TeachersRemember

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 27 September 2012

Top 10 Ads - The Ones I Can Never Forget

Posted on 02:43 by Unknown
Here are the top 10 ads that come to mind. Stuff that brings a smile types.

1) Wills, Made for Each Other: This was a print ad and showed a man and a woman walking on a beach. To me this was the epitome of romance then, in the early 80s. So impressed was I that I actually cut the ad out and put it under my mattress where it lay for many years. The ad and the brand stayed alive since then.

2) Amul Ads: Almost all of them - the ones on the hoardings - made me wonder how they could think of such wonderfully creative lines so consistently. Sporting events, political events, everything was fodder to the Amul ads. Instant recall of ad, brand and product.

3) Murphy baby: Even before the 80s, in the old magazines of the late 70s one would see the Murphy baby ads, and well everyone loved the Murphy baby who is now immortalised with the movie 'Barfi'. Sweet and charming, it is a face that one cannot forget. Instant recall of brand, ad and product.

4) Liril: The Liril ads, bold for those days, of a vivacious girl bathing under a waterfall, dressed in a bikini, was as fresh as the ad maker must have imagined. Th girl was spontaneous and one could feel the freshness of lemons, the thrill of a waterfall. The jingle, the music 'laa,la,laa,la...' and the ad when seen in the movies was stuff that lasts forever. Also there was that rumour that the model died after she contracted pneumonia owing to her frolicking in the rain. The Liril ad was never the same though they got other models.

5) Nirma: The ad runs through your mind and on television even today - 'Rekha, Jaya and Sushma..' and company who are thrilled with using Nirma and the little girl who twirls into a photograph as the jingle plays on in the background. Cannot ever forget the brand, the product and the ad.

6) Vicco Turmeric: The visual of the girl who is getting ready for her marriage and how her skin is glowing after being treated with Vicco Turmeric and the jingle in the background about 'Vicco Turmeric Ayurvedic Cream..' is something one cannot forget.

7) Thums Up: Perhaps the line that was so apt and perfectly researched - especially for the 80s people. Thums Up never went down so well as it did with some food and friends for anyone of those days. That was a brilliant campaign which was later killed by Coke with its adventure series for Thums Up. No one understood Thums Up better than the original creator of 'Food, Friends and Thums Up' and the ad did send a thrill up the spine when we watched it in theatres.

8) Charms: For the first time a cigarette came with a denim kind of a colour in the ad and it was interesting. the line 'Spirit of Freedom' was equally apt. Charms, the college fag, and an improvement over Charminar had the irrepressible Charu Sharma diving off a board into the swimming pool (he was a national level swimming champ then and a good looking guy too).

9) Vodafone's Zoo Zoo's and the Hutch Dog: Both in one because Hutch became Vodaphone later but both brilliant for brand recall, product recall and ad recall. Zoo Zoo's were simply fantastic in educating us on the various features of Vodafone while the Hutch pug not only educated us about those cute, ugly dogs but also that Hutch follows you everywhere. Pity the service did not match the ad.

10) Fevicol: I am always fascinated by Fevicol's ads which always come with great creatives - that of an overloaded truck with Fevicol painted on it - yeh jod nahin tootega - and others (the one where the little kid keeps wandering off until his mother puts him on a Fevicol can, the Fevikwik ones about the fishing rod) were simply superb. Will always remember Fevicol in such circumstances.

Those that missed are certainly Surf's Lalitaji, a Cavenders ad of a guy shooting at clay pigeons that used to be played in the local theatres in the 80s, Idea's rather irritating Sirji ads and so on. Next, to do a series on unforgettable ad characters (Sirji, Lalitaji, Onida's devil and others).
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Shimoga in pictures
    In Shimoga, now on the way to become Shiva Mogga, in Karnataka last week. Statue of Keladi Shivappa Nayaka It is the district head quarter o...
  • The Qutb Shahi tombs in pictures
    Though Raja, Shobha and I visited the Qutb Shahi tombs after we visited Chowmahalla palace, I'd rather start with these tombs because th...
  • Song of the day - Pyaar mein kabhi kabhi
    God knows which movie this song is from and who the actors are but its incredibly peppy and uplifting. I heard it before but I never knew wh...
  • Thought for the Day - Learn to Face the Unpleasantness
    This thought struck me the other day when I was under some stress and was wondering if what I was doing was worth doing at all considering w...
  • A Visit to the Alma Mater - St. Gabriel's High School, Kazipet
    No trip to Warangal can be complete without stopping by at my old school, St. Gabriel's Boys High School of the Montfort Brothers. I joi...
  • The Hyderabad Series - The Way of the Hyderabadi
    This is a series I propose to write in honour of Hyderabad - then and now. The Way(s) of the Hyderabadi It is time. We Hyderabadis must pro...
  • The Shatabdi Express - Pune to Hyderabad
    The change in my Shatabdi experience since last December is marginal.  I have now moved into first class which offers more space and that is...
  • Poem by Zen Master Sen-ts'an on Nonjudgmentalism
    I loved this poem by Zen Master Sen-ts'an on nonjudgmentalism as a prerequisite to following the 'Perfect Way' in 8th century B....
  • Bro. K.M. Joseph - The Beloved Cricket Brother of All Saints High School Heads to Rome
    It was a pleasant surprise to hear from Denzil Balm, the committed coach of All Saints High School for so many years, a few days ago. The su...
  • Macaulay , Pioneer of Indian Modernization- Zareer Masani
    After the history books in school where one became acquainted with British officials Robert Clive, Warren Hastings, William Bentinck, Thomas...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (247)
    • ►  September (13)
    • ►  August (37)
    • ►  July (27)
    • ►  June (30)
    • ►  May (30)
    • ►  April (47)
    • ►  March (18)
    • ►  February (19)
    • ►  January (26)
  • ▼  2012 (253)
    • ►  December (32)
    • ►  November (25)
    • ►  October (18)
    • ▼  September (23)
      • Top 10 Ads - The Ones I Can Never Forget
      • Barfi - Movie Review
      • A Doctor's Anguish as a Patient, for the Patient
      • 'Stone in love' - Journey
      • Thought for the Day - It's not what you want, it's...
      • We Bought a Zoo - Movie Review
      • Thought for the Day - Pursue the Moment, Nothing Else
      • Beyond the Blues - Aakash Chopra
      • A Separation - Movie review
      • Out of the Blue - Aakash Chopra
      • The Hyderabad Diaries - The Cop Farce
      • Anjali - But we are all Different
      • Doghi - Movie Review
      • Indicators of Inefficiency
      • A Walk in The Park
      • Needed urgently - A sense of humour, a sense of ho...
      • Thought for the Day - The Creation of Belief
      • Morning Hour at Tankbund
      • Ha Ha Therapy - Dr. G. Lakshmipathi
      • Young Frankenstein - Movie Review
      • The Cricket Series - Fine Advise for Cricketers fr...
      • Ferrari Ki Sawari - Movie Review
      • The Cricket Series - Process of Player Preparation
    • ►  August (16)
    • ►  July (24)
    • ►  June (19)
    • ►  May (50)
    • ►  April (34)
    • ►  March (12)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile