Exploiting 9/11
By Rob Walker
Posted Monday, July 15, 2002, at 8:21 AM PT
Not long after Sept. 11, Ad Report Card looked at various examples of marketing gambits that seemed, at best, opportunistic. (We followed up with this column and with reader reactions .) The normalcy pendulum has swung quite a bit since those days, but the debate over mixing Sept. 11 and commercial messages lingers. One series of ads that has gotten attentionand criticismon this front comes from Cantor Fitzgerald, the bond brokerage firm that lost many employees in the attacks on the World Trade Center. (To see the ads, go to Cantor 's Web site, click "View Our Stories," then move your cursor over the words "Ad Campaign" and click on any of the head shots that come up; you'll need the Flash and QuickTime plug-ins.) Another campaign that's gotten a lot less attention than one might have thought is for a product called Raditect, which you can see via Ads.com (you'll need either Windows Media Player or the Realplayer). Viewed together, the campaigns make it clear just how cynical post-Sept. 11 advertising can getand that, particularly compared to Raditect, Cantor Fitzgerald has nothing to be ashamed of.
Exploiting the attacks or speaking from the heart? |
The Raditect ad: This spot opens with black-and-white footage of a mystery man getting out of a car and clutching a metal briefcase. An ominous voice-over begins: "Next time, it may not happen from jetliners smashing into concrete and steel." Next we're shown a happy family, Dad playing with the kids as Mom beams from the kitchen. "But when it comes"we see the mystery man again, then a shot of a nuclear reactor"whether from a dirty bomb, nuclear accident, or even an earthquake that produces radiation, you won't have time to rush out and buy this remarkable early-warning system that could save you and your family's lives." A product shot shows a small black box with lights, which start flashing as a string of shrill beeps bleat forth, before we again cut back to mystery man, who is opening his briefcase, which apparently contains a scary bomb. Now we see the ad's narrator, a reassuringly gray-haired man sitting in an office behind a big desk with an American flag at hand, as he tells us to take down a toll free number ("it's important") and introduces us to Raditect, "the first affordable radiation detector for your home, car, or office." As he explains, vaguely, how Raditect is able to warn us of radiation "long before it's on the news," we see the happy family scrambling out of the house in response to the urgent beeping. "It delivers the head start you need to safely avoid the panic and the horror of radiation." Finally we're told that it costs $149 and that we can learn more at the Web site www.homelandprotection.net , as we see closing footage of an SUV zooming down a remote and empty highwaypresumably the happy family fleeing to safety.
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