“You can’t fake true cool,” said the Super Bowl ad starring Bob Dylan. No, but you can fake sincerity.
When I strolled by the television on Super Bowl Sunday, my biggest surprise was not the winning team. I was floored when I spotted Dylan extolling the virtues of the American auto industry. Here was a hero of my youth, hard-core counter-culture leader, patron saint of individualism and liberal politics, shilling for the business poster-child of America’s hyper-consumerism and waste.
I had heard his music as audio for ads, but I figured he didn’t have much control over that in the welter of copyrights and legalities. This was different. His music wasn’t featured. He appeared on camera praising Chrysler as a product worthy of purchase, superior to other cars because it’s American-made.
Discussions about his spot cover the gamut of opinion. Some people feel artists don’t have many optionsnowadays to make a living unless they include advertising. Or they think performing artists expand their audiences and fan bases in this manner. Others are puzzled and confused by this decision apparently in contradiction to his long-standing persona.The one says Dylan is just changing as he matures. Another that “Dylan stands as an image of integrity, independence, and authenticity,” so it’s good business sense to relate him to a produce.
Sorry. Not to me. Seems to me to be part and parcel of the traditional American attitude—make as much money as you can by any means possible so you can consume excessive amounts of everything. The ad also asks. “Is there anything more American than America?” and continues to eulogize our supposed virtues. An appeal to an unfortunate human value run rampant in many nations—xenophobic and parochial jingoism. Thinking your country is always the best and eternally right.
What’s theimportance of “cool”anyhow, touted in the ad. The judgment about attitude, behavior, and style is a knee-jerk opinion important only to advertising copywriters and adolescents up to the age of thirty. “Cool” has no relationship to essential worth of a person or even a product or service, when compared to honest, intelligent, humorous, caring, beautiful, courteous, any number of qualities.
Also interesting, Chrysler isn’t even an American company any more. It is a consolidated subsidiary of Italian multinational automaker I have no problem with that. I do have a problem with hypocrisy in advertising.
It looks like my high school social studies teacher came closer to predicting the future than others, including Bob Dylan or Chrysler. Mr. Balliat’s evidently revolutionary theory was that eventually all arguments pro and con about trade and manufacturing and business will shake themselves out, and those countries and groups of people who WANT to work in a particular industry and who are BEST SUITED for the responsibility will do so.
4 thoughts on “Feet of Clay, Example #1: Did Bob Dylan Sell Out in His Super Bowl Ad? Or What Is “True Cool?””
I like your point of view on this issue. I would also like to point out that this isn’t the first time Bob has appeared in commercials. He actually appeared in a Victoria’s Secret ad a few years ago! Check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBq7SyGtG8Y
I ran across the Victoria’s ad while researching for this blog. The difference about the 2014 Chrysler ad is that Dylan is supposedly speaking. There’s none of his music, so he appears to be personally endorsing the product.
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I like your point of view on this issue. I would also like to point out that this isn’t the first time Bob has appeared in commercials. He actually appeared in a Victoria’s Secret ad a few years ago! Check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBq7SyGtG8Y
I ran across the Victoria’s ad while researching for this blog. The difference about the 2014 Chrysler ad is that Dylan is supposedly speaking. There’s none of his music, so he appears to be personally endorsing the product.
As if he hasn’t got enough money!
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