Miami Herald

Afraid of becoming your parents? TV’s Dr. Rick comes to the rescue

- BY ASHLEY FETTERS

Where were you when you first got Dr. Ricked?

I was on my couch, chuckling blissfully along at the Progressiv­e insurance commercial where a millennial­aged homeowner tries to “coach” an annoyed plumber fixing a pipe under the sink. That’s when Dr. Rick, an older, mustachioe­d mentor on the scene, gently pulls the homeowner away and reminds him that plumber is the expert here: “You hired him.” (Dads do love doing that, I thought.)

Then, the ad pivoted to Dr. Rick advising a young woman. If there are so many throw pillows on your couch that you aren’t sure where to sit, he told her, you have too many. And you’ve turned into your mom.

“Oh, no,” I said to the two chevron-print pillows and the squishy yellow “You Are My Sunshine!” cushion I had just neatly stacked off to the side of the sofa before I sat down.

For nearly a year now, Progressiv­e’s Dr. Rick ad campaign — in which a tough-love Dr. Phil type helps millennial­s and Gen Xers avoid taking on their parents’ behaviors when they buy (and insure) their first homes — have been delighting audiences and then, often to their further delight, sucker-punching them with the cold truth about themselves.

Not only have the Dr. Rick spots managed to stand out in TV’s strange, highly competitiv­e world of humorous insurance ads (packed as it is with Progressiv­e’s Flo and her colleagues, State Farm’s Jake, Liberty Mutual’s LiMu Emu, Geico’s pun-happy new homeowners and President Palmer from “24” forever selling Allstate), these ads have carved out a space for themselves in the cultural lexicon of the moment that’s rare for an ad campaign: “You need Dr. Rick” has become an affectiona­te shorthand for “You’ve become everything that irritated you about your dad.” Fans of the commercial­s (fans of the commercial­s!) tweet at the insurance company almost daily.

It doesn’t hurt that when Progressiv­e introduced the

Dr. Rick ads in April 2020, they quickly became a warm, sunny island of gentle observatio­nal humor in a vast sea of grim commercial­s murmuring about “these uncertain times.” Or that they’re performed by a cast of veteran improv actors recruited from the Groundling­s and Second City.

(In one roundly beloved bit, two of Dr. Rick’s patients struggle not to stare at a stranger with blue hair. “We all see it,” Dr. Rick tells them under his breath, as they continue to gape. “We all-l-l see it.” That bit was largely improvised.)

And certainly some credit belongs to Bill

Glass, the 49-year-old veteran improv actor with a self-described “resting goofy face” that only gets goofier when he puts on Dr. Rick’s stage mustache (nicknamed “the Beast”).

But what’s most unusual about the Dr. Rick ads is their appeal across generation­s that, in the “OK, boomer” skirmishes of late, don’t always get along. The ads apply both a gimlet eye and a big heart to an instantly familiar but little-explored phenomenon.

Introjecti­on — the phenomenon of humans absorbing the attitudes, values or traits of the people they spend the most time with — has never been one of the sexier psychoanal­ysis terms. Lacking the titillatin­g mythologic­al wink of the Oedipal complex or the sharp weaponizat­ion potential of passive-aggression, introjecti­on never seeped into the popular consciousn­ess.

But in 2015, Progressiv­e’s chief marketing officer, Jeff Charney, was hunting for a novel insight about the stages of life around which to build a new ad campaign. He stumbled

across the concept of parental introjecti­on — the absorption of the traits of the adults we’re around first and most frequently.

Talking to behavioral scientists and psychology researcher­s, “We found that there was a ‘grown-up switch’ that everybody has, and nobody had really mined when that switch turned on,” Charney said. The lurch into self-identified adulthood seemed to be precisely when people started becoming their parents.“We (initially) thought it was when people had kids,” he said.

“But we found out it was when they buy homes.”

Soon, homeowners­hipinduced parental introjecti­on was recast by Progressiv­e as “parentamor­phosis”; that campaign’s first ads debuted in 2016. Eventually, the ad series would evolve to focus on the don’t-become-yourparent­s evangelism of Glass’s Dr. Rick.

On an advertisin­g level, the Dr. Rick ads are textbook examples of good sales strategy. Barbara Mellers, a professor of marketing and psychology at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, points out that they’re both simple in concept and surprising in

content, which is a winning combinatio­n for a memorable ad.

Plus, advertiser­s are always going for relatabili­ty: “The more similar a person in an ad is to you, the easier it is for you to imagine yourself in that person’s place,” Mellers said. Adults of any age might recognize themselves in Progressiv­e’s Dr. Rick spots, in the adult child being subtly roasted for becoming their parent, or in the parent — offscreen, but a palpable presence — being razzed for their distinctly parental ways.

That cross-generation­al appeal is unusual in its own right. For part of this past winter, my partner and I lived with my parents in Minnesota, where we spent weeknights doing one of the few things people can during a Minnesota winter and a pandemic: sitting on the couch watching TV together. Laughter usually had a 50% participat­ion rate; whatever made two of us laugh usually made the other two roll their eyes or cluck their tongues.

Dr. Rick was the rare exception. I had always privately chuckled at my parents’ insistence on using their iPhones with

their index fingers rather than their thumbs; now, here they were laughing at it too.

As Mellers pointed out, though, what may be making the Progressiv­e ads stick so well in the public imaginatio­n is that they point out a phenomenon that’s familiar but hasn’t been parodied to the point of being a trope. “I think we all experience it, but I don’t know how much has been written on it or how broad a topic it is in the general conversati­on of life,” Mellers said. When she first watched a Dr. Rick ad, “I started rememberin­g funny things about sounding like my mother.”

Charney, too, has thought a lot about his own parents — and his own parentamor­phosis — over the course of developing and shooting the Dr. Rick ads. Certainly, he’s thought about the parental habits that irked him; his childhood friend’s mother had a “No cussin’, no fussin’, and no backtalkin’”-style mantra framed in her home for years, and the alarming fervor with which Dr. Rick throws a similar framed poster in a garbage can, Charney said, is in her honor.

More often, though, he thinks about how he’s

developed the same impulse as his own dad to chase down drivers who speed past his home while his kids are riding their bikes — an impulse he’s grown to understand rather than resent. At the end of the day, the Dr. Rick ads are “an ode to our parents,” Charney said.

And although Bill Glass’ face is now the one many probably see in their nightmares about transformi­ng into their parents, even Glass himself has experience­d the stomachdro­pping Dr. Rick moment. “I’ve caught myself running around the house turning off lights, going,

‘Do we have to have all the lights on?’” he said. “I’ve had a couple of, ‘The laundry’s not going to fold itself!’ And I’m talking to no one. There’s no one around,” Glass added with a laugh.

But for Glass — and probably for many — the Dr. Rick ads have helped illustrate that while he may be turning into his father, he’s far from alone in doing so.

“I love my dad, and I’m in no hurry to turn into him,” Glass said. “But maybe Dr. Rick has helped me lighten up a little bit on some of that stuff.”

 ?? Progressiv­e ?? Actor Bill Glass in character as Dr. Rick from Progressiv­e’s TV ads.
Progressiv­e Actor Bill Glass in character as Dr. Rick from Progressiv­e’s TV ads.
 ?? Progressiv­e ?? Dr. Rick (Bill Glass) quizzes his students on whether they need a ‘Live, Laugh, Love’ sign in the house. (Answer: One doesn’t, unless the goal is to become one’s parents.)
Progressiv­e Dr. Rick (Bill Glass) quizzes his students on whether they need a ‘Live, Laugh, Love’ sign in the house. (Answer: One doesn’t, unless the goal is to become one’s parents.)
 ?? Progressiv­e ?? Actor Bill Glass plays Dr. Rick, a therapist in TV commercial­s who helps young homeowners avoid becoming their parents.
Progressiv­e Actor Bill Glass plays Dr. Rick, a therapist in TV commercial­s who helps young homeowners avoid becoming their parents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States