REFLECTIONS OF AN, ONCE GREAT, ADVERTISING AGENCY AND THEN SOME
Compiled by Marten Tonnis
Completed August 2020
The Apple creative team at Chiat/Day Biltmore in 1984.
Back row: Steve Beaumont, Lee Clow, Steve Hayden, Stephen Kessler, Richard O’Neill
Middle row: Penny Kapasouz, Christine Donohoe, Elaine Hinton, Laurie Brandalise,
Marc Chiat, Steve Rabosky, Joe Sosa
Bottom row: Diana Barton, Gary Johnston, Marten Tonnis and Harry Ray
One of the b/w's picked by Lee Clow for a Communication Arts article, May 1985.
The first 8 x10 color polaroid while waiting for Harry Ray and Stephen Kessler.
One day, all the Apple creatives were to meet at Bo Hylen studio for a shoot.
It was for Communication Arts, writing an extensive Apple story.
Since Bo did all my photography for my Apple ads,
Lee Clow asked me if he could shoot people.
"Of course" I said, "He shot elephants in South Africa."
January 2, 1984.
Lee Clow put me with 31 year old Penny Kapasouz as my copywriter.
We banged out my first Apple ad. A newspaper spread.
The body copy on the left page was translated in morse code. It won many awards.
Chiat/Day received several letters mentioning errors in the morse code translation.
Nervous as she could be, Penny Kapasouz, a Glen Cove, Long Island native,
was sweet and wrote copy like a poet.
Before Apple, she'd worked on Yamaha then later on Porsche.
She very much loved her Porsche 914 which broke down often.
Ironically, she later married John Byrne, VP marketing at Porsche.
Not long after, Penny left the agency.
She'd put on seven years at Chiat/Day Biltmore.
![]() |
My first breakthrough campaign for the Mac in 1984. Created with copywriter Steve Rabosky. It ran in newspapers, magazines and as tv ads. The campaign won many awards. photographer: Bo Hylen |
With Steve Rabosky. Of course, for the newspaper it reads 'We interrupt this newspaper.'
Also with Steve Rabosky, one for newspaper and magazine.
And yet another magazine ad. Copy by Steve Rabosky.
For Mitsubishi Audio, Steve Rabosky and I did a couple of magazine ads in 1986
which made Steve copywriter of the year by that moronic magazine Adweek.
photographer: Bo Hylen
For Apple's re-pitch I created a new look for the print.
It even ran in several magazines.
Copy written by Steve Hayden. photographer: Bo Hylen
There's that famous phrase used by headhunters:
'You're only as good as your last award winning ad.'
Well, it wasn't for my very last Chiat/Day ad for Apple.
It was written by Steve Hayden.
Even though I could do it blindfolded, it was an emotional one.
It happened some time in 1986. Two bombs exploded.
Chiat/Day lost not only Nike but also Apple.
It was John Sculley, then in charge at Apple, asking BBDO to pitch
the account with Chiat/Day as incumbent.
Steve Rabosky and I were in charge of the print
while Lee Clow and Steve Hayden handled the problem: television.
Many print ads were created of which one was 'No desk is an island.'
The work was solid and Lee was confident we kept the Apple account at Chiat.
To celebrate the work for the upcoming pitch, I organized a party
and created the invitation cards.
It was at Bo Hylen's house in the Hollywood Hills since my place was too small.
Bo acted not only as the host but also took care of the valet parking.
His lovely wife and her friends were in charge of dinner and drinks.
Photographer Bo Hylen shot all the Apple, Mitsibishi Audio
and later Infiniti cars for my ads, some Nissan, then a few Yamaha offroad bikes.
The party turned out alright. Even creative director Lee Clow showed up in his Porsche.
Steve Hayden fixed Bo's leaking toilet, Andy Dijak, another art director,
had arguments with his girlfriend who threatened to kill herself.
Steve Rabosky was drinking ice tea and my new girlfriend was kissing somebody else.
Everybody had fun.
And Bo, staring at his just refinished, scratched hardwood floors was pissed.
.
The Apple presentation was in Cupertino.
Present were Lee Clow, Steve Hayden, my writer and I, the account guys
and Diana Barton, the studio assistant in charge of a shitload of comps.
Boring John Sculley seemed to like the print but disliked the tv ads.
The presentation was also boring and we all knew where we were heading. Home.
Apple went to BBDO. And I went freelance.
Again I was working on Apple. With creative director Steve Hayden.
This time at BBDO. Steve named it BBDO Slighty Further West.
Also present was ex-Chiat copywriter Laurie Brandalise and
art director John Morrison, with a Pepsi in one hand, a cigaret in the other.
I did this ad with Laurie and came upon it later in a business magazine.
The ad pictured was the first of several Apple ads.
The Biltmore was thinking about renovating their hotel.
Chiat/Day was thinking about checking out of the hotel.
It was searching for a new location. Lee and Jay had something in mind.
In the meantime, Jay Chiat had send creative director Bill Hamilton to New York
to reign the creative department. Bill didn't like the idea at first but took the chance.
Jay told him I was freelancing and offered me a stint on Sara Lee.
Watch the :30" commercial
In 1987, CD Bill Hamilton introduced me to copywriter Jamie Seltzer, then Sara Lee.
For a three ads tv campaign. It didn't take long for an idea.
For the first one, we picked 'Blondie' Debbie Harry as the spokes person.
Debbie demonstrates how easy it is baking a loaf of bread.
As she pops out the loaf and cools it with a fan,
she says, "It doesn't get any hotter than this."
The ad had impact and the slogan 'Nobody doesn't like Sara Lee' became popular.
But according to an Ad Age interview, Bill said otherwise:
"We can all make mistakes. Right from the start, the Sara Lee client
hated the campaign, but were willing to roll the dice. The brand was connected
to another product catagory that people were no longer buying.
The tv campaign was not designed to sell products but to change the image of the past."
After only a few months, Sara Lee pulled the plug.
I wasn't much involved with the shoot. Lee Clow had called me back to Chiat L.A.
To work on Nissan.
Chiat/Day had an 'in-house' illustrator. Hank Hinton.
The one who did the '1984' storyboard and most of the drawings at the agency.
I tried to draw like the master but the scheme didn't work.
But Lee Clow very much liked my storyboards.
"They have a soul and attitude." he always said.
Sometimes he colored them himself with color pencils in Amy Miyano's studio.
I found just one which was done for the oversized Prince tennis racquet tv ad,
created with copywriter Dick Sittig.
For the shoot we had a customized racquet made, sized with only the sweet spot,
because "God doesn't need an oversized one. He only needs the sweet spot."
When I started the storyboard, I had a difficult time drawing God.
I ended up drawing Lee Clow.
Aside from layouts and storyboards, I started painting.
Lee Clow's beard. After a photo by Stephanie Diani for Adage.
In 1987, Chiat/Day N.Y. created a campaign for Arrow Shirts.
A print ad and an award winning tv commercial called 'Higher and higher'.
It was filmed at the city hall of Pasadena, California.
Creative director Bill Hamilton, art director Michael Smitth, copywriter Graham Turner,
director Mary Lambert, production Mark Sitley and Sharon Oreck.
Male choir arrangement of Jackie Wilson's 1967 hit by James Ingram.
Watch the Arrow Shirts 'Higher and higher' tv ad
___________________________________________________________________________
CHIAT/DAY
DURING THE VENICE WAREHOUSE DAYS
1988. THE AGENCY CHECKED OUT OF THE BILTMORE HOTEL AND MOVED INTO AN OLD WAREHOUSE
While I was freelancing, the agency merged with an Aussi one, called Mojo.
That was in 1989. Now Chiat/Day was officially called Chiat/Day/Mojo.
If I'm right, it was Jay Chiat with the idea to become global. Meaning bigger.
It didn't last very long though.
In 1992, the agency unloaded the kangeroo to rival Foote Cone & Belding.
It was early 1988 when I went through an ad magazine with an article about
Helmut Krone, the art director of the old, but famous VW beetle ads.
He worked with this young copywriter and I wondered who it was.
Then Jay Chiat hired him at Chiat/Day New York
and creative director Bill Hamilton hired me freelance.
That's how I met this copywriter. It was Marty Cooke. And what a writer!
Bill put me with Marty to work on Reebok. He brieved us, then said,
"Dirty some paper, guys. Let's piss off Nike."
Marty had an old Remington typewriter. He didn't like computers at the time.
It was the only thing on his desk aside from a stack of white paper. It made
a lot of noise. I didn't mind. It reminded me of my grandfather who had a similar one.
