat is now out of the bag. Growing up as young, impressionable Canadians with sponge-like minds, this is the kind of propaganda we were fed.

 

A to Z Zellers Commercial

 

It will make Kimberly very happy to hear that the singer of this jingle pronounces the letter H as “aitch” and not “haitch” like I say it. And to further reinforce our Canadianness, that last letter is zed, not zee. Zellers is the Canadian equivalent of Target, except that we’re not cool enough to attract designers like Alexander McQueen or Proenza Schouler to create budget lines for us. Instead, we get Ashlee Simpson. Yawn.

 

Tim Hortons in Afghanistan

 

This video is amazing. Listen closely for the outrageous Canadian accents. I don’t know anyone who actually talks like that, but I think this is the accent my American friends are trying to imitate when they tell me to “Take off, eh?” If we must have troops in Afghanistan, then at least let them be peacekeepers, and at least give them coffee from the T-Ho.  That’s all they want, dammit! (Aside from world peace, of course.)

 

You Are Gorgeous December 17, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, City Living, Culture & Society, Neighbourhood, Photography — Brooke D. @ 4:16 pm

When I moved recently to my new neighborhood, I immediately noticed all the great hair and beauty ads in the shop windows along Jean Talon and the diversity of human beauty proudly displayed behind its panes of glass.

 

I went walking the other day and decided to take a few pictures to chronicle the variety of faces I saw peering back at me from the inside, looking out. Some were really striking, some were extremely cheesy, and some were a little straight-up creepy (e.g. mannequins of small children with dirty, matted hair is a little… I don’t know… ew?).

 

I was greeted warmly with waves and smiles in some shops, actually kicked out of others, and had the pleasure of meeting one man who stood proudly by a photo of himself taken some 40 years earlier (see the black and white number).

 

This is my ‘hood:

 

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Hipster Conversation Topics for the Watercooler, Part II December 4, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Top Ten, Video — Tess Hart @ 12:03 pm

For our latest installment in the Hipster Conversation Topics for the Watercooler series, might I recommend that you engage your coworkers in a retrospective on the Japanese commercial from the historical and present day perspectives? By following the simple instructions below, you too can experience pure cinematographic genius combined with advertising so persuasive and powerful that you might feel the sudden urge to fill your house with robots, penguins, and singing food. Resist these temptations and remember, in just 2-3 minutes you can sound like an expert connoisseur of an obscure topic that no one outside the darkest circles of trendster would ever discuss. Okay, so your coworkers have probably all seen an Akira Kurosawa movie or two, but how nerdy (or ultrahip) are they really?

 

To begin:

1. Open web browser

2. View YouTube videos below (30 seconds each)

3. Put up a really important-looking document on your computer screen and close all web-browsing applications

4. Amble over to the watercooler/coffee machine/kitchenette area/microwave

5. As soon as someone walks by, strike up a conversation on the creativity, absurdity, and humour of Japanese advertising. Don’t be shy about commenting on obscure insights provided by these cultural windows, or discovering subliminal connections to Gus Van Sant movies.

 

It’s easy!

 

 

Top Ten Awesomest Japanese Commercials I Could Find on YouTube (Plus Bonus Pasta Sauce Ads):

 

10. Robot Commercial

9.  A Wholesome Example of Mars Curry from the 60’s

8.  Singing Pizza Toppings

7.  Japanese Hip Hop Tells You All About the Legend of Zelda

6.  Penguins Promoting Toilets

5.  Cute Girls in New Town Are Not What They Seem

4.  Find This Man. He Can Destroy the Cockroaches in Your House.

3.  Early 90s: Japan Airlines Hired Janet Jackson for Their SWAT Team

2.  I Have No Idea What This Commercial Is For But It Has Children And Is Sinister

1.  Psychic Caterpillars with Jedi Mind Tricks

 

Special Bonus Evil Pasta Sauce Commercial Series:

3.  Pasta Sauce à la Linda Blair

2.  Pasta Sauce à la The Shining

1.  Pasta Sauce Has Landed

 

Who is Zato One? November 17, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Art, City Living — Genevieve D. Markle @ 8:27 am

 

king of tight pants

zato one


zato 1

 

Do we have another reclusive street artist on our hands? (Banksy, I’m looking at you here.) This is what I ask myself when taking my daily stroll along little-used (and little-known) Groll street in Mile End. A graffiti artist by the name of Zato One has stenciled a significant number of works on the sides of houses lining the narrow street. You may have already seen some of his stuff around Montreal without even realizing it; he was the artist responsible for fighting guerrilla marketing with guerrilla defacing by altering those hipster Vespa ads that started popping up on vacant walls during the summer. So what’s the story behind his tongue-in-cheek, mild social commentary? Does he have an artist’s statement? Googling his name turned up very little: one measly mention on Wooster Collective and a photo or two on Flickr. Whatever the deal is, I’m feeling it. And I’ll be keeping my eyes peeled for more.

