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Ready, Set, 'Go' for Visa

If you ignore the anthem, TBWA's campaign just might lift your spirits

Barbara Lippert: Adweek Columnist

March 9, 2009

-By Barbara Lippert


Sometimes, life takes a fresh start. This new Visa campaign from TBWA, for instance, introduces the word "go" with a new global tagline, "More people go with Visa," which replaces "Life takes Visa." I can see that going is more forward-moving than taking, which you kind of have to sit back and do. But as a phrase, it doesn't roll off the tongue. It seems like it's been translated from another language, the awkward result of too many focus groups.

In the U.S., there are two TV spots to start. "Let's Go" is a big, glossy anthem, my least favorite kind of commercial. It's a beautifully shot update of "Morning in America" imagery. Now, a young woman uses a cool European coffee maker. A jogger stretches. People scan the sky hopefully as the sun rises. The vignettes, reflecting on the promise of a new day, are attractive -- they could sell me on a nice new breakfast cereal, or a crisp white shirt, or maybe some life insurance.

The anthem ad also features the most up-to-date music in the campaign, the song "Today" by Smashing Pumpkins, from 1993.
 
For the record, I still don't get why companies need these advertising "manifestos." Consumers do not lean forward on the couch and say, "Wow, Marge, get in here -- Visa is revealing some brand DNA!" They respond to messages that resonate.

"Let's Go" is, however, armed with a secret weapon: Morgan Freeman, who I am naming the official voice of God in this age of mild Depression. His voice is so distinctive, his line readings so nuanced, that the sound just breaks through and stops time -- a little aural stimulus package. James Earl Jones still has plenty of juice, but Freeman's voice conveys the sum of all of his more delightful movie roles, and Darth Vader is not among them.

Indeed, given all the financial gloom and doom, I can appreciate any message that's upbeat and positive without being preachy or pandering. And that's why I like the second spot, "Aquarium." It's so beautiful that it cuts through the pessimism and gives us a minute of visual relaxation. But the tone is more contemporary than "Let's Go."



The deep blue water suggests life, birth, creativity -- that's why, in The Muse, Sharon Stone advises Albert Brooks, a stumped screenwriter, to go to an aquarium for inspiration to fix his stalled screenplay. (She turns out to be a psychopath, but still, there is something hypnotic in the sea depths.)



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Ready, Set, 'Go' for Visa

If you ignore the anthem, TBWA's campaign just might lift your spirits

March 9, 2009

-By Barbara Lippert


Sometimes, life takes a fresh start. This new Visa campaign from TBWA, for instance, introduces the word "go" with a new global tagline, "More people go with Visa," which replaces "Life takes Visa." I can see that going is more forward-moving than taking, which you kind of have to sit back and do. But as a phrase, it doesn't roll off the tongue. It seems like it's been translated from another language, the awkward result of too many focus groups.

In the U.S., there are two TV spots to start. "Let's Go" is a big, glossy anthem, my least favorite kind of commercial. It's a beautifully shot update of "Morning in America" imagery. Now, a young woman uses a cool European coffee maker. A jogger stretches. People scan the sky hopefully as the sun rises. The vignettes, reflecting on the promise of a new day, are attractive -- they could sell me on a nice new breakfast cereal, or a crisp white shirt, or maybe some life insurance.

The anthem ad also features the most up-to-date music in the campaign, the song "Today" by Smashing Pumpkins, from 1993.
 
For the record, I still don't get why companies need these advertising "manifestos." Consumers do not lean forward on the couch and say, "Wow, Marge, get in here -- Visa is revealing some brand DNA!" They respond to messages that resonate.

"Let's Go" is, however, armed with a secret weapon: Morgan Freeman, who I am naming the official voice of God in this age of mild Depression. His voice is so distinctive, his line readings so nuanced, that the sound just breaks through and stops time -- a little aural stimulus package. James Earl Jones still has plenty of juice, but Freeman's voice conveys the sum of all of his more delightful movie roles, and Darth Vader is not among them.

Indeed, given all the financial gloom and doom, I can appreciate any message that's upbeat and positive without being preachy or pandering. And that's why I like the second spot, "Aquarium." It's so beautiful that it cuts through the pessimism and gives us a minute of visual relaxation. But the tone is more contemporary than "Let's Go."



The deep blue water suggests life, birth, creativity -- that's why, in The Muse, Sharon Stone advises Albert Brooks, a stumped screenwriter, to go to an aquarium for inspiration to fix his stalled screenplay. (She turns out to be a psychopath, but still, there is something hypnotic in the sea depths.)


 
The spot opens with dazzling, kaleidoscopic close-ups of parrot fish, sea horses, jellyfish and other sea creatures, churning up bubbles that dissolve to reveal the wide eyes of an enraptured little girl.

Backed by the old Moody Blues tune "Tuesday Afternoon" from the Days of Future Passed album, the music, like the commercial, is buoyant. (It's from 1967, after all.) Back in the day, the song was considered slightly psychedelic, and the abstracted dance of the parrot fish visually matches that feeling.

Maybe the spot is for stoner stay-at-home dads. More likely, it's for all the aging Xers and cusp boomers worried about money, and whether they'll ever feel secure again. "When was the last time you went to the aquarium ... on a Tuesday ... with your daughter?" Freeman asks in way that shows he really knows how to hold a beat.

It's clear we're dealing with a new economic reality -- no more jetting off on the spur of the moment to exotic places where they don't take American Express. Now, we dream of time out with our families, and the freedom to take time off from (or forget about being out of) work.

The power of "Aquarium" is in its pitch-perfect tone. It acknowledges what's important, like family and simple pleasures and relatively inexpensive diversions, in a way that's, well, diverting.

Visa's international markets get "Gofesto," another anthem spot, with a message that is more about getting out and traveling and experiencing the world. Its strength is that it can be customized by region -- Japan added a cherry-blossom scene and India inserted a local touch: a Holi festival.
 
Here in America at the moment, people seem more interested in staying put than going. What the campaign seems to be saying, in a subtle way, is, "Stay put, but go spend."

Related: "Are Banner Ads Poised for Creative Renaissance?"

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