That creative moment came after two days staring at each other when
Marty yelled "I got it!" He handed me the typewritten piece of paper.
There was just a tiny line: Reeboks let U.B.U.
That made our creative juices flowing.
I blew up the typewritten line on the Xerox copier and showed it to Marty.
"Here Marty. The typeface for Reebok."
We created four tv ads, including a :60" and I added five billboards.
Bill loved it and the client went hysterical.
Marty picked David Bailey to direct the tv ads and we hired
photographer Max Vadukul to shoot the print.
Max and I picked regular people we met on the streets of New York,
like the dancing 'chicken man' and even some farmers nearby.
All shot in black and white.
The client showed up one day while shooting and freaked out.
"This is a color campaign." he yelled.
"Don't worry" I quipped, "We'll color it afterwards."
The work got noticed and became well-known.
We'd put Reebok back on the map and... it won tons of awards.
The One Show, D&AD and even a Cannes Lion.
The zany, albeit short lived campaign
helped Chiat/Day become Ad Age agency of the year 1988.
It's 1991 in Canada. Marty Cooke, now a creative director at Chiat/Day/Mojo Toronto,
needed me for a 'Manifesto' print and tv campaign to put Nissan back on the map.
Marty and I worked well together and we came up with a total of
five print ads and four tv ads. A kind of social focused campaign.
The tagline 'Built for the human race' which was used
in the U.S. finally meant something. This spread was for the Nissan Sentra.
Nancy Moran, from New York, was the photographer.
Art director Preuit Holland finished my ads for production
as I was called back to Chiat/Day L.A.
Another Nancy Moran shot. For the Nissan Pathfinder magazine spread.
Nancy was a well-known photo journalist in the 1970' and '80's.
Thanks Marty !
The Nissan campaign ended up winning the Canadian Bessies Award,
the Cassies and Best of Show award
And with the Labatt Dry Beer tv ads it made Chiat/Day/Mojo agency of the year.
The Manifesto print ad. Part of the Nissan Canada camapign. Photography Nancy Moran.
The 1991 Nissan Pathfinder and the Manifesto tv ads for Nissan Canada.
CD copywriter Marty Cooke, art director Marten Tonnis, director Jim Sonzero,
agency producer Bette Minott, music by John Trivers of Trivers, Myers Music,
camera by Christoph Lanzenberg, film editors Igor Kovalik and Bert Kish.
The tv ads were signed of with 'Built for the human race',
but in Quebec they used the tagline 'Le moteur d'une generation'
Watch the Pathfinder :30" tv ad
Watch the Manifesto :60" tv ad
There were two proofs floating around the agency. This is the one I signed off on. The wrong one got published after I left the warehouse.
Right after finishing the Nissan and Labatt Dry Beer Canada job,
Lee Clow asked me to come back on staff at Chiat/Day Venice
to work with copywriter and CD Rob Siltanen.
Lee liked my stuff I did with Marty Cooke for Nissan and Labatt.
Reluctantly I accepted and again was working on Nissan, but this time for the U.S.
Aside from the '180° from anything ad for the 300ZX,
Rob and I did a branding ad showing the Nissan Le Mans car.
While I worked on the layout, Rob handed me the final headline:
'The only thing ahead of us are the bugs on the grill.' I thought it genial.
We showed the ad to Lee Clow but after that it never saw the light of day.
Another one for the drawer. One of the many concepts ended up with fingerprints
all over. By account morons, focus groups and nervous lawyers.
Lee was getting too much involved and I was getting irritated.
There was no real direction for Nissan. I mentioned to Rob that,
aside from the 300ZX, their cars sucked and were ugly as hell.
After five months I dropped my notice on Lee's desk.
It was October 1991. I quitted Chiat/Day for the second time.
While I was on a shoot, Jay Chiat was in town, dropped by Lee Clow
and left a note on a layout pad on my desk regarding the Nissan Canada campaign.
Thanks Jay.
Nissan Pathfinder tv ad 'Her Fantasy' :30"
In 1992, while freelancing, Lee Clow needed me for a Nissan tv ad concept.
It was for the Pathfinder and part of the 'Fantasy' tv campaign.
I only had one concept, did the storyboard and choose cool opera music.
Richard O'Neill, the agency's producer, liked the idea and
assisted me with selling it to Lee. He gave it thumps up.
We're in Utah, near the Grand Canyon, shooting a black Nissan Pathfinder.
Lots of running footage and dust. The last scene was at the exact location where
Thelma and Louise drove off the cliff in that famous movie. The tv ad turned out ok.
It was directed by South African born Peter Smillie who had a production company
in Johannesburg. In 1984, he left the country for Hollywood during the Apartheid.
The famed director won numerous awards.
Peter even filmed the hood of the Pathfinder in a tent to keep the desert dust out.
Lee Clow wanted to use the chrome Nissan badge in all new print and tv ads.
The creative director and I were lying on our stomachs on the carpeted
floor in one of the Warehouse meeting rooms. I had turned the lights off.
We were both staring at my silver-grey Jaguar 1/18 toy car I had brought in.
The car was lit by a candle which I had glued on a large piece of cardboard.
The effect was amazing. The front of the toy car was only half lit and
the shimmering light of the candle casted an enormous long drop shadow.
“Very cool.” Lee Clow said.
An Art Direction article from November 1993 about the :30" tv ad called 'Beam'.
1993. For the third time, Lee offered me a staff job at Chiat/Day. He’d also
hired copywriter/CD John Stingley who'd left Fallon McElligott in Minneapolis.
It was to revive the shrinking image of Infiniti.
Chiat/Day got the account, thanks to its work for Nissan.
John was one of the best writers I’ve worked with and it didn’t take long
coming up with a print and tv campaign. A simple straight-forward one.
We picked actor Jonathan Pryce, who'd starred in the movie ‘Brazil’,
as the spokesperson. He could memorize a script by reading it only once.
With Mark Coppos directing, we shot a dozen commercials at the largest stage
at Raleigh Studios in Hollywood. It was the biggest lighting job during his career.
The editing was done in an office above the stage by Tim Anderson from King Cut.
Nowadays, Anderson is a big film editor at Banzai West.
The print ads turned out great. Photographer Bo Hylen
rented a Hollywood studio and shot the cars just the way I wanted,
although they weren’t lit by a candle. I enjoyed shooting with Bo,
especially when he passed me the 8x10 Polaroids. Before looking at them,
I sniffed the chemicals. I love the smell of Polaroids.
The Infiniti campaign got mixed reviews and won a few awards.
The campaign got a lot of awareness and was even parodied by the popular
tv show ‘Saturday Night Live’. They replaced the car with a toilet.
In late 1987, Lee Clow called me in for a Yamaha brochure cover idea.
He mentioned the client liked to see something happy.
I always liked the Arrow shirt shot done at Chiat/Day N.Y. I did something similar.
The client went for it and so did Bo Hylen.
The casting was done at his studio and shot the next day in a two hours time.
A few weeks later, I drove to the desert for a new Yamaha motocross bike shoot.
This time with photographer Gill Smith.
Knowing Gill, he wanted that magic light, meaning I had to kill four hours
in a 110° heat until shooting time. I went insane.
The shot turned out great. I mean, for the motocross bike.
In 1986, art director Rick Boyko and copywriter Bill Hamilton
created a series of print ads for Mitsubishi's big screen tv.
With Martin Scorsese, John Huston,
Jim Henson, Bob Fosse, Ridley Scott and Billy Wilder.
Photography by Norman Seeff
![]() |
The measuring tape. The great newspaper ad for the Mitsubishi 35" tv. By Rick Boyko and Bill Hamilton. It won several awards. |
__________________________________________________________________
CHIAT/DAY
FROM THE STUPID BINOCULARS DAYS
1994. THE AGENCY CHECKED OUT OF THE WAREHOUSE AND MOVED INTO THE...
But nothing is forever and in early 1994, Lee Clow kicked us out and,
as hostages, taken into the new building across the street.
I have to be honest. I hated the place. Thank you, Jay.
If you came in a bit late, you couldn't find a desk.
If you couldn't find a desk, you couldn't use a computer.
If you were coming in very late, you couldn't even find a chair and
no place to leave your stuff. (I disliked the lockers.)
You had to work either inside one of the binoculars 'wigwams' or
the very noisy cafeteria where it was impossible to concentrate.
Often I used the patio chairs on the balcony just to be able to do my layouts.
The advantage was, there, I could smoke.
A month later, it was the fourth time I went to Lee Clow's office.
This time not to give him my notice, but with a proposition. To take me off Infiniti.
