May
15
2007

Shrek says, “Get up and play,” but finish your Happy Meal first.

As the release of Shrek the Third quickly approaches, the advertising campaigns to market the friendly giant to America’s children are hitting fever pitch. And that’s all fine and good—to a point. What I don’t have a problem with is kids going to see the movie. They should. I think the last two Shrek movies have been enormously funny and entertaining, and as a character, Shrek is extremely affable. But I’m concerned that movie theater seats just aren’t wide enough for all the overweight kids who love Shrek and everything he promotes.

The bone I’m picking here is not with the kids, but with the Ad Council and GSD&M in Austin. Sponsored by the Department of Health and Human services, these two advertising entities launched a series of public service announcements, using the slogan, “Be a Player: Get up and play an hour a day,” urging the more than 10 million obese school age children in the U.S. to get off their asses and do something physical. To the folks at those agencies—which typically put out solid creative work—with all due respect, what the hell were you thinking?

Sure, you had focus groups that proved Shrek was a well-known character in the target population of the “Player” campaign. And that kids will likely listen to what Shrek has to say. But the research ignores the most glaring reality of all: Shrek is a big fat ogre. Austin, we have a strategic problem. And to top all that off with whipped cream and mayonnaise, he’s a big fat ogre who’s being used to promote McDonald’s Happy Meals, Fruit Loops, Frosted Flakes, M&M’s, Pop Tarts, Snickers, Sierra Mist, Cheez-Its and Keebler cookies to name a few. Sounds healthy, doesn’t it?

Surely, the Ad Council and GSD&M did their homework and knew these campaigns were in the works. But apparently the public relations opportunities for donating their services outweighed (pun intended) the aforementioned strategic problem and the inherent conflicts of interest.

So kids, listen to Shrek (like the focus groups proved you would do): Binge and purge. Stuff yourselves until you’re green in the face. And after you finish gorging yourself on that bowl of French fries and Fruit Loops, put down your Sega Game Gear from 1991 (seriously, that’s what the kid is playing at the beginning of the TV spot) and get up and play. That is, if you can move. And boys, don’t forget: be a player.

So what do you think?

Shrek says, “Get up and play,” but finish your Happy Meal first.

  • Joseph R. Stanfa

    is there a strategic problem with your argument? Let’s see:
    how can a man who was born without an ass, be arguing so fervently
    against marketing that promotes fat asses? Doesnt make sense right?
    thats what i said. I would think that the bane of your existence has
    been the fact that you have… NO ASS. I mean, when you were a kid,
    didnt you wonder why other kids had these big round funny-looking
    things on their posteriors and you didnt, or what those big round
    funny-looking things above their legs were for, or, especially, while
    in little league during marathon sessions of bleacher sitting, how
    much your performance suffered from lacking the big, soft, squishy
    padding to sit on that all the other big league hopefuls had the
    luxury of enjoying while waiting for their turns to hit the game
    winning home-run? Maybe you should take a good, long hard look at your
    own baat, or lack thereof, and ask yourself: Is a society of assless
    freaks really what this country needs to be promoting? Maybe it’s time
    you turned the other cheek (if you even can) and consider the
    possibility that these marketing ventures provide long term benefits
    to our society… like SOMETHING COMFY TO SIT ON! Gary, face it: It’s
    time you finally came to terms with your own asslessness, and stopped
    transposing the frustrations of gary the child— who, instead of
    packing various foodstuffs into the front of your undies like the rest
    of the boys, stuffed them into the back— on those who are merely
    giving society a good old kick in the rear.
    I tell you this because i love your ass…
    even though it doesnt exist.

  • Joseph R. Stanfa

    Is there a strategic problem with your argument? Let’s see: how can a man who was born without an ass, be arguing so fervently against marketing that promotes bigger asses? Doesn’t make sense, right? I would think that the bane of your existence has been the fact that you have…NO ASS. I mean, when you were a kid, didn’t you wonder why other kids had these big round funny-looking
    things on their posteriors and you didn’t? Or what those big round funny-looking things above their legs were for? Or, especially, while in little league—during marathon sessions of bleacher sitting—how much your performance suffered from lacking the big, soft, squishy padding to sit on that all the other big league hopefuls had?
    Maybe you should take a good, long hard look at your
    own butt, or lack thereof, and ask yourself: Is a society of assless freaks really what this country needs to be promoting? Maybe it’s time you turned the other cheek (if you even can) and consider the possibility that these marketing ventures provide long term benefits to our society…like SOMETHING COMFY TO SIT ON!
    Gary, face it: It’s time you finally came to terms with your own asslessness, and stopped transposing the frustrations of Gary the child— who, instead of packing various foodstuffs into the front of your undies like the rest of the boys, stuffed them into the back— on those who are merely giving society a good old kick in the rear.
    I tell you this because i love your ass…even though it doesn’t exist.

  • Jerry LeBlanc

    Dreamworks is a client of GSD&M and they’ll do anything to keep a piece of business, including compromising their scruples.
    A better part of the ad is that they aren’t asking kids to be a “Player,” the song says “Be a playuh.” Apparently no one at GSD&M knows that the slang “playuh” means a man who is very sexually active.