Archive for celebrity watch
Celebrity endorsement, once more softly
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An article in the Sunday Magazine of the New York Times points out that celebrity endorsement continues to matter to marketing. Indeed, the data say the celebrities showed up in 14% of ads last year.
And they are everywhere. The article notes the recent work for Totes by Rihanna, by Nicole Kidman for Chanel No. 5, by Eva Longoria for L’Oreal Paris hair color, by Jessica Simpson for Proactive, Jamie Lee Curtis for Dannon Activia yogurt, and Ellen DeGeneres for American Express
But the article reports a muddle in the model.
One Davie Brown category in which most celebrities appear vulnerable is trust. Celebrities are recognizable and appealing, but are often viewed with skepticism. “Trust always seems to be the lowest score among celebrities,” observes Matt Fleming, a Davie Brown account director who helps brands evaluate celebrity talent.
This is a puzzle. If consumers buy products because celebrities are endorsing them, doesn’t this imply that they must trust the good opinion of the celebrity. But if they don’t trust them, um, why do they buy the product so endorsed?
I believe that this puzzle tells us something useful It says that we are wrong to think about celebrity endorsement as endorsement. The celebrity is not speaking on behalf of the product. They are not declaring their approval. This is why the consumer can find the celebrity untrustworthy and effective. The model has a muddle because the model is wrong.
So what is the celebrity doing here? When Rihanna appears with Totes, when Ellen DeGeneres speaks for American Express, what is happening? I believe that what the celebrity does is lend their meanings to the brand. Some part of Rihanna’s glamor is made resident in Totes. Some part of Ellen’s humor is made resident in American Express.
Celebrity endorsement is a process of building band meanings out of celebrities. If we think of the celebrity as a brand (and all celebrities do), then the celebrity endorsement is the transfer of meanings from one brand (Ellen) to another (Amex). This is simple meaning transfer. For a more detailed treatment of the argument, see my article on this topic (as below).
This is not an extraordinary complicated notion. It was the way Aristotle described metaphor several thousand years ago. But it has a way of escaping the popular and the academic press. The NYT article parades our many misconception. But the facts are clear.
Celebrities matter to brands because they supply them with meanings, incredibly fresh, powerful and nuanced meanings. Many planners, creatives and agencies get this. Many brand managers do. When do the journalists and the academics catch up?
References
Creswell, Julie. 2008. Nothing Sells Like Celebrity. New York Times. June 22, 2008. here.
McCracken, Grant. 2005. Who is the celebrity endorser? In Culture and Consumption II: Marketings, meanings and brand management. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Purchase from Amazon.com here.
Acknowledgements
Ryan Holiday for bringing this article to my attention. See Ryan’s blog here.
Kathy Griffin: can she do it?
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Kathy Griffin is an anthropological puzzle. She is featured in the present issue of Entertainment Weekly.
What’s interesting about this coverage is that it tells us that Griffin’s adaptive strategy has costs. She has been banned from most of the Talk shows and Award shows. And this is important because it tells us that she is taking risks and that the risks sometimes go wrong.
When I wrote about her last, I couldn’t help wondering whether there wasn’t a contradiction here. How D List could she be when Griffin has risen so high and won such fame? Was this outsider thing really a pose? And a disingenuous one at that. Kathy Griffin, the insider who pretends to be an outsider.
But it turns out the tattle-tale strategy (telling on the celebrities who are your friends) goes badly from time to time. It’s not the case that everyone is in on the joke. Some people are going to hold it against you and some, like Letterman and Gelman, do. (So says the EW article.)
And this gives us a test case. It shows us what happens when someone defies the Sammy Maudlin club (see the SCTV skit that features a talk show in which everyone is way too paly). It helps us find that "fine line" between the gossip and something so apparently scurrilous that there is punishment and the scurriler discovers she will never "trade banter on this sound stage again."
Ok, it’s probably not a fine line. It’s a broad one. But it is still hard to know where it is, or what the costs of violation are. Until someone dares break the rule, we can’t be sure it isn’t something that is in fact forgivable…and costless. The trouble is the costs of exclusion are so high in Hollywood, there is a huge disincentive to take the Griffin risk. Without a Griffin experiment, we can never really know.
But now we do. At Griffin’s cost. And the new question is what exactly Griffin’s bad behavior is going to cost her. Unless of course, the EW article is actually an effort to make us feel bad for her, which it does. In this case, she wins when she wins and she wins when she loses. (That is, she wins when she gets famous and she wins when she gets punished.) But I don’t think that’s it. The EW article makes it seem like she has really been made to pay.