"I'll think about it" he said, "In the meantime, work with Dick Sittg for awhile."
1994. Dick Sittig was on his way back from N.Y. with his tails between his legs.
He couldn't face the pressures of a creative director. I totally agreed.
Together we launched the Airtouch Cellular tv campaign.
I even designed a morphing treatment of the Airtouch logo.
Then a tv ad and print magazine spread for Prince's oversized tennis racquet,
with a little help from God.
(For the shoot, the tennis racquet was customized to the size of the sweet spot.)
'God doesn't need a big racquet, all he needs is the sweet spot' was the idea.
The print ad turned out ok. The commercial won a few awards.
Then I got restless again.
Some time mid 1994, it was the third time I quitted Chiat/Day.
Some reflections from the Venice warehouse and the Biltmore
Before Ken Segal wrote 'i' for iMac,
it was an art director who was doodling one day in his sketchbook.
Variations on Keith Haring and Rene Magritte's 'Ceci n'est pas une pipe.'
followed by a billboard showing the boxy Macintosh with the copy 'This is not a box'.
Then he did a cartoon box and wrote the line 'Think different.'
It was Craig Tanimoto. A new Apple campaign was born.
Copywriter Rob Siltanen then wrote the salute 'To the crazy ones.'
Another Apple found in a drawer. A three page newspaper ad.
Though not my favorite, it was well written by Penny Kapasouz and Steve Rabosky.
Dumbwaiters and Rock drills
With Bill Hamilton at the reign of the creative department,
great work was done at Chiat/Day New York.
One was the outstanding print and tv campaign for Nynex yellow pages.
Copywriter Robin Raj and art director Marty Weiss created stuff
which was way up there with Apple's '1984' commercial.
These ads were simple, clever and very entertaining.
That was in 1987, in the age of landline telephones and phone books.
The campaign won numerous awards.
TBWA\CHIAT\DAY
FROM THE GROSVENOR DAYS
![]() |
In 1995, Omnicom bought Chiat/Day. The agency merged
with TBWA and it was now called TBWA/Chiat/Day.
In early 1999, the agency settled in the new 'architecturally innovative'
and 'absolutely amazing, wow' complex in Playa del Rey,
changed the / to \ : TBWA\Chiat\Day and...
everybody was happy as a clam.
One day Lee Clow invited me to meet with Creative Chief Lee Clow.
Some valet parking guy yelled, "Hey, you can't park there !!!"
At the front desk, this young girl had trouble with my name.
I searched for Lee Clow. He wasn't available.
I saw Rob Siltanen, one of the so many creative directors. I think he saw me.
Amy Miyano asked for my portfolio! Say what? Don't you know me?
Is it always this noisy, I asked some girl on roller skates.
I met some big shot creatives but they barely spoke with me.
We're too busy, they'd said.
I searched for my car. The valet guy was on a coffee break.
I waited.
As I drove off the lot, I noticed Lee Clow in my rearview mirror.
He was playing with his dog.
I left the goddamn place.
The Pearlstein Project
Among the many freelance jobs, copywriter Tim Braybrooks and I created
a 24 page mailer for Leonard Pearlstein, to promote a new way
of conducting advertising.
The cover pic is by British photographer Martin Parr (Magnum)
APRIL 23, 2002. A SAD DAY
Dear Jay,
Once you've mentioned a phrase:
Your mind is like a parachute. It doesn't work unless it's open.
Somehow it sounded familiar.
But it were the other, touching words,
spoken right in my face, in your New York office.
Yes, Jay, you were right. I am a fly, flying around, searching for poop.
But, I got to see the world.
Being freelance took me to many places.
To Canada, Mexico and Europe.
I've worked in Curitiba, Brazil, in Amsterdam, Lyon, London,
Paris and Kampala, in Uganda.
A reminiscense of all the work I've done.
But more important were all the creative people I've met.
As a fly, I've said it several times: Same shit, different piles.
But it wasn't the same shit, different country.
Thank you Jay, it was fun to have been in the same decades with you.
AFTER CHIAT DAYS
And so a new life began. A thrill in the romantic, exiting, creatively
fulfilling life of a freelance art director.
In N.Y. I worked with Bill Hamilton, on Merrill Lynch and The Wall Street Journal.
For Wieden & Kennedy on Microsoft. At Publicis for Boeing.
For Hitachi Laptops with Robert Chandler at Seiniger.
At Suissa Miller on Skytel. In New York with Marty Cooke on N.Y. Life.
In Holland, for the Amsterdam Police.
Billboard for Coca Cola, art and copy by me
For the U.K., an Eminem billboard for Coca Cola.
For Tom Cordner at Team One, an America West Airlines tv campaign.
A National Car Rental campaign for The Pearlstein Group.
For Mark Monteiro at DDB, three tv ads for Arizona Public Service.
For Size, Inc., a Toyota Europe campaign for their hybrid cars.
In Curitiba, Brazil for Damasco Café,
for Jesa Butter in Kampala, Uganda and...
Concept and copy by me for National Car Rental magazine ads.
With copywriter Jean Claude for Aston Martin France and a poster for an art museum, Lyon.
![]() |
Amsterdam Police magazine ad, art and copy by me. The ad got a lot of response. |
With copywriter Norman Durkee for Publicis, Seattle.
Ads for Skytel. Copy Tim Braybrooks and me.
With copywriter Angela Harder for Damasco Café, Curitiba, Brazil.
With copywriter Jed Alger for Microsoft, Wieden & Kennedy, Portland.
Small space magazine ad Mothers for Mothers, Pasadena, art and copy by me.
Magazine ad for Toyota Hybrid Europe, art and copy by me.
![]() |
One of a series of four ads for Jesa Butter, Kampala, Uganda. |
BEFORE THE BILTMORE DAYS
![]() |
While working in France, way back then, print advertising was more visually focused than copy. It seemed art directors were more popular than copywriters. My favorite French ad, done for Woolmark in 1976, was created by art director Bruno Suter at HVA Conseil and photographed by Daniel Aron. Shot somewhere in the French country side, we see a shepherd and his dog watching over a flock of sheep forming the Woolmark logo. It was so simple, on the mark and visually strong, it was just signed with 'Real wool'. For the shoot, the Wool logo was constructed out of steel wire. Aron then attached the sheep and applied low voltage electricity to keep the sheep from moving. Try that today. No way, José. DURING THE CHIAT/DAY DAYS
They were drinking buddies and boiling ads. For the farmers in Virginia who were struggling in order to make a living. That was in 1986. It was art director Cabell Harris and copywriter Luke Sullivan at Drinking Buddies Advertising, in Richmond, who created some powerful stuff. They are some of my favorites. Not only for the ads but also for the very strong messages directed at the government. And nothing has changed.
A great tv ad called 'Bridge' for Pioneer Audio. After having worked two years at Stein, Robaire, Helm, For the tv ad they took old stock footage of the bridge in Tacoma, Washington. A surprise for Kirk and Court: It won the Grand Clio for the best tv ad of the year.
Bad press. The ad that never should have seen the light of day. Comparing 2004 Asian's tsunami with 9/11. The Press ad was created in Brazil by ad agency DDB. Yes, It's powerful, but shocking. I did stuff like this before but most of the time it ended up in a drawer. Concepts that are way out there have an advantage. You can always tone it down, but you can't improve a bad one.
A nice Nissan spread done in 1987 by art director Pam Cunningham and copywriters Steve Bassett and Steve Silver.
Another great Mitsubishi tv magazine ad from 1988. One of a series created by art director Rick Boyko and copy by Bill Hamilton and Rob Feakins. Photography by Dennis Manarchy
Ok, here's one more Infiniti ad I've found in a drawer. Actually, ripped from a magazine. Dating the same year, 1993. It was one of the last spreads John Stingley and I did.. We used a bowling ball, painted by photographer Bo Hylen.
Rick Boyko and Bill Hamilton were a busy team from '86 to '88. Aside from Mitsubishi and Home Savings, they also worked on Nike. From a series of ads, here's Rick's favorite, called 'Pier' done in '86. Photography by Dennis Manarchy
Two more on my list of favorite tv ads. A superb demonstration for Penn tennis balls, done by Fallon McElligott. And the Jeep tv ad, just called 'Snow'. It won the Grand Prix at Cannes in 1994.
