Why Agencies Love to Use Idiots in Their Advertising

fedex_dentist.png

BBDO New York has created two new commercial for FedEx to tout the delivery service’s new Delivery Manager which allows recipients to specify date, time and place for delivery. To get the idea across, the agency came up with two silly scenarios.

In one, a family decides to take a “staycation” instead of a vacation so it won’t miss an important package. In another, a dentist performs work on his front porch to he doesn’t miss a package that might have been delivered to his office.

Both scenarios are wildly stupid, yet funny, and do a great job at making everyone feel better than these imaginary idiots who have no common sense. The approach, used by countless marketers and their agencies, employs schadenfreude. It’s like marketers can’t seem to get a message across without shitting all over some poor loser.

But hey, we love to wallow in the idiocy of others and as long as humans gain self-importance from the stupidity of others, marketers will continue to serve up doofuses in their ads.

Is this good marketing?

YouTube video

YouTube video

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

I’m 73 and last Thursday my doctor asked who was driving me home and I said “I drove myself” and the look on his face told me that answer had an expiration date and the 40-minute drive home was the first time in my life I was afraid of something I’ve done ten thousand times because he didn’t take my keys but he took my certainty and that’s almost worse

I’m 73 and last Thursday my doctor asked who was driving me home and I said “I drove myself” and the look on his face told me that answer had an expiration date and the 40-minute drive home was the first time in my life I was afraid of something I’ve done ten thousand times because he didn’t take my keys but he took my certainty and that’s almost worse

Global English Editing

I’m 65 and I found a box of photographs in the attic last month and I sat on the floor for three hours — not because I was looking at them but because I was looking at a world that doesn’t exist anymore, where my parents are young and my children are small and the kitchen table in the background is the center of a life that felt permanent and turned out to be temporary

I’m 65 and I found a box of photographs in the attic last month and I sat on the floor for three hours — not because I was looking at them but because I was looking at a world that doesn’t exist anymore, where my parents are young and my children are small and the kitchen table in the background is the center of a life that felt permanent and turned out to be temporary

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and my daughter recently told me I look ‘frumpy’ now that I’ve stopped wearing makeup and heels every day — and instead of feeling hurt, I felt free, because her discomfort with my comfort told me everything I needed to know about whose approval I’d been performing for

I’m 73 and my daughter recently told me I look ‘frumpy’ now that I’ve stopped wearing makeup and heels every day — and instead of feeling hurt, I felt free, because her discomfort with my comfort told me everything I needed to know about whose approval I’d been performing for

Global English Editing

I’m 66 and I’m still working, still paying a mortgage, still helping my kids, still driving my mother to her appointments, still pretending I have the energy I had at 45 — and the invisible decade I’m living through has no anthem, no self-help section, no supportive community, just a quiet expectation that I’ll keep holding the weight without mentioning what it’s doing to my knees, my marriage, and the version of myself that I keep promising I’ll get back to when things calm down, which they never do

I’m 66 and I’m still working, still paying a mortgage, still helping my kids, still driving my mother to her appointments, still pretending I have the energy I had at 45 — and the invisible decade I’m living through has no anthem, no self-help section, no supportive community, just a quiet expectation that I’ll keep holding the weight without mentioning what it’s doing to my knees, my marriage, and the version of myself that I keep promising I’ll get back to when things calm down, which they never do

Global English Editing

Nobody talks about the women who raised entire families, kept every tradition alive, and held everyone together for forty years — and then got thanked by being called “strong” instead of being asked “are you okay” because those are two completely different sentences and only one of them requires anyone to actually do something

Nobody talks about the women who raised entire families, kept every tradition alive, and held everyone together for forty years — and then got thanked by being called “strong” instead of being asked “are you okay” because those are two completely different sentences and only one of them requires anyone to actually do something

Global English Editing

Research suggests the reason many men over 60 struggle to articulate emotional needs isn’t stubbornness or pride, it’s the total absence of practice — they were never asked what they needed as boys, never shown what asking looks like by their fathers, and never given a relationship where the asking wasn’t met with discomfort, redirection, or the subtle withdrawal of respect, and you can’t expect fluency in a language that was never spoken in the house where you learned to talk

Research suggests the reason many men over 60 struggle to articulate emotional needs isn’t stubbornness or pride, it’s the total absence of practice — they were never asked what they needed as boys, never shown what asking looks like by their fathers, and never given a relationship where the asking wasn’t met with discomfort, redirection, or the subtle withdrawal of respect, and you can’t expect fluency in a language that was never spoken in the house where you learned to talk

Global English Editing