Where the Suckers Moon : The Life and Death of an Advertising Campaign

Author: Randall Rothenberg
List Price: $16.00
Our Price: Click to see the latest and low price
ISBN: 0679740422
Publisher: Vintage (31 October, 1995)
Sales Rank: 47,671
Average Customer Rating: 3.6 out of 5

Customer Reviews

Rating: 3 out of 5
An Interesting Behind the Scenes Look at Advertising
This book can be read in two ways:

1) the history of advertising in America 2) the history of Subaru and how it handles its advertising.

Well written and researched, _Where the Suckers Moon_ is an interesting glimpse at a flailing automaker/manufacturer in search of the perfect campaign to put its products in the forefront of consumer's minds. Even though my own background in Marketing/Advertising is very limited, I could see where problems lay in Subaru's approach. I left the book questioning how Subaru of America has managed to stay in business as long as it has. I think if you are in anyway involved in project planning, marketing or advertising you should read this book.


Rating: 4 out of 5
A must-read for anyone interested in advertising, marketing
I remember it well: a dramatic image of a sleek black car, against a black background; a gruff world-weary voice dissing conventional auto advertising; an arresting multi-layered scroll of selected text over the fixed image, corresponding directly with the voiceover as the words were read... and remember thinking: "this is an amazing ad. This ad will be incredibly influential."

It was, too, insofar as it almost immediately spawned similar art direction for a host of other products. Only problem was: it didn't sell cars.

"Where the Suckers Moon" explains why. It explains every aspect of the businesses involved -- how car sales are based on image, not mechanics, and and how automobile advertising became the holy grail for agencies.

You learn all about Subaru, and how their corporate structure all but guaranteed failure. You learn about the hubris and arrogance of Weiden and Kennedy, the "hot shop" selected to create the doomed campaign. You learn about how cars have been sold in the past, and gain understanding into how they're sold today.

The lessons pointed out in "Where the Suckers Moon" are relevant for other businesses as well, because the book almost painfully explores the human dynamics of the company that created the product, the company chosen for promoting those sales, and the dramatic and catastrophic effects of a lack of alignment between the two parties. It can -- and does -- happen elsewhere. So don't imagine that you won't get anything out of it simply because you aren't directly dependent on cars or advertising for your bread and butter.

Failings? It's longer than it needs to be, and sometimes veers into philosophical discussions of advertising which clearly reveal the author's own biases. As such, it does somewhat undermine its own attempts at reportorial quality. This is a bit disappointing, because the research is spectacular -- the access that the author had to the entire process is stunning, and the candor of the participants would be enough to make most senior managers cringe.

Minor squabbles. All in all, this book is not only the most important book about advertising written in a long time -- it's also a genuninely entertaining read.

Footnote: Once you understand the mindset of Subaru management during the failed campaign, the shift to Subaru's current Paul Hogan/Crocodile Dundee campaign becomes even more remarkable. Sells cars too....


Rating: 4 out of 5
An entertaining, quirky little book
If you follow marketing, if you like Subarus, if you enjoy corporate history, or if you just like offbeat non-fiction, settle in for an illuminating account of Subaru's efforts to pick an ad agency to launch their misunderstood SVX. Follow the agencies in the review from over their shoulders, sit in on Subaru's deliberations, and then watch how their plans and intentions fare against the actual world. It's a wonder that any advertising ever emerges from these labyrinths to wind up on our TVs, our magazine, and our billboards. You will never look at a car ad the same way.

Similar Products

Ogilvy on Advertising
Hey, Whipple, Squeeze This: A Guide to Creating Great Ads, Second Edition
How to Put Your Book Together and Get a Job in Advertising: 21st Century Edition
Eating the Big Fish : How Challenger Brands Can Compete Against Brand Leaders
Truth, Lies and Advertising : The Art of Account Planning


Book Index