The power of one word. Genial. (Still searching the origins of this 1960's billboard)
Proof art directors can write. In this case a headline. That according to the book 'Chiat/Day the first twenty years'. Penny Kapasouz told me it was Jeff Roll who wrote it, for the billboard and it was used as Yamaha's tagline in 1978 in response to Honda's tagline 'Follow the leader.' Penny also mentioned:
No, I haven't forgotten Randy Newman's 'I love L.A., the city's anthem, well, for Nike, in 1984. art directors: Gary Johns and Lee Clow copywriter: Jeff Gorman directors: Tim Newman and Mark Coppos producer: Morty Baran Editor: Gayle Grant Randy Newman: "Rollin' down the Imperial Highway; A big nasty red-head at my side. Santa Ana winds blowin' hot from the north. We was born to ride. From the South Bay, to the Valley. From the West Side, to the East Side. Everybody's very happy 'cause the sun is shining all the time. It's like another perfect day. I love L.A. Super: Nike. This summer
While at Chiat/Day Biltmore, stuff happened in the U.K. This superb tv ad from 1986 was done for The Guardian, a British newspaper. It demonstrates journalism from all angles. Genial. The paper got thousands of supporting letters. ad agency: BMP copywriter: Frank Budgers art director: John Webster director: Paul Weiland
Some controversal, but great stuff was done at TBWA/Chiat Grosvenor. The 1997 ABC tv posters and billboards, splashed throughout L.A which gotten a lot of press coverage. Another headline, on concrete seats at bus stops, reads, 'Wouldn't you rather be sitting on your couch.' copywriter: Rich Siegel art director: John Shirley
Two ads made it on one page in Ads Magazine from May 1984.
Before joining Chiat/Day, I worked on my last Spruce Goose ad with a great copywriter towards the end of 1983. Steve Kaplan. He wasn't a fast writer but a smart thinker. Sometimes, great headlines just rolled off his tongue before I could say "Shit, that's fucking great." It was Steve Kaplan who wrote this ad. Ironically, Chiat/Day/Mojo held their 1989 Christmas party at the Spruce Goose.
Four more great Nike magazine ads from the Biltmore days created by Jeff Gorman and Gary Johns in 1985. Production manager: Joe Sosa
MORE FROM THE BILTMORE A hotel review by a young English woman who has waited a long time to write this due to various reasons.
I came here about 6 years ago with my friend because it was The hall was pretty. The room was a bit dated. My friend had to change rooms a few times because she didn't like the vibe. He took us to see different rooms so we could pick the best one we like. It was my first night in LA, and I had nightmares after fallen asleep. then we went back to sleep again. But this time my friend insisted to leave the light on... The morning after, we left the hotel to meet other friends. She then turned on the light and woke me up. She didn't want to scare me by telling me what happened when we were After learning what really happened that night, I was really freaking out. that happened in the hotel. One was the famous Black Delilah case and another one was No wonder Hollywood shot 'True Blood' (vampire) I did find quite a few people's reviews in TripAdvisor at that time regarding I also read somewhere that the staff or people who work nearby all knew it's haunted. But now I think these reviews all got taken down. After learning all the facts, we both agreed that we should change hotels. They didn't deny what we said nor agree with us and simply refunded us the remain of the hotel fees. We were really grateful. We ended up in another random motel for the remaining of our LA trip. cared after all that drama. We were just so tired and spooked. I am sure many people have stayed at the Biltmore But we still feel grateful for the helpful hotel staff. Stephen Kessler was flourishing as a copywriter at Chiat/Day Biltmore,together with art director Harry Ray. This was in 1985. I remember they were working on a campaign for the Apple II and wanted to use Alan Greenspan. Sure, good luck, guys. But they did. Alan Greenspan (People in high places always asked him 'Where does all the money go?') accepted being a spokesman for Apple. Two years later, Greenspan became Chairman of the Federal Reserve in the Reagan Administration. Kessler and Ray ended up with a tv commercial and a magazine spread (with help from copywriter Laurie Brandalise) which left a buzz in the financial world. The irony was, Greenspan didn't own an Apple computer before the tv ad aired. Apple gave him one afterward. In 1990, Stephen Kessler ended up writing the book 'Chiat/Day: The first twenty years' and has become a big time Hollywood guy, directing features and documentaries. "IF YOU CAN POINT, YOU CAN CLICK ." -Penny Kapasouz It's getting more and more difficult to trace back info about Penny Kapasouz. This copywriter I've worked with for about two years. She did an incredible job on this 20 page insert for Apple, especially for the short time she had to write it. The insert has received high marks for the sublime written language. But more important, it has had major impact on consumers. The insert won praise for the easy and understandable workings of the Macintosh. but it was Penny writing the whole insert by herself. She said she was writing to people who know little or nothing about computers. It was easy for me since I knew little or nothing myself.
Forbes, Newsweek, Fortune and Inc. Magazine. The price tag: $2.6 million. Read Apple's insert here
"I love print." Penny Kapasouz once said. She also worked on Porsche and wrote 'Porsche is working on your car.' for the account pitch poster. She wrote most of the copy for the Porsche brochure.
Shown is a spread version of the eight page magazine insert. It was beautifully written by copywriter Laurie Brandalise and art directed by Gary Johnston. For a similar looking print ad, one of Laurie's headlines reads, 'It gets bigger when you plug it in.' I wonder why the ad, or the insert, was omitted from the book 'Chiat/Day: The first twenty years'
In 1982, the agency created a series of small space ads for U.C. Berkeley. They all had an attitude. These two are my favorites, done by copywriter Brian O'Neill and art director Mike Moser. For the Russia ad, which ran in Time Magazine, a Berkeley professor happened to be going to Russia. When he got there and going through customs, they found the magazine with the ad in his suitcase. They didn't let the professor in the country.
At Chiat/Day many great Porsche ads left the Biltmore. Aside from the tv ad 'If you were a car, what would you be' another ad never left my brain. It was shot in Stuttgart at the Porsche Museum with Dr. Ferdinand Porsche. Together with copywriter Brent Bouchez, Penny Kapasouz wrote the script with the phrase 'We believe any car that nearly got you from here to there, just didn't go far enough.' copywriters: Brent Bouchez, Penny Kapasouz art director: Steve Beaumont director: Mark Coppos producer: Morty Baran in-house editor: Gayle Grant
For three years we were entertained by a dog. A Chihuahua. Taco Bell landed their account at TBWA/Chiat in 1997. Copywriter Clay Williams and art director Chuck Bennett came up with the Chihuahua concept while eating in a Mexican restaurant. They spotted one walking down the street. A little dog totally on a mission. The idea for a tv campaign was born. Williams and Bennett started with one commercial introducing the dog with a Mexican accent. The spot captured the public and became a popular culture phenomenon. The 1999 tv ad shown is called 'Drop the Chalupa'. (The first cop is played by Rick Almada) The campaign lasted till 2000 when Taco Bell said adios to TBWA/Chiat.
Sunset icon While at Chiat/Day, during the Biltmore years, I went often to this place on the Sunset Strip, spending my paychecks on records. Especially rare soul songs on vinyl from the '60's and '70's. It was the only source to find them. Russ Solomon started the thing. In 1960, he opened his first record store at the Tower building in Sacramento, then in San Francisco, followed by Hollywood's well-known Sunset Blvd. That one story building with the classic red and yellow signage became one of L.A.'s biggest icons. Popular through the '60's, '70's, '80's and the '90's, reaching over $1 billion of sales. You always had a chance to bump into somebody famous. Rock stars and locals. It became a rituel to go there. Tower Sunset went out of business in 2006. Then in 2018, its founder died. The building has been leased to Gibson Guitars.
Do you remember ad agencies house ads? I came upon this neat site done by Dave Dye, who's posting articles about advertising for a while on his 'Stuff from the loft'. Dave Dye is one of UK's top creatives and an award winning creative director at JWT. His page about 'House Ads' is very interesting. It proves some of the big ego of many ad agencies, including Chiat/Day. Clients always ask, "Why should I choose or trust your ad agency to do my stuff?"
One comment on the site sums it all up: "I'd like to buy this new car. Can you tell me about it?" "Sorry, no I can't. We don't have a brochure or a car you can look at." "So how do I know if it's right for me?" "Take my word for it." "That's not good enough." "That's all I can offer you." "What about other people that have bought one?" "Ask them, if you like." "But what about a test drive?" "You can do that after you've bought one." "But what if I don't like it?" "Get rid of it." "Will you buy it back from me?" "No." "Why not?" "Because I don't know you or trust you." "Goodbye." "Oh."
