Sunday, November 02, 2008

THE BEST TV COMMERCIAL?


I thought I'd play my favorite current TV commercial (above), the one by Telebrands for a product called "ShamWow!" I'm guessing that this is just a polyester sponge cloth, the kind you can buy at any discount store for a dollar, but they're selling eight of them for 20 bucks plus postage and handling. You can decry the commercialism, but I hope you'll love the commercial. It's a fine example of the pitchman's art.

What kills me about this is that it doesn't pretend to be anything but what it is: hardsell. The announcer looks like the kind of sleazy fast-talker who sells vegetable cutters at carnivals. You wouldn't think anybody would trust a guy like that, but they do. Why? I think it's because people react to the skill in the writing and execution of carnival pitches. You think you're above it, but you're not. It's fun to watch a man who, using only words, can invest a product with magic.




One of the best TV pitchman is Billy Mays (above), who's famous for shouting at the audience. He has a terrific graphic look and a likable face, and the writing and editing of his commercials is superb. Nobody gets up to get a cheese sandwich when Billy's on.



I assume Mays also works for Telebrands, which seems to be the new Ronco. Telebrands never attempts to sell high-ticket items like insurance and cars. Instead it sells glue, closet lights, picture hooks (above), and the like. TV ads are probably most effective when they sell things like that. You want to sell something that's cheap and accessible. If I had a show on TV I'd kill to be sponsored by something basic like hooks. To sell a hook you have be creative, put on a show, add value to the product by stimulating the viewer's imagination.



Here's (above) Billy reading his voice-over lines in a recording studio. When you hear him speak without the distraction of art direction, you realize what a talent he really is.



Here's (above) another great TV pitchman, Anthony Sullivan. I wish I could have put up his "One Sweep" commercial, which is one of the stand-out hardsell commercials of the last five or ten years.

The clip above is about a minute and a half long, and I warn you that it starts slow and you'll be tempted not to finish it. RESIST THAT TEMPTATION! Watch the whole thing! He finally gets the line right at the end, and when he does you'll realize that he's well worth the zillion dollars they probably payed him.


This one is for serious students of film only. It's a ShamWow commercial re-named (now calles "Zorbeez") and done a whole different way by Billy Mays. It's a rare chance to study how two different masters tackle the identical problem.

Both commercials are great, but I prefer the ShamWow. The name is catchier, it focuses on the the character and his performance, the testimonials make a great counterpoint, and the beware of imitations warning plants the idea that the product is worth imitating. Billy's commercial starts with an unappealing wiping motion and attempts too many arguments. Even so, I still like it. Which do you prefer?



One final commercial for serious film students only: A recent softsell paper towel commercial for the purpose of comparison with the hardsell ShamWow and Zorbeez commercials. As you can see, the hardsell works better.

31 comments:

  1. Earlier this year,Slate.com did an excellent story about this fellow, as well the equally ubiquitous Billy Mays. A couple of years ago, I fell for the Aussie pitchman selling the rubber broom, which cost me forty bucks for two (the operator explained the $9.95 model offered was adequate but $19.95 model actually did the job and if I bought two, I'd get free S&H). So now I have two mighty fine rubber brooms which actually do a kick ass job, just like they promised. I still feel have an uneasy feeling I've been taken, but they work better than the vacuum, so I've learned to live with the uneasiness. Sort of like voting in a general election!

    ReplyDelete
  2. You're right - the ShamWow guy looks sleazy. He scares me, but the infomercial is classic carny pitch.

    From what I understand, Anthony Sullivan actually owns the company that produces infomercials. He was one of the speakers for an invention convention held in Pittsburgh a few years back.

    Billy Mays is a great pitchman - even though he SHOUTS and YELLS, there's something about him that makes him likeable.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Awesome post! The Shamwow guy is priceless!

    Have you ever seen any of Tim and Eric's infomercials? I'm rather fond of this one.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous7:03 AM

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa7FragNZXQ this is my favorite. "tell em tony sent ya"

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous7:09 AM

    Id bet good money that the shamwow spokesman is drunk out of his mind at a seedy strip club right now

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous10:06 AM

    These well compensated shills should volunteer their off hours communicating with the deaf.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I like the Skittles commercials. They're probably the weirdest ones we're likely to see. The "singing rabbit" one was pure art. What do you think, Eddie?

    Sleazy carny pitches (at fairs) are amusing to me. I have no idea why. Maybe it's the carnies themselves, or the atmospere of the fair, or the way carnies and fairs blend in so nicely in a really weird way.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Why does the ShamWow guy wear a mic on his head? Did they run out of boom mics in the sound stage he's in?

    The world of magic suffered a loss when Mays decided on commercials. The way he moves makes me feel like I just missed the slight of hand part of the trick.

    For me, one of the classic specimen of this breed is the snake oil salesmen who would skip town once the rubes caught wind. Now they can hide behind a maze of phone lines instead of leaving town.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Did you notice the sleazy camera trick in that Sham Wow commercial? Watch closely to the puddle of soda under the carpet sample. In one shot it's there, in the next shot before they use the Sham Wow, the puddle is already gone.

    Tricky bastads!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous8:49 PM

    One of the best TV pitchman is Billy Mays (above), who's famous for shouting at the audience. He has a terrific graphic look and a likable face, and the writing and editing of his commercials is superb. Nobody gets up to get a cheese sandwich when Billy's on.

