Always outnumbered. Generally overdresssed.
Wednesday, September 01, 2010
Yeah, yeah I know
Ben already posted it on his blog but I wanted to say something about it and I didn't want to colonise his comment section with it and get flamed as a massive pseud as you will see.
I like this advert a lot - but does it strike anyone else that the moment that Jack Black says 'I'm not your puppet!' constitutes a mind-bending nexus of irony?
Because obviously, Jack Black is acting not as himself, but as a version of Jack Black, the actor who doesn't want to appear in an advert for Orange. Orange are behaving, not as themselves, but as though they are the kind of brand that wants to aggressively manipulate Jack Black into acting as their shill. So both Black and Orange are engaged in a double-bluff where they know that we know that they're not these things (i.e. Black as shill, Orange as manipulator). But the point at which it gets absurd and mind-bending is that Orange and Black really are all of the things they're claiming not to be. When Black is made to dance, he really is being made to dance. Orange are forcing him to dance, for money, to sell their product.
This is interesting to me, not just as a kind of conceptual calisthenics, but because working all this out makes no difference whatever. In fact, if you uttered this aloud in a client meeting someone would almost certainly punch in the side of the head before you got to the end of the word 'nexus'.
Sometimes you can forget that it's two thousand and fucking ten and that our audience has one of the sharpest sensibilities in history.
Nearly finished the essay, but thanks for asking. Anyone going to enter this long copy contest?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
Yeah, but its funny.
Yep, not denying that for a moment.
Long copy contest: Between 50-200 words.
I've written headlines longer than that.
irony is the refuge of the artistically weak
Agree Ben, 50-200 words. It should be called the 'some copy' competition. We'll probably put a couple of things in for it, though. We loves copy.
Post a Comment