While working at Chiat/Day Toronto on the Nissan Canada campaign, a young creative team did a neat trade ad. It won a bronze One Show Award in 1991. copywriter: Isidoro Debellis art director: Karen Prince
________________________________________________________
with Jay Chiat and became Chiat/Day. While Jay was the tough guy, Guy was the gentleman. According to Lee Clow, "Guy taught me a lot of things. He made me sane while Jay drove me crazy." In 1984, Guy Day staged himself less at the Biltmore and retired in 1986. He passed away in 2010.
Stephen Batchelor, then an art director, worked together with copywriter Cameron Day, Guy Day's son. They created a very neat piece for the 'Los Angeles Creative Club'. The nice photo of Guy Day is a gift since there aren't many floating around. art director: Stephen Batchelor copywriter: Cameron Day photographer: Unknown to date Typography: Anderson Printing (pro-bono)
Thanks to Stephen Batchelor for sharing this rare ad.
I was following ads wherever I could find them. Here's another example of a clever print ad from the early 80's, found in a British magazine. It won a D&AD award. The copy was written by Richard Cook with a funny story behind it.
Each sentence started with an initial that, when isolated and bunched together spelled out: RICHARDCOOKWROTETHIS He just wanted to be sure he got credit as the copywriter which didn't happen with his previous ad. No one can remember if the client ever found out. art director: Tony Riggs copywriter: Richard Cook photographer: Bruce Brown typographer: Terry Smith ad agency: Colman RSCG
This ad was one of the many Wall Street Journal interviews with well-kown business people. For Jay, they even used Apple's typeface (Apple Garamond) for the headline and a great illustration for which the WSJ is famous for. Remember, this interview was in 1985.
Apple proposed to run a printed apology in the Wall Street Journal. Jay Chiat shot back, saying that if Apple apologized, Jay would buy an ad on the next page, apologizing for the apology. It was a mess.
It seems from either 1984 or 1985. The copywriter Michael Duffy adds facts to convince the person that this ad can deliver on the benefits it promises. A coupon at the end. Nobody's holding their nose. This is direct response advertising. Get a response from the reader. art director: Ron Brown copywriter: Michael Duffy ad agency: Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO
Well, it's a print ad. And probably the best advertising done for a restaurant. Simple and classy. Created in 1991 by Fallon McElligot. copywriter: Bob Brihn art director: Bruce Bildsten
THE PIZZA DAYS
Chiat/Day created a bunch of Pizza Hut tv ads like this one from 1985. My favorite was the one version with boxer Marvin Hagler which I can't find. Marvin Hagler: "Just thinking... I wonder what... 'What's his name' is eating tonight... probably soup."
copywriters: John Stein, Ed Cole, Bill Hamilton, Marvin Hagler producer: Elaine Hinton director: Norman Seeff
_______________________________________________________
New York advertising agency Erwin, Wasey & Company, who had offices throughout America and even in Europe, published this house ad in a magazine of May, 1931. It was O. B. Winters who wrote the poetic copy. Note that an art director was then called a layout man. Five months later, that same year, Jay Chiat was born.
While wandering around at Chiat/Day's binocular building to find a desk, a clever series of print ads were created. That was in 1994. My favorite ad of the three was titled 'Firing squad'. It wonderfully explains the creative process at ad agencies. Even at the best and well-known places there were the fingerprints. Creative teams faced many battles to get their 'Blow me away' concepts through the agency's mill. First trying to please the creative director, then explaining it to the account people and then convincing the client. Even after a print or tv ad was approved, it usually went through several tests of incompetence: stupid focus groups and nervous lawyers. The best advertising done in America, or elsewhere, never have left ad agencies. All those great concepts are hidden somewhere in drawers, touched by the so many fingerprints.
art director: Cabell Harris copywriter: Steve Skibba ad agency: WORK client: Smith & Nelson
________________________________________________________
OLYMPIC DAYS
another creative team was busy on Nike. A series of billboards for the upcoming Olympic Games. Adidas and Reebok had the same stint in mind, but they were way outnumbered by Nike's ad budget which included deals with several big athletes like Carl Lewis.
Mayor Tom Bradley not only brought the Olympics to L.A., he was smart by sending many people out of town. I've never seen freeways that empty.
The one shown is still my favorite. art director: Gary Johns copywriter: Jeff Gorman photographer: Carl Furuta
Bo Hylen shot Lee Clow. Twice. In 1986. On the strand of Venice beach. Done for a Swedish brochure for Strokirks Printing. It containes an article about Lee. to created his self promotion piece 'Hire the Hairy' in order to convince creative director Hy Yablonka to get hired. on the 'Hairy' theme. Hy Yablonka was convinced. This was way back in the early 1970's.
together with copywriter Blake Hunter. On the right, a funny ad for Olympia Beer created by Lee and copywriter David Butler.
in Newsweek from November 1984. The art director even added Chiat/Day's Apple creative team.
copywriter: Tom Roth? photographer: Bo Hylen (cover and page three) ad agency: Anderson & Lembke, Connecticut Client: Strokirks Tryckeri Skövde, Sweden
Ad agency Collett Dickenson Pearce handled the London Metropolitan Police account. In 1988 they produced an ad campaign for the recruitment of new cops. Planner Cathy Simmons worked close with the creative team. This is one of the ads winning several D&AD awards. copywriter: Jeremy Clarke art director: Graham Finke photographer: Don McCullin ad agency: CDP
who introduced planning to Jay Chiat who brought it to North America. He then hired British planner Jane Newman to work at Chiat/Day New York.
________________________________________________________
THE COOLER DAYS When Chiat/Day was working on California Cooler, Hal Riney was doing the same. With Bartles & Jaymes. A battle started. Northern California versus Southern California. This was in the mid 1980's. While Lee Clow created beach blanket parties on the Venice strand talking surfboards and singing 'Louie Louie', Hal Riney preferred a small porch. With two gullible guys, Frank Bartles, played by David Rufkahr, and Ed Jaymes, played by Dick Maugg. The kind of Hilbillies of advertising. Hal, who came up with the name Bartles & Jaymes wrote and produced about 150 tv ads. Director Joe Pytka shot most of the original work. The campaign won many awards. The question is, who won the Cooler battle? Hal Riney was known for his ego and taking credit for every ad that left his building. Of course there were many creatives working on his stuff. One day I got a phone call from Hal, asking me to meet up north. I declined. The silent actor, Dick Maugg, died in 2015 and Hal Riney in 2008. ________________________________________________________
THE FAUST/DAY DAYS An old ad from 1968 during the Faust/Day years created by art director Mel Abert and copywriter Mel Newhoff. Abert was hired in 1966 and became one of the original Chiat/Day employees with the 1968 merger with Jay Chiat. In those days, everyone was smoking, wearing suits and ties. Secretaries wore dresses with pointy tits. Copy was typed on typewriters with carbon paper. Mel Abert teamed up with Mel Newhoff and worked directly under Jay Chiat. Abert's personal life went something like this: One day, a beautiful blond walked into his office and, feeling a bit more creative than usual, he got down on all fours and barked like a dog. Try that today. But she married him and later became his business partner. Mel Abert, together with Mel Newhoff started their own ad agency: Abert, Newhoff, Burr. It went out off business in 1990. Mel Newhoff passed away in 2013.
Steve Hayden wrote it. I remember seeing this ad in the Los Angeles Times magazine and thought it funny. The copy was wonderfully written. It wasn't until much later I found out Steve Hayden was the writer. At the time there were two commercial classical radio stations in L.A. of which KFAC was the best. Starting to suffer from a decline of listeners, KFAC made several attempts to appeal to a younger audience and in 1989 it switched the format to rock music. Not long after, the station got sold. The ad got into the D&AD Copy book with other ads written by Steve. Read Life without KFAC by David Colker
It won some awards.
At his Marine del Rey beach apartment in 1985.
When freelancing at Chiat/Day N.Y., on Fifth Ave, I visited him often in his office. He always said something hilarious with some sarcasm. This is my favorite: "Don't be afraid of failure, unless you're working for me."
at ad agency Saatchi & Saatchi in London. copywriter: Michael Campbell art director: Vanessa Rosser typographer: Andy Dymock
He even mentions Mark Fenske who was fond of grumbling 'love the process.' Another line in his ad is by Kara Goodrich, quoting, 'I still believe print is the most liberating medium of all, because print is where you are naked.' Kevin taught how to write great copy at Adcenter under the tutelage of Mark Fenske and Cabell Harris. Kevin worked at The Martin Agency in Richmond and is now a creative director at McGarrah Jessee in Austin, Texas.
________________________________________________________
THE STEVE JOBS DAYS
He came up with a name and hired well-known French artist Folon to design a little man called 'Mr. Macintosh' A mysterious little man who lives inside a box. It was 1982.
