Homemade Apple iPod Ad Hits Big

There aren’t many, if any, companies, other than Apple, that instill so much product love customers will go out of their way to create and ad for it. That’s what high school teacher George Masters has done for the iPod and the iMac. Steve Rubel points to a Wired article about the creation and the trend towards homemade ads.

Set to the Darling Buds tune, Tiny Machine, with a 70’s-themed psychedelic look, the ad, which was posted just a few weeks ago, has already been viewed 40,000 times. Industry prognosticators are gushing with adoration. Jupiter Research advertising analysts Gary Stein says, “It shows great advertising principles. He’s computer-literate, but he’s also literate in the language of advertising…. You could take this thing and put it on MTV this afternoon. It’s not only good, it’s good advertising. People go to college to learn this. He just gets it.”

Stein also calls this the first “straight-up,” non-spoof ad he’s seen.

We’re sure Adrants readers discredit that by pointing out past “straight-up” ads but this one’s good. Very good.

So far, Apple is playing it smart and hasn’t slapped a cease and desist on Masters as many companies might if un-sanctioned ads such as this became as popular as Masters’ has. For those agency creatives reading this, Masters wouldn’t mind hearing from you. He’d like to work in advertising. And we don’t think you’d go wrong using his skills.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Behavioral scientists found that people who prefer solitude over socializing aren’t lonely – they’ve discovered that the quality of their own company is higher than what most social interactions provide

Behavioral scientists found that people who prefer solitude over socializing aren’t lonely – they’ve discovered that the quality of their own company is higher than what most social interactions provide

Global English Editing

Research suggests the 1960s and 1970s produced highly resilient adults not through discipline or hardship alone but through unsupervised time — hours and hours of unstructured childhood where problems had to be solved alone and that forced independence created a generation that defaults to action under pressure while today’s generation defaults to consultation and the difference shows up every time the system breaks

Research suggests the 1960s and 1970s produced highly resilient adults not through discipline or hardship alone but through unsupervised time — hours and hours of unstructured childhood where problems had to be solved alone and that forced independence created a generation that defaults to action under pressure while today’s generation defaults to consultation and the difference shows up every time the system breaks

Global English Editing

I spent forty years trying to be more interesting in conversations and then at 60 I realized the people everyone gravitated toward weren’t interesting at all — they just had the discipline to make other people feel interesting

I spent forty years trying to be more interesting in conversations and then at 60 I realized the people everyone gravitated toward weren’t interesting at all — they just had the discipline to make other people feel interesting

Global English Editing

The single most isolating thing about having no close friends after 60 isn’t the loneliness — it’s realizing that every system in society assumes you have someone, and when you don’t, you become functionally invisible

The single most isolating thing about having no close friends after 60 isn’t the loneliness — it’s realizing that every system in society assumes you have someone, and when you don’t, you become functionally invisible

Global English Editing

I spent my entire adult life planning for retirement and now at 65 I’m here and it feels like I’m watching a movie of someone else’s life in real-time — I know intellectually that this is my house, my wife, my days, but I can’t shake the sensation that I’m not really in it

I spent my entire adult life planning for retirement and now at 65 I’m here and it feels like I’m watching a movie of someone else’s life in real-time — I know intellectually that this is my house, my wife, my days, but I can’t shake the sensation that I’m not really in it

Global English Editing

I gave my kids everything I never had growing up and somewhere around age 63 I realized that’s exactly why they can’t appreciate it — they have no reference point for what life looks like without a parent who absorbs everything so they don’t have to

I gave my kids everything I never had growing up and somewhere around age 63 I realized that’s exactly why they can’t appreciate it — they have no reference point for what life looks like without a parent who absorbs everything so they don’t have to

Global English Editing