[Update: It has since been brought to my attention that the King of Tight Pants was not actually done by Zato One.  My bad. Does that mean we have another anonymous stenciler to ponder now?]

 

zato one

Side of a building on Groll street, Mile End. (All photos by Genevieve D. Markle)

 

More Reasons to Vote – Because Celebrities Tell You to! November 3, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Culture & Society, Manifesto, Video — Genevieve D. Markle @ 9:48 pm

 

 

 

 

The Evolution Will Not Be Televised October 16, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Art — Genevieve D. Markle @ 12:54 am

It was only a matter of time. The Tragically Unhip slowly creeps into the public conscience—through word of mouth at first, then by Googling any phrase with the word “hipster” in it—and the next thing you know, we’ve got a hint of a following. Maybe even a small fan club. And as a result of our newfound quasi-popularity, we decided it was time to get a new look. Enter the brilliant design team that hooked us up with the bomb-diggity web banner you now see at the top of this page.

 

You know how it seems like in order to be cool you have to either be, know, or sleep with a graphic designer in Brooklyn? Well, luckily for us, we do know a graphic designer in Brooklyn. (Yay, credibility!) We were introduced to Laura F. Cline by our friends over at Learned Evolution, and boy are we glad we met her. On her first try, Laura created a logo that we absolutely fell in love with, spelling out the name of the Tragically Unhip in EKG-inspired lettering based on our new tagline: “A blog with three fingers on the pulse of uncoolness.” She also created our business cards, which means that I can stop writing our URL on paper torn from my Moleskine every time I meet someone new. In short, we owe a big thank you to Laura Cline and Learned Evolution, and also to Sofia Shendi for hacking into our webpage and sticking the banner up there using her lean, mean web-programming skills.

 

Drinks all around! (But cheap ones, please. We’re writers.)

 

Coffee, Tea or Me? September 26, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Sex — Genevieve D. Markle @ 5:40 am

 

I feel guilty.  Last night I cheated on Craigslist and went to Kijiji Montreal to post an ad offering my services as a private tutor and TESOL instructor. If you’ve never been on Kijiji before, I don’t recommend it; it’s messy, hard to read, and rife with those annoying pay-per-click sponsored links. Most of the time I just ignore these ads, but (for obvious reasons) the one I’ve copied and pasted for you above really caught my attention. It informs the reader that there are “1000’s of beautiful Russian girls seek[ing] foreign men for marriage” and that you can learn more if you visit their website at www.odessadarlings.com.

 

First of all, isn’t Odessa in Ukraine? And don’t Ukrainians hate being identified as Russian? This was my first problem with the ad: a genuine concern for accurate geographic labelling and for the appeasement of a people’s sense of national identity. My second concern was that a website exists where men can purchase Russian/Ukrainian mail-order brides. [Update: There is now a meetup.com group devoted to finding "Cyrillic love".] Well into the new millenium, white slave traders and other entrepreneurs involved in human trafficking can now advertise their wares via the world wide web. How resourceful!

 

There was an entire chapter in Misha Glenny’s McMafia devoted to this precise phenomenon: women from Odessa being sold by their poor families and sent by enterprising Russians all the way to Israel where they were forced to work in brothels. It was painful to read. While the optimist in me wants to believe that the mail-order brides at Odessa Darlings will actually be treated very kindly by their new husbands—men who may be too shy or unattractive to find a wife by their own merits—the truth is that it’s all business, and that these women will be purchased as professional wives. Make the coffee, clean the house, screw the hubby, and don’t talk too much because, well, you don’t speak English.

 

Even better, though, is that on Odessa Darlings, the would-be husbands have their own profiles too. So inquisitive, anthropological-study nerds like me can spy on all these men (some of whom are actual hotties) to see what kind of man seeks a mail-order bride.  Clicking on the “Men’s Gallery” will show you a bunch of amateur photographs of the men that our Odessa Darlings can choose from. The viewer can scroll through photo after photo of men posing—in front of their car or lounging in a vacation spot—in the photo that they think makes them look the most attractive and click-worthy. How else to get a hot wife?

 

But hold on a minute. Contrary to what the advertisement at the top of this page states, nowhere on Odessa Darlings does it mention marriage or that ”1000’s of beautiful Russian girls [are] seek[ing] foreign men.” Instead, the website’s tagline simply reads “The best way to connect [with] beautiful Ukraine singles.” So is it a mail-order bride website or not? You be the judge.

 

This is Not a Joke September 18, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Fashion, Shopping — Genevieve D. Markle @ 12:35 pm

 

This is a real American Apparel ad. Clicking on it will bring you here. I don’t know what frightens me more: the weird-looking dog or the thought that very soon, legions of white 19-year-olds will be out on the streets trying to look like the homies from Run DMC.