________________________________________________________
THE BILL HAMILTON DAYS
A great memory piece about creative director Bill Hamilton while at Chiat/Day New York. It appeared in Ad Age, July 1988, written by Ann Cooper. Note the funny photo with Bill as sheepherder, shot for his bio sheet.
THE ADGEEK DAYS
on February 2, 1987, showing work from the year before. The moronic ad magazine made Steve Rabosky copywriter of the year. The art director wasn't mentioned.
One for France, by Britsh illustrator Nick Price, from 1974. It also ran as an ad in all major French magazines. Advertising agency: De Plas-Troost, Paris The original illustration is owned by the French subsidiary of R.J. Reynolds. (Trone Advertising in the U.S. completely fucked it up by calling him Joe and turned him into a horrendous, appalling cartoon character)
who did an unofficial one with Tintin. Not endorsed by Hergé.
two years before Lee Clow joined the agency. Honda, responsable for half of the billings of Chiat/Day, left in 1975. Jay Chiat wanted to run an ad telling the world how the agency lost the account. They did. And not just to own the situation, they did it because they acknowledged the agency had lost its course. It's a brilliant ad from a copywriter's point of view. But from an art director's view it's so so. Bad aligned copy and line breaks. Sorry, Jay. The following year, Chiat/Day ran a couple of house ads, targeting the food, airline, pet and motorcycle companies. These ads paid off. One of the new accounts was Yamaha.
A great photo session with Jay Chiat and Lee Clow.
"I directed these photos with photographer Roxy Rifkin early in my career with Chiat/Day. It was for the company bios back in the days of print. Lee's bio was titled, 'Lee Clow, ECD, President. Retired?' Not in the minds of the creatives. He influenced me, me being one of them. Thanks Lee. Pirate. Legend. Genius."
Another print ad stuck in a drawer. One I did with writer Steve Rabosky just before the account left the Biltmore, including me. This was at the end of 1986 when desktop publishing was a brand new thing.
A rare photo of director Mark Coppos (on the left) with Lee Clow, on Topanga Beach during a California Cooler tv ad shoot in 1986. Mark was a big part of Chiat/Day in the 1980's. First as a still photographer, then as commercial director. He shot much of the agency's work and most of the Apple tv ads. Then in 1993, he directed my Infiniti commercials with Jonathan Pryce. Mark enjoys a private life in Malibu. I met him there twice. One time with art director Yvonne Smith. He'd invited us at his beach home. Later I bumped into Mark near the newsstand, at a restaurant which is now, yet another, surf store.
Thanks to John Vitro for sharing. Two more ads during the 'Test drive a Macintosh' days in 1984. One full page newspaper and a magazine print ad.Copy written by Steve Rabosky.
The other day I was searching for this book for a friend in Lyon. I visited eBay and guess what? With the original cover, you can get it for $26.28 or for $39.95 or for $49.99 Then I tried Amazon. You can get a used one for $19.41 or $50.00 or $108.95. You do the math.
With all the pathetic hoopla and self destruction that's going on in 2020's U.S.A.
THE PRO AND CON DAYS
at the TBWA/Chiat Grosvenor factory in Playa del Rey.
Client requests always seems to be granted even if it means entire teams are stuck working overnight and on weekends."
Some days are chaotic, other days you have nothing going on."
Became a sweat shop. Cameras everywhere. No loyalty to employees."
of employees increased, the bagels disappeared."
At TBWA/Chiat, expulsion is the penalty for biting and too much barking. However, Mr. Clow has been known to take the pets' side, undoing dog banishments now and again, saying it's the result of poor training. Lee says, "I don't think people raise kids very well either." Case in point: One office puppy 'Big Papa', a French bulldog owned "Sometimes it's like a great poem, but a bad one can say more."
Today you tell me to do something different."
When Chiat/Day's 228 employees moved in to the Warehouse in January 1988, Mr. Chiat became Venice's largest employer. A budget of $2.5 million transformed the Warehouse, a leased 42,000 square-foot structure. Skylights were cut into the roof, doors were replaced with glass to bring in light to the windowless space. Frank Gehry designed a new entrance and added the 22 by 54 foot steel skinned 'Fish' conference room.
explaining his redesign for the old Warehouse in Venice. From German architectural magazine Arch+, issue 136, 1997.
After Chiat/Day lost Porsche, it won the $150 million Nissan account in 1987, $100,000 was spent to pitch the Infiniti account but for the Nissan pitch, Chiat/Day claimed to have spent $1 million. Jay Chiat said, "We had an unlimited budget and we exceeded it." For the pitch poster, about a quarter of the agency's employees handed over their driver's licences, including Jay Chiat. I can't find the creatives. It might have been art directed by Steve Beaumont.
became very popular in the mid nineties. Every time I went out with a girlfriend I popped one of those and always carried a box in my jeans' back pocket. And I loved the ads and billboards. Created at Leo Burnett in Chicago, from 1995 till around 2006. Copywriter Steffan Postaer, together with art director Mark Faulkner created a series of great ads with the line 'Curiously strong mints'. They won awards left and right, like the One Show, Clio, Kelly, including Lions at Cannes. And an empty metal box came in very handy. For household items like nails, paperclips, buttons, change and even mini survival kits.
These ads ran in Adweek from around the mid 1980's. There's nothing I can find about Chiat/Day's team. I mean the softball team. And no mention of the creative team who did those ads.
A crisis struck Chiat/Day's New York office in 1993. Reebok abruptly fired the agency, handing the $80 million in billings to Leo Burnett in Chicago. Although David Ropes, Reebok's vice-president of worlwide marketing, extolled Chiat/Day's virtues, he found the agency lacking in global terms. Chiat/Day gained the Reebok business in 1987 but in 1989, after its controversial "Reebok's let U.B.U." campaign, resigned most of it, then rebounded it in 1991. With characteristic aplomb and irreverence, Chiat/Day took out full-page ads in the Los Angeles Times and New York Times that read, "Now we know how Dan felt." referring to Dan O'Brien who had failed to qualify for the Olympics. O'Brien had been feautured in Chiat/Day's $30 million Reebok campaign which centered on the rivalry between decathletes O'Brien and Dave Johnson. I can't find the newspaper ad but it ended with the line, "You haven't heard the last of us, either." The irony: Leo Burnett resigned Reebok in 1997.
written by Michelle Dopp and Ann Christine-Diaz. Chiat/Day's effort to combat racism includes a 'Booklet Dashing Rumors Issues of Racial Intolerance' This piece looks at Chiat/Day's co-founder Jay Chiat's attempt to fight racism with a campaign for the L.A. County Commission on Human Relations. It includes a pamphlet that highlighted Rumor vs. Reality when it came to people's perceptions of African Americans and posters and bumper stckers with copy such as "Is Your Neighborhood All White or All American?" Even the creatives are mentioned. art directors: Hy Yablonka and Kathy Migliore copywriter: Thomas Groener creative director: William Tara
The old Nissan van is still alive and parked at the Grosvenor factory.
while Rick was working at Ogilvy & Mather, New York, mentioning his mentors Bill Hamilton, Lee Clow and Jay Chiat. Awhile back, Rick Boyko had send me a photo taken at Chiat/Day Biltmore for his bio sheet.
Written by John Stingley and photographed by Bo Hylen.
A few more Reebok U.B.U. ads from 1988. Shooting with photographer Max Vadukul was an adventure. With his small entourage, we walked and drove around New York looking for anything interesting. Including people to use for the shoot. One was in front of the Twin Towers with some suits, then an old, rundown public swimming pool. And another version with the old couple at a farm. Max even shot a couple of real cops who drove by at one location. They were willing to pose on sidewalk scooters. That one was produced as a billboard. Since I worked freelance and was called back to Chiat/Day L.A., art director Marty Weiss put together the ads, some of them appearing in the 1989 D&AD annual.
After more than 30 years since U.B.U., I thought contacting Max Vadukul but wasn't sure he remembered me. He did and wrote me back, saying, "That was a great shoot like crazy." He went searching through his contact sheets. Max Vadukul was so kind to share all his photos from the Reebok U.B.U. shoot and he added, "I always cast on the go... and photograph with the intention of holding the gaze...near impossible in 2019." These black and white photos are priceless and so rare, I even hardly remember some of them. Thank you very much, Max.
Here's my take on the 'Running girl.' Note that all pictures shown are taken from Max Vadukul's contact sheets.
