Holiday Fruitcake and Cheesy Music Kick Off ‘Fruitcake Cash’

oregon_lottery_fruitcake.jpg

On November 21, Borders Perrin Norrander will unveil a new advertising campaign for the Oregon State Lottery, promoting the new holiday scratch-it ticket, Fruitcake Cash. Yes, Fruitcake cash. The campaign will consist of television, radio and online. The spots spoof those cheesy, late night music compilation infomercials by highlighting mockeries like “The Spirit of Fruitcake Volume Four,” “The Holidays Ain’t Nuttin’ Without My Fruitcake,” and the 80s ballad, “What’s That Fruitcake Doin’ Under My Tree.” Before the hokiness gets too much to take, the announcer interrupts the infomercial suggesting, “for a fruitcake gift they’ll really love, give fruitcake cash.”

We’re told the fruitcake parody songs, composed and produced by Asche & Spencer, were so well received by the client, BPN created a complete CD including full-length versions of the songs featured in the commercials. So there you have it. The first of what will, surely, be a long line of spoofy, holiday-themed ad campaigns.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

8 things boomers do in restaurants that their adult children have been quietly apologizing to servers about for years (and they don’t even realize it)

8 things boomers do in restaurants that their adult children have been quietly apologizing to servers about for years (and they don’t even realize it)

Global English Editing

Research suggests people who remained in their hometown while their peers left develop a paradoxical identity — they become the keeper of a world that’s slowly disappearing around them, the last person who remembers what the high street looked like before the chains arrived, and that role carries both pride and a loneliness that people who left will never understand because they took their version of the town with them when they went

Research suggests people who remained in their hometown while their peers left develop a paradoxical identity — they become the keeper of a world that’s slowly disappearing around them, the last person who remembers what the high street looked like before the chains arrived, and that role carries both pride and a loneliness that people who left will never understand because they took their version of the town with them when they went

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and I’ve learned that the marriage conversations that matter most never start with “we need to talk” — they start with a long drive, a bad week, or one of you finally saying something true by accident

I’m 73 and I’ve learned that the marriage conversations that matter most never start with “we need to talk” — they start with a long drive, a bad week, or one of you finally saying something true by accident

Global English Editing

Research suggests the most damaging legacy of growing up with one strong parent and one weak parent isn’t the resentment toward the weak parent — it’s the internalized belief that love is something you earn by being useful, and that the moment you stop being useful, you become as invisible as the parent who didn’t show up

Research suggests the most damaging legacy of growing up with one strong parent and one weak parent isn’t the resentment toward the weak parent — it’s the internalized belief that love is something you earn by being useful, and that the moment you stop being useful, you become as invisible as the parent who didn’t show up

Global English Editing

The one phrase your adult children wish you would stop saying is something you say at least twice per visit — and family therapists say most parents who hear it identified can’t believe they’ve been saying it because to them it sounds like love

The one phrase your adult children wish you would stop saying is something you say at least twice per visit — and family therapists say most parents who hear it identified can’t believe they’ve been saying it because to them it sounds like love

Global English Editing

The art of being classy isn’t about knowing which fork to use – it’s about making the person who doesn’t know which fork to use feel completely at ease while you quietly use the right one

The art of being classy isn’t about knowing which fork to use – it’s about making the person who doesn’t know which fork to use feel completely at ease while you quietly use the right one

Global English Editing