 

I’m Lovin’ It! September 3, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Food — Genevieve D. Markle @ 12:34 am

Find me a writer who actually makes enough money from his craft to sustain himself and I’ll give him twenty bucks (because chances are he still needs it more than you do). I just wish that it was any restaurant besides McDonald’s that was including coupons in my mailbox for $28 worth of food. The absolute perfection of the Big Mac on the front of this brochure got me wondering just what tricks McDonald’s uses to make their burger look so enticing. A quick Google search led me here, and I learned that food handlers at photo shoots have been known to utilize such inedible substances as glue, spray deodorant, and motor oil to give their fare that delectable, mouthwatering look that so inspires us to eat in their establishments. Yum!

 

mcdonalds advertising

I was so hungry, I took a bite right out of the brochure!

 

Things We Would Do If We Were Cool August 20, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Sex, Television, Things We Would Do If We Were Cool — Genevieve D. Markle @ 9:14 pm

 

I swear my sex life is this exciting. (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)

 

If I had been cool at 16, I would have had the sexual prowess of a Gossip Girl. Posters plastered all over New York City promoting their upcoming season are are so scandalously sexy I feel like they could be ads for The Red Shoe Diaries, rather than a prime-time television series aimed at high school kids. Their false advertising makes my inner adolescent feel totally inadequate. I mean, what underage boy knew to seduce a woman by feeding her cherries? And what post-pubescent male had mastered the complicated art of doing it in the hot tub? I was lucky if I could find a fellow who knew that circling his tongue like a windmill in my mouth did not count as a good French kiss. Gawd!

 

When The Carpet Doesn’t Match The Drapes August 14, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Body, Sex — Genevieve D. Markle @ 5:25 am

I used to work in porn. No, wait—not like that! I was the ticket taker at an X-rated movie theatre. As much as I tried to steer clear of the auditorium and all the, er, shenanigans going on inside, I used to have to walk through the projector booth in order to get to the staff bathroom, and I admit to sneaking a peek at the screen whenever I walked by. As a result, I can say with confidence that I have been exposed to more sex and body parts than your average woman. Specifically, I’ve seen a lot of bush—or lack thereof. Now, I have no idea if the porn stars’ predilection for pubeless punany is reflective of North American women at large, but if not, and you are the proud owner of some pubic hair, well, have I got a product for you!

 

Are you a bottle blonde on top but a tell-tale brunette down below? Did you, God forbid, just find a grey in the hair south of your border? What on earth are you going to do?! Let me tell you: You’re going to head to your local drugstore and purchase a bottle of award-winning Betty, “Color for the Hair Down There.” You can choose from one of five shades: brown, black, auburn, blonde, and the cryptically-named “Fun.” From the looks of the box in the ad I saw at the 14th Street L station last night, Fun appears to be a vibrant shade of fluorescent pink. I guess that one’s for the punk grrrls.

 

So buy Betty! Because we women need one more thing to be self-conscious about.

 

Fourteenth Street Fur-Dye.

14th St. fur-dye. (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)

 

H&M Hearts Hipster Beards August 7, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, Fashion, Hipster Culture — Genevieve D. Markle @ 12:42 pm

 

All kinds of wrong.

H&M: All kinds of wrong. (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)

 

 

Could somebody please tell H&M that Bearduary was over in March? In an attempt to appeal to the market’s most unmarketable demographic, H&M emblazons the side of their construction site at Peel and Ste. Catherine in Montreal with their interpretation of the classic hipster beard. (By “classic,” of course, I mean dating back to 2006.) I guess this is supposed to help them sell more clothing. We just think he looks kind of scary.

 

 

 

 

P.S.  Jon Lajoie called.  He wants his pedophile beard back.

 

What Exactly Are You Trying To Sell Me? August 4, 2008

Filed under: Advertising, City Living — Genevieve D. Markle @ 5:27 pm

 

I promise to no longer go anywhere without my camera. I generally try to stay far away from the soulless zoo that is Ste. Catherine Street, but today I had to bring my wedding dress to the tailor’s. As I was waiting for the light to turn green at the corner of Drummond, I noticed the man across the intersection from me was carrying a large homemade banner with the word “CORRUPTION” spray painted onto what looked like an old, white bedsheet. He carried no literature and he wasn’t shouting propaganda or conspiracy theories from his post. In fact, he began walking as soon as the light changed colour and did not try to engage the other pedestrians. Was he hoping that someone would stop and ask him what he was denouncing?  Protesting? Selling? I wish I could have taken his photograph. Instead, I took the picture below. So I ask of this billboard what I should have asked of that strange, silent man: What exactly are you trying to sell me?

 

I'll take two! (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)

I'll take two! (Photo by Genevieve D. Markle)