THE CUBICLE DAYS
According to the seating plan, the first cubicle showing was occupied by art director Laura Della Sala and copywriter Rob Feakins. Laura worked at Chiat/Day from 1986 till 1992 and is now a freelance Creative Director. Rob worked at Chiat from 1986 till 1994 and is now a CD, Content Creator and filmmaker.
A typical cubicle at Chiat/Day Biltmore. Each one had a hanging divider which creatives used to pin down their ads, layouts or whatever they liked. I shared one with copywriter Steve Rabosky. When Jay Chiat was in town, often he popped his head in our cubicle, stared at the work, then said "Is that all you guys did today?" Lee Clow did a similar thing. Liking an ad concept he got excited but then said, "Keep on thinking."
From the Biltmore days.
Three ads which ran in Belding Awards annuals. The one on top is a nice, honest ad and a great way to mention all the Chiat/Day employees. I remember most of them. (Notice the missing dot on one of the i's) The one, bottom left, was created by Doug Mukai. The third ad was created by copywriters Carlos Rubio and Jeff Maki, art directed by Diallo Marvel, creative director, Rob Schwartz
Lee Clow in an ad to promote Communication Arts magazine done in 1987. "This is my complete collection, minus the ones Gorman, Johns and Hayden stole." art director: Rich Silverstein copywriter: David Fowler ad agency: Goodby, Berlin & Silverstein
from the early 1990's. They mentioned, "We talked famed creative Lee Clow into being a spokesman for our client. Lee loved the idea so much, he art directed it himself."
Two more great newspaper ads for Porsche created at the Biltmore in 1986. art directors: Yvonne Smith and Jeff Roll copywriter: Mark Monteiro photography: Lamb and Hall
created in 1991 at Chiat/Day Toronto.
from the early days of Chiat/Day. Probably around 1973 or 1974.
It mentioned the funny story of "Flip a coin to see who's going to be president." Tom Faust flipped the coin. Jay Chiat won. The ad agency became Chiat/Day and Tom Faust left.
This article appeared in Adage on March 29, 1989 announcing Chiat/Day being ad agency of the year 1988.
Gehry planned the interim quarters in an empty industrial warehouse, 4000 square meters, as a temporary city in the desert. The warehouse, which is lighted only from above, Gehry laid out streets and squares, districs and 'bubbles' under a ceiling 7 meters high. The Gehry's architecture costing about $3 million renders the simple wood stud structure and disposable materials like cardboard as trend decor. The in-house conference took place in the belly of a wooden-ribbed fish almost 17 meters in lenght. Frank Gehry broke almost all the laws of architecture.
the $150 million Nissan account win for Chiat/Day Biltmore.
A page from a late 1980's Workbook with Jay Chiat on Venice strand. Photography: Ken Chernus
THOSE WERE THE DAYS
While I was working on the Nissan Canada campaign with Marty Cooke at Chiat/Day Toronto in 1991, supernatural Naomi Campbell strolled the Sunset Strip.
photography: Ellen von Unwerth
An extensive interview by Sean Riley Mitchell with Jay Chiat from September 18, 1988. A part of the interview is about the Reebok U.B.U. campaign.
How a 'turn of phrase' almost cost Chiat/Day the Porsche business. An edited story from the Biltmore days by Steve Goldman.
The concept headline in question
"We settled into our seats on a flight bound for the Bahamas to present Porsche Cars North America's first national advertising campaign. The Chiat team had worked tirelessly honing the launch strategy, creative, media, and couldn't be more excited to showcase our final work to Porsche and the entire dealer body. An hour into the flight the captain came on the intercom asking Guy Day to ring his seat location. The flight attendant delivered an urgent message from Porsche's marketing director to call immediately upon landing. None of us had a clue what this could be about, and were quite shocked to receive any kind of message inflight. Upon arrival we were met by the normally gregarious CMO who told us the CEO was boiling mad about the 12-page insert copy that didn't reflect his input when concepts were originally presented to him in Germany. And he wanted to fire the agency for not listening. This was not overstated as we listened to the fuming Porsche leader call us on the carpet, demanding the insert be changed before the national dealer meeting scheduled for the following day. During the initial concept review in Germany, the CEO questioned the last spread headline, And Professor Porsche is still not satisfied. Saying Ferry Porsche was indeed satisfied but was always striving for more. But it didn't sound like a big issue, so we thought ... or wanted to think. Rationalizing that it was probably a translation issue. At Chiat we always fought hard for ideas down to a line of copy. Not out of stubbornness or arrogance, but with strong conviction that it was best for creating distinctive, relevant and motivating brand stories. So we took the input as a suggestion rather then a mandate. This was pre-digital, using "state-of-the-art" stacked slide projectors, choreographed with audio and video projection for the national dealer show. So the only way to make the change was to write a new line, physically create a revised slide, and get it delivered to Paradise Island in time for the presentation. As if this wasn't a big enough problem, we were on press ... printing and shipping millions of inserts to run in the major newsweeklies, lifestyle, fashion and car magazines ... as well as the Wall Street Journal, New York Times and major metro newspapers. "Stop the presses" I urgently relayed to my assistant in Los Angeles, gave him the new headline, and requested a slide be hand carried along with enough revised inserts to hand out to all attendees. A local dealer agreed to carry these materials for us. Little did we know he had a strange aversion to flying. Just before leaving to meet him at Nassau International Airport, I was informed this dealer was not a good flyer and would always consult his spiritual adviser before taking any flights ... many times not showing up at meetings if his guru said it was not a good day to fly. As I anxiously waited for this flight to un-board, our "courier" was nowhere to be seen. I'm thinking this just couldn't get any worse. But to my relief I see him and his wife casually strolling down the ramp, being the very last passengers to deplane. Handing me the package he inquired why I was sweating soo much. It was a good day to fly :-)
Porsche and the dealers were ecstatic about the creative. Our favorite marketing director could once again keep down his food. And Chiat/Day retained this most coveted account, until we pitched and won Nissan, and eventually earned the Infiniti account. I still get chills reading this insert written by the amazingly talented Penny Kapousouz. It tells the authentic story of the Porsche brand; the extraordinary engineers and designers behind these amazing cars, the vision of Professor Porsche. Reminding me of the power of great print advertising. Every word worth fighting for."
The final headline
on the patio of Chiat/Day on Fifth Avenue, New York. The photo accompanied the L.A. Times Magazine article 'Off the wall on Madison Avenue.' When freelancing on Reebok with Bill and copywriter Marty Cooke, I used the patio often due to the no-office-smoking law.
mentioning those who made it in life, including Jay Chiat who graduated in 1953. He was inducted as distinguished alumni in 2000.
Where did this come from? The Sony U-matic tape edit of Apple's '1984' :60" - :30" and the title screen.
It's really a house ad just to show off. copywriter: Zak Mroueh art director: Rick Buceta creative director: Jack Neary
A merit winner from 1992. copywriter: Philippe Garneau art director: Duncan Bruce creative director: Jack Neary
Celibrity chef, author and travel documentarian of 'No Reservations' tv series. Haiti: The 2010 earthquake.
Aside from a Dutch guy who changed Dutch literature overnight with his
A 1993 article written by Jay Chiat which appeared in Adweek.
New York, April 1985 Lunch at restaurant America with America's adman of the moment, Jay Chiat. An interview by famed journalist/writer Ron Rosenbaum. Photography by Deborah Ferngold (The short-lived Manhattan, Inc. magazine died in 1990)
'There is no excuse for bad work' Hermann Vaske interviews Jay Chiat. Lurzer's Archive from 1993.
The cover of the 12 page Porsche insert from 1986 with wonderfully written copy. It should have been in 'Chiat/Day The First Twenty Years' book. copywriter: David Butler art director: Andy Dijak photography: Lamb & Hall
A play on the letter 'Z', this spread won an A&DC silver award in 1990. Created at Chiat/Day/Mojo in Toronto which adopted the U.S. tagline 'Built for the human race.' copywriter/cd: Richard Haddan art director: Karen Prince
A collection of 1984 and 1985 Apple Macintosh tv ads created at the Biltmore. Many written by Penny Kapasouz and Steve Rabosky and the majority directed by Mark Coppos.
The art director made it in a French magazine but it's not an ad. In Deuche & Méhari Magazine from June 2019. A bi-monthly about old Citroëns. The 2cv and Méhari. Memories from Amsterdam, the Ardennes in Belgium, France and above all, Lyon. And a painting I did awhile ago.
