Work & Money>Consumer:
from the October 18, 2001 edition

Help wanted - Madison Ave.

Advertisers inhabit a rich, diverse, highly informative, and entertaining universe.
E-mail this story
Write a letter to the Editor
Printer-friendly version

Get all the Monitor's headlines by e-mail.
Subscribe for free.

What works in selling cornflakes is unlikely to promote a Bose audio system for the new SUV. We know this, and no matter what we say, we like to see how smart, creative people work out details on such ads.

In the aftermath of the terrorist destruction of the World Trade Center, a number of TV commercials originally scheduled were pulled. Style, tone, content - the message - were not appropriate.

Madison Avenue, with the best weathervane in the media business, put its own thumb on the skip button. The spin folks knew viewers would want a more serious and more dignified feel, at least for now.

But the persuaders abhor a vacuum. Their raison d'être: to pitch products and services at the intersection of imagination and appetite. If the ear hears it, the eye sees it, the tongue tastes it, the nose smells it, a finger touches it - and the exchange of money makes it happen - the ad shops want to be there.

In some cases, in just a few hours, new, appropriately sensitive commercials started airing. Suddenly, in almost every ad we saw, patriotism was as plain as the horizon of a Kansas wheat field.

Now, the question remains: In a culture of all-marketing, all-the-time, will there be any lasting changes in the content and theme of advertisements after Sept. 11?

We did see a sea change in the decline of negative ads in the past two presidential elections. Public sentiment demanded it.

Kim Campbell's article (right) takes a closer look at some of the longer-term trends in advertising following the New York and Washington attacks. Just how far public sentiment has shifted is still an open question.

• E-mail Ideas@csps.com.








Get Monitor stories by e-mail:
(Your e-mail address will be protected by csmonitor.com's tough privacy policy.)
Tools and Guides
Finance questions?
E-mail Work & Money.
 
Ethical Market Monitor
The Domini Social Index 400 over the last 90 days.
Chart from Yahoo! Finance
Chart data by CSI
 
Salary Wizard ®

Find out what you're worth

Job title

Zip Code

salary.com


Photos of the Day:
The best photos from Jan. 05, 2009

ELECTION '08 Patchwork Nation
The American voter beyond red and blue

FISHERIES Empty Oceans Series
The sea is no longer so vast.


Daily podcast

Monitor Reports

Discussions with Monitor reporters from around the world


Today

Pat Murphy

The US role in trying to defuse the Israeli-Hamas conflict in Gaza




Today's print issue
Today's Issue of The Christian Science Monitor