We must hope that she still has options, that she can continue to get work. And surely, in a plenitude, post-network world, that’s possible. I mean, she has a cable show and that is her protection against banishment. Plus, if she can get coverage of this kind from EW, then obscurity can’t be a problem. She won’t ever be A list, but the alternative doesn’t not look very punishing, and, when all is said and done, it will be millions of dollars from the poor house.
But there is till a real problem with this adaptive strategy. Griffin can always find work, but if she is excluded from the corridors of celebrity, it will starve her act. She may make celebrity and riches working her own cable universe. But unless she shares a Green Room with a big star acting like an idiot, she has nothing to trade.
Griffin says in the EW article that celebrities now get that her act is not dangerous, that it is another part of the celebrity game, indeed another opportunity for their aggrandizement. And if she is right, here, and other celebrities become less sensitive to the Griffin treatment, then she can turn the spiggots back on. She is back in the know.
But if Hollywood manages to cut her off, then she has a real problem. The problem, and this is the problem for every adaptive strategy (and creature), is to find that sweet spot, the one between an act sufficiently rude and revelational to persuade fans that Kathy really is telling tales out of school AND an act that is sufficiently discrete to protect celebrity’s celebrity (and of course their self love).
Can Kathy do it?
References
Fonseca, Nicholas. 2008. The Most Polarizing Woman in Hollywood. Entertainment Weekly. June 13, 2008, pp. 34-38.
McCracken, Grant. Kathy Griffin. This Blog Sits at the Intersection of Anthropology and Economics. June 7, 2007. here.
Zerubavel, Eviatar. 1993. The Fine Line. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Going Paula
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An episode of Hey, Paula feels like an episode of another kind.
Delight gives way to crying which returns to delight. Girl, call your
anthropologist.
Here’s what he’ll tell you.
1) Our culture distinguishes between public and private.
2) This helps us distinguish between "front stage" and a "back stage."
3) Everyone seeks to "manage impressions" on the "front stage." When this is done well, our social capital increases, and other capitals accrue to us.
4) Everyone works to conceal the "back stage." When this is done badly, our social capital diminishes and other bad things happen too.
5) The distinction between public and private, and the one between front stage and back stage, has been shifting in our culture in the last 100 years. Once an iron clad distinction that ruled social life and personal experience, it is now blurred. Victorians lived and died by this distinction. It is now, as we might say, "in play."
6) All public figures (actors, politicians, business leaders, public figures) are now obliged to reveal more of the private self in the public persona. It’s part of the new contract fashioned between leaders and the rest of us. It’s almost as if we are saying to celebrities:
"if you want us to take you seriously, you have to show us more of who you are. We need to know who we’re dealing with. Personal revelation helps. It’s what you owe us. It’s part of our due diligence."
7) It is possible, then, to increase one’s social capital, celebrity and credibility by moving the boundary between public and private and revealing more of one’s private life.
But the old rules still apply, and when some people reveal the private self the result is punishment and self-diminishment.
9) Reality TV has a mixed record as an instrument of revelation. Stars like Kathy Griffin has used to to good effect. It has built her standing and celebrity. But it has been less kind to other celebrities. I think we are obliged to say that on balance Mr. T’s appearance on the reality program, I Pity the Fool, did more to confirm his obscurity than save him from it. Nick and Jessica returns a split verdict: Jessica, ok. Nick, not so much.
10) The question for Paula Abdul was whether reality TV would augment or diminish her standing.
11) I think every student of popular culture was obliged to sound the horn of caution. In point of fact, Paula Abdul had already participated in the new culture of "revealed privacy. " Several years of exposure and unrehearsed reaction on American Idol had given the American public a pretty good sense of the "real" Paula Abdul. Evidently, this was a woman who lead with her emotions, cared about the little guy, came to the defense of the vulnerable, and otherwise qualified as the "people’s Paula."
12) The question was simple: was there any more to be gained from still greater revelation? And this question was haunted by the "diminishing returns" suspicion that there couldn’t be enough "revelation capital" left to justify the risk of overexposure.
13) The empirical outcome is I think indisputable. The danger of overexposure is clear and with each passing "episode" ever more costly. When Paula melts down over a missing hair dresser, she puts in jeopardy her "people’s Paula" standing and risks looking like a Princess.
14) I think the larger conclusion is also clear. It’s time for every public figure to put an anthropologist on retainer.
References
McCracken, Grant. 2007. Kathy Griffin. This Blog Sits at the Intersection of Anthropology and Economics. June 07, 2007. here.