THE CRAZY JONES DAYS
Remembering her from the 1980's for her music and wild photos. "If you really study this photo, the pose is anatomically impossible." Jean Paul Goude writes in his 1982 book 'Jungle Fever. "First, I photographed her in different positions. I cut her legs apart, lengthened them, then I started painting, joining up all those pieces to give the illusion that Grace actually posed for the photograph and that only she was capable of assuming such a position." And this was way before Photoshop. Goude is credited with launching her career in the 1970's. In addition to designing her album covers, he also directed her music videos. Goude calls his technic 'French Correction.' Goude's image distorsions have been used in service of the objectification and eroticization of black women. "Blacks are the premise of my work... I have jungle fever." he told People Magazine in 1979. Grace Jones appeared in several print and tv ads for Citroën and Honda scooters.
A nice clean print ad done by CLM BBDO Paris in 1984. Teling us it's about time a capitalist started a revolution. Showing books by Mao, Engels, Lenin, Karl Marx and Trotsky. copywriter: Hervé Chadenat art director: Lucie Pardo photographers: Gary Brian and Marc Gouby
THE SCREAMING DAYS
A short story from 1999. Jay Chiat Left Chiat/Day after it was sold to Omnicum in 1995. In 1999, Jay became temporary chief executive of Screaming Media, a New York media company. Screaming Media is in a business known as online content streaming, collecting and distributing to web sites news articles about technology, health and business. Jay wanted to hire an ad agency and asked TBWA/Chiat/Day to participate for a review. One day, Jay Chiat met with Bob Kuprman in a restaurant. "Jay and I had dinner," said Kuperman, "And I told him he'd be the worst client in the world. I worked with Jay for 10 years. I have to have him as a client now?" Whether Jay Chiat was involved or not, TBWA/Chiat/Day bowed out of the review gracefully. Jay had something to say: "Now that I'm a client, I understand what a jerk I was." The photo of Jay was taken in 2001. A year later, Jay passed away.
There were moments I wished to have never chosen to go freelance. The bad side of it is not having control on the finished print or tv ads. But some creative directors were good to me and let me have my finger in the soup. One of these CDs was Robert Chandler who'd worked at Chiat/Day in the early days. In the mid 90's he was at Seiniger Advertising which was on Wilshire Blvd in Beverly Hills. I was hired for one month, working on the Hitachi Laptops account. Always having his office door closed, I knocked while entering. Robert was sitting behind his Apple computer with his feet on the desk and the keyboard on his lap, staring at naked women. "Cool" I said, "research for Hitachi?" He cracked up, "I luv to fuck this one." "I think I prefer Dolly Parton's tits" I said while pointing at the fake boobs. Robert turned around and said, "Why don't you get some stockphoto books, look for some great pictures and I'll write the headlines." "Say what?!?" I said. But that was Robert Chandler, waiting for the pictures. In the meantime he was jerking himself off on the internet. Robert was a good writer and a funny guy. When he and his wife went to Hawaii for a week, they took separate planes. "For the kids" he told me when we had lunch one day. I asked "What do you mean?" "Say if my wife and I fly together and the plane crashes, we're dead." I said, "Planes crash once in awhile. It's called population control." Robert cracked up, "Your macabre humor. No, if we fly separately and one plane goes down, the kids still have one parent." "What if both planes crash?" I quipped. Back to Hitachi. For one of the ads I found a picture of Napoleon.
HOW JAY CHIAT HANDLED DONALD TRUMP
A story by Steve Goldman "I worked at Chiat/Day for 20 years when Jay Chiat was changing the rules of the ad business. And building, from scratch, one of the greatest creative agencies ever. Many remembers Jay's natural ability to recognize talent and push people well beyond their limits. But most don't know how he generated such exteaordinairy loyalty and dedication. Earning the agency moniker: 'Chiat/Day and Night'. Here's a story of Jay's fearless leadership when he dealt with Donald Trump and it's major impact on the agency. When The Donald introduced Trump Airlines he wanted the 'greatest' ad agency and chose Chiat/Day. Chiat produced some brilliant advertising for the Trump Shuttle. But evidently ads not to Trump's 'taste', who sent Jay a very nasty and threatening letter about the work and the agency, nicely typed on beautiful gold-laden stationary. In uniquely Jay fashion, he replied with a hand-written note attached to Donald's original letter that simply said: Donald, I thought you should know that some lunatic has stolen your stationary. Jay And of course Chiat/Day was summarily fired. So why is this an example of leadership? Because Jay had a vision much bigger than keeping any one client happy and he wasn't going to let some bully push him around. But even more important, it was a message from Jay to the Chiat team, who toiled 'day & night' to live up to the agency's mission, that he wouldn't compromise. 'Good enough is not enough' as our T-shirts were emblazoned. Jay's principles of great advertising, and gutsy leadership, bred decades of loyalists to this day. He was the definition of the entrepreneurial, charismatic leader with a clear sense of purpose, much needed in today's disrupted ad space." P.S. The Trump Shuttle failed and... was a complete disaster.
A RARE NEW YORK DAY
I'd posted this photo with Jay Chiat and Lee Clow before, in the side bar, but it's such a neat one, I thought given it more importance. It might be the last photo of them together. It was shot in New York on October 14, 1998 by Mary Ellen Mark and ran with an Adweek article on November 9, 1998 with this blurb: The mercurial Bronx-born adman and the laid-back Southern California surfer joined forces more than 25 years ago at Chiat/Day. While the pair seemed unmatched, the combination was powerful. The hard-driving Chiat inspired Clow to reach greater creative heights, while the perfectionist Clow tempered and implemented Chiat's grandiose visions. The relationship was combatative at times, but loyalty and respect held them together. Jay Chiat left in 1995 after he sold the agency, which he founded with Guy Day, to Omnicom. Lee Clow has gone on to achieve even more success, most recently with the 'think Different' campaign for Apple. "We worked together for 25 year until Jay quit." Clow joked at the photo shoot. Asked whether he is retired, Chiat responded with the usual blunt retort: "No, I'm unemployed."
THOSE LEGENDARY DAYS
A great photo by David Fairchild
An edited story by Bernice Lake and Kevin Cody. Lee Clow was born in Los Angeles on August 3, 1943, a product of Southern California's post-war boom and beach culture. Learning to surf during the sport's golden era would play a decisive role in his career decisions. He credits his first-grade teacher Mrs. Rice with recognizing his artistic potential after he drew a boat in her class with a bow wake and smoke coming out of the smoke stack. Walt Disney was an early hero. He was fascinated with how an animator who drew a mouse was able to create a business empire. The juxtaposition of art and business along with Disney's passion and focus sparked Clow's interest in advertising. When Lee was 19 he worked at a bowling alley at night and surfed in the day. More interested in surfing than studying, he spent a leisurely three years at Santa Monica City College, a two-year community college and later studied advertising and graphic design at California State University in Long Beach. Then Lee started looking for work with an advertising agency that was creative and not in New York. He did not want to give up surfing or wear a Brooks Brother suit. In 1968, Lee started at N.W. Ayer, then did a self-promotion 'Hire the Hairy' for Hy Yablonka and in 1973 got hired as an art director at Chiat/Day. It was the only agency in L.A. where "advertising was respectable" and where ads could be "smart and funny" he said. All the creatives started calling it "Chiat/Day and Night" because of the dedication expected of its employees. At the time, the agency had 30 employees and $15 million in billings. 50 years later, with Clow as creative chief/chairman worldwide, TBWA\Chiat\Day had 1,500 employees and $1 billion in billings. Clow thinks of himself as a 'media artist'. According to Clow, there is an oppotunity for brands to stand above the crowd by telling stories in a 'disruptive but artful way'. This past Valentine's Day, in a 'love note to advertising' published in Ad Age, Clow announced his retirement. "I've probably overstayed my welcome. There aren't too many people my age that are still allowed in the office," the 75 year old told Ad Age.
THOSE TEMPTING DAYS
After freelancing for a couple of months at Wieden & Kennedy in 1988, on Microsoft, Dave Luhr sent me a nice letter. I liked Portland and its friendly, open minded and down to earth people. And I enjoyed working with copywriter Jed Alger and Dave Luhr. Even though Dave's offer was very tempting, I declined. Thank you Dave. The letter ended up in a drawer.
An ode to Jay Chiat from the people at TBWA\Chiat\Day Toronto which ran in a Canadian newspaper, at the end of April, 2002. It won a One Show Merit award and an ADCC Award in Canada. copywriter: David Koibusz art director: Jeff MacEachern
THAT EVENING ON TUES/DAY
A very rare find, hidden in an old portfolio case. On Wednesday, March 14, 1984, The Los Angeles Herald Examiner dedicated a whole page and mentioned all the winners of