    I couldn't disagree with you more about Billy Mays. His voice is an irritating high pitch tenor monotone, and when he yells, it hurts the delicate sensibilities of my inner ears. I turn the volume all the way down when I hear his annoying clamor.

    He's as bad as Tony Little. ugh

    ReplyDelete
  11. I'm drunk to avoid thinking about the upcoming election, and therefore have no idea what your theory was. But I enjoyed watching the series of youtube clips!

    ReplyDelete
  12. I personally think this is the best commercial I've seen. Funniest anyway. It has NOTHING to do with it's product, but it's funny as hell.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JC2gIPnUCgw

    BABIES EVERYWHERE!!!

    About that other ad though...there's something obviously ironic about an infomercial product called SHAM-wow. I mean, what's next.. bullshit-o-matic?

    ReplyDelete
  13. I'm gonna have to go with ShamWow. He's just so deliciously sleezy!

    ReplyDelete
  14. In defense of the questionable choice of name for the product, Sham-Wow!, it's a play on the phonetic pronunciation of chamois, which has been pronounced commonly as ˈsha-mē but is also pronounced sham-ˈwä.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Hey

    You might appreciate the British version of shouting salesman

    In the first advert he was fairly quiet
    http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwVaLFbLFOM&feature=related

    Then just ends up shouting
    http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwVaLFbLFOM&feature=related


    Barry Scott ended up as a minor celebrity for Cillit Bang.

    Not quite as good as ShamWow guy. But I agree people love a straight up advert. Theres been a ton of techno remix's of Cillit Bang commercials.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Dear Sir,

    I agree with you - the ShamWow commercial is superior despite Mr. Mays's excellent pitchman-ship.

    But, I think it is for a different reason. The man's accent is so sleazy and huckster-like. His earpiece shows that he's more used to speaking into a loud speaker at crowds than making commercials.

    The flaw in Mr. Mays's commercial is the higher budget. When one can here the audio editing between the takes it makes the commercial feel distant and "made". A good huckster should be all show, but not artificial.

    In a sentence, the unknown man makes you feel like he's pressuring "you", while Mays feels more concerned with TV watchers as a whole.

    ReplyDelete
  17. PS. The youtube man who you used to see Billy Mays's voice over has a channel full of infomercial ephemera (mistakes, voice-over sessions, and the like)

    http://www.youtube.com/user/thesulanader

    My personal favorite of the one's I've seen is this video of Billy Mays falling down:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RyYcDh2EMY

    I just like seeing the stocky, round little man in a way we aren't supposed to. He has a huge body for such a tiny frame!

    ReplyDelete
  18. Hi Eddie!

    hey, have you seen Kevin Smith in his conferences?
    He's a real storyteller!!!

    here i put two links from a story told by him in a conference about his first experience with his wife

    Part1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isrvj471h90

    Part2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBtRhH04H2c

    what do you think??

    your pal, Paul.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Yes I do wnat to buy a shamwow. Never needed one but I want to buy it now.
    I bought Bill Mays promoted super putty or whatever it is for $30 bucks for 3 tubes to repair a ceramic figure. Y'know, it's that plumber's putty you can get at a hardware store only that it's white. You have to wear rubber gloves, it gets hot and hardens fast. It's damn plumber's putty.

    ReplyDelete
  20. "I couldn't disagree with you more about Billy Mays. His voice is an irritating high pitch tenor monotone, and when he yells, it hurts the delicate sensibilities of my inner ears. I turn the volume all the way down when I hear his annoying clamor.

    He's as bad as Tony Little. ugh"

    No one said advertising had to be enjoyable to be effective. :)

    ReplyDelete
  21. Last: great Slate article! I didn't know anyone else was writing stuff like that!

    Jennifer: Sullivan owns his own company!? Fascinating!

    Frank: Mays would be flattered!

    Phantom: Haven't seen it!

    Pummi: There's a YouTube video that shows that.

    Gerard: Plumbers' putty? Thanks for the tip!

    ReplyDelete
  22. David: Your link was damaged!

    Dan: I like that walk on the baby woman!

    Jim: Both your links are the same, but I got the second one from a sidebar. Cillit Bang, what a strange name for a product. Do you know the story behind it?

    Mr. T: Wow! Sullivan looks so different in these films!

    Paul: A great story!

    ReplyDelete
  23. Phantom: That Skittles commercial was great!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Glad you enjoyed the article. That online column is the best to go also for a round up of Super Bowl TV ads. Always great commentary on the state of Madison Avenue sales pitches.

    Just got out of the hospital Friday evening (very painful life threatening intestinal blockage), so just catching up.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Those ads reminded me of this:

    http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=hEAeAZ5YOMM

    ReplyDelete
  26. the german comment is what sold me.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Great Post, Eddie


    And such a shame about Billy Mays. Taken right in his prime

    ReplyDelete
  28. Anonymous10:10 PM

    "It's a ShamWow commercial re-named (now calles "Zorbeez") and done a whole different way by Billy Mays. It's a rare chance to study how two different masters tackle the identical problem."

    You do realise that what you said there is completley wrong.

    Zorbeez came long before shamwow did (Zorbeez was promoted in 1983) and to top it off Vince essentially stole Billys entire Zorbeez commercial. The coke on carpet, everything.

    Find the original Zorbeez commercial and you will see how identical it is.

    Vince is nothing but a thief.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous3:10 PM

    Hello. And Bye.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Anonymous3:43 PM

    now I know it!

    ReplyDelete