Bud…OBAMA…ser
Thursday, October 30th, 2008
Mock commercials have been discussed on this blog before, whether it’s “Saturday Night Live” or others that find creative inspiration from direct response or general advertising. However, a recent independent commercial supporting Obama has blurred the lines of advertising and advocacy. This example is intriguing because it’s a new take on an old, famous Budweiser commercial. It also shows how commercials can at times have the power to transcend into pop culture. The actors from the original, infamous “Whassup” campaign have taken a hard line at McCain in this updated version.
Original Whassup Bud Ad:
Obama Whassup Ad:
This also becomes an issue of branding. Could Budweiser’s brand be somewhat tarnished for Republicans? Did all the references of Teresa Heinz Kerry harm the Heinz brand in 2004? I can tell you this much, my college roommate ordered “W- America’s Ketchup” off the Internet after refusing to buy Heinz products. A lot of Americans wouldn’t buy it, regardless of the fact that her role at the company is limited to philanthropy projects and that her former husband was an admired Republican senator. The same could be true for die-hard democrats that declined to buy Coors products while republican Pete Coors was running for the Senate in Colorado.
According to The Wall Street Journal, “But the video is causing a ripple in industry circles, because Budweiser—which clearly has no interest in backing a presidential candidate—is powerless to stop it. In a departure from normal industry practice, neither Anheuser Busch nor its ad firm, Omnicom’s DDB Chicago, own the Whassup slogan or concept. Instead, the brewer paid Charles Stone III, who created and starred in the ads, roughly $37,000 to license the idea for five years. That deal expired three years ago.”
But, regardless of this particular political ad’s positive or negative impact, it does further prove that advertising campaigns can have a long-standing impact in American culture. Having already received well over 2 million views, they’ve taken something straight from the ad world to create an organic, viral marketing phenomenon.
Pat Cauley is Electronic Retailer magazine’s eMedia editor.




















