Philippine Daily Inquirer

Once we were called

- Minyong Ordoñez

I GOT hired in advertisin­g in 1961, and throughout the ’60s and ’70s we were imitative of the jargons, posturing and thinking of ad men in Madison Avenue, New York, US of A.

The television series titled “MadMen” portrayed the titillatin­g facets of working in advertisin­g—the rat race, office rivalry and infighting, the intrigue, one-upmanship, and indiscreti­ons of working in an office whose main business is to generate sales ideas and to get a quick promotion for it.

Us Madmen dictated the images and mnemonic devices to enliven the trivialiti­es and vagaries of daily lives.

The ’60s and ’70s were the golden years of advertisin­g in America. Madison Avenue in New York City was the Mecca of advertisin­g. In that avenue, the gurus and superstars of advertisin­g were “kings of the hill,” as Frank Sinatra’s song,“New York, New York,” said.

Ad men

Leo Burnett (an Alfred Hitchcock lookalike) created a country for tough men called Marlboro Country which made the brand a leader worldwide.

David Ogilvy (the haughty Brit migrant) used mystique in selling Hathaway shirts by putting an eye patch on his royal blood model.

Ajax detergent introduced the white knight galloping through washdays for the cleanest, whitest wash.

Shirley Polycop of FCB used female psychology in selling Clairol hair coloring with a provocativ­e line, “Does she or doesn’t she.”

“Pepsi Day” became your calendar of activities.

“Think Small” was Bill Bernback’s (the gentleman with brains) way of selling the virtue of thrift in Volkswagen.

A loud animal roar emitted from your gas tank because Exxon gasoline in the US (Esso locally) told you to “Put a Tiger In Your Tank.”

Madmen coined a lot of jargons and expression­s to spice up their hubris. We took this to mean knowledge and profession­al posturing of the trade. We imitated them to gain our career pizzazz quickly.

If we wanted to test whether our ideas would be effective in the market place we said, “Let’s spill the milk and see if the cat will lick it,” or “Why don’t we raise the flag and see if anyone salutes.”

We would intimidate clients who were hesitant to approve our ideas with an acerbic question, such as, “Is anybody going to get killed if we run the campaign?”

Dressing for success

We adopted the Madison Avenue dress sense, too; funny, in my case, because I’d take the crowded JD bus from San Francisco del Monte, standing up in the aisle with my white, long-sleeve shirt crumpled. Disheveled, I reached Rufino Building on Ayala Avenue. Once in the office, I’d put on one of my two ties which I kept in my drawer, go to the men’s room to groom my hair flat and parted like Don Draper (or Leopoldo Salcedo, locally), the Madmen’s de rigeur hair groom. Then I’d put on my one and only suit that I parked in my supervisor’s cubicle to complete the Madmen look. All our suits were made by an

tailor, named Ernie Samia, we rechristen­ed as Ernie D. Taylor. made suits on installmen­t payments. came every payday to collect and

He carried a bulging clutch of fabric swatches from Kamuning and went around all agencies Avenue and Vito Cruz to clothe

men. We tried to evade on collection days. But no one really

him. If you got pirated by agency, Ernie would find you there.

If you grew up in the ’50s, you have taunted your playmates with patay patay! Kiko patay patay!”

opening lines for its nutrition sell).

“Tinday! Palalayasi­n kita!” was P&G’s racist threat to a kasambahay whodid a lousy job of washing laundry by not using P&G laundry bar.

Of course, you sang Tide’s memorable ditty, “Puputi ang damit kahit hindi ikula; Lilinis ang damit kahit hindi ikula; gamitin n’yo bagong Tide, Bagong Tide.”

Tide was a big landmark in the history of marketing and advertisin­g. It changed the habits of women doing laundry by eliminatin­g bleaching deemed a big reason for washing whiter and cleaner clothes. P&G product and consumer research became famous.

Another change in consumer habit happened when we introduced Safeguard antibacter­ial soap as the soap that’s “gamit ng mga doktor sa ospital.” Overnight, the soap market shifted from beauty bars such as Lux and Camay to Safeguard. It became the household bath soap because playful kids with germs must be kept germ-free and clean.

Black-and-white TV was the newmedium in the early ’60s. We made some breakthrou­gh commercial­s with “Utos ni Mayor” for Tide, and “Lahat ay Mapapaling­on” for Camay Soap.

San Miguel Beer came up with memorable lines like “Isa Pa Nga” and “Iba ang May

an enterSamia, whom Taylor. Ernie payments. He

and take orclutch bag full Kamuning maragencie­s on Ayclothe all Filevade Ernie really es

another there. you must with “Kiko

(Star Marnutriti­on

job using Pinagsamah­an,” while Ginebra San Miguel monopolize­d hard labor and livelihood workers with the ditty, “Ang Inumin ng Tunay na Lalaki!”

Banco Filipino became an instant sensation with the jingle, “Sa Banco Filipino, araw-araw interest ng interest.” This also made Greg Garcia the youngest hotshot adman in town, flaunting his new attaché case.

Filipino-focused

In the late ’70s, I pioneered the concept of the “Think Filipino, Feel Filipino and Talk Filipino” in creating advertisin­g in Basic Advertisin­g, our agency. I also shed off my silly Madison Avenue pretension­s.

My passion for consumer insights drawn from Filipino culture resulted in many successful brand campaigns such as “Reseta ng Doktor” for Benadryl, “Tsikletin Mo Baby” for Chiclets chewing gum, “Lalaking Disente” for Three Flowers pomade and the classic “Langhap Sarap” for Jollibee, creating a huge domestic and export market for a Filipino brand. It’s the biggest, most successful Filipino brand in the business.

My friend, Telly Bernardo, conceived the hyperbole, “Mukhasim” campaign for Datu Puti vinegar. Another friend, the late Danny Almiranez created “Tamis-Anghang,” immortaliz­ing UFC Banana Catsup here and abroad.

In the late ’80s, our agency made a lot of magic in the marketplac­e. We overhauled the image of Sarsi from a poor man’s drink to a classy brand by doing a fantastic cultural aesthetic on film calling it Sarsi “Angat Sa Iba.” We also changed the wallflower image of Palmolive Soap into a modern teen hip hopping in a modern music video. We called it, “I Can Feel It.” Palmolive Shampoo was sold as “Hiyang.” All these campaigns resulted in market leadership within a month or two.

We created “Babalik Ka Rin” for Duty Free and its sales tripled in one month—in US dollars. We were No. 1 in the ’80s. And unstoppabl­e.

I think the Mad men eras faded at the end of the ’70s.

During the mid-’80s and up to the present, wacky or shocking commercial­s were given awards at the Cannes Festival. They were called interrupti­ve creativity because of their ability to stop the viewer dead in its track. The creative people went nuts over the Cannes awards. They still are.

During our time, there were no awards. The only reward we got was client’s eternal gratitude and admiration for making the cash registers ring and our ability to deliver the highest return on investment for their money spent in advertisin­g.

They called us geniuses.

E-mail the author at hgordonez@gmail.com.

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 ??  ?? DONDRAPER, lead character in the TVseries “Mad Men;” the author during the “Mad Men” years of advertisin­g in the early ’60s.
DONDRAPER, lead character in the TVseries “Mad Men;” the author during the “Mad Men” years of advertisin­g in the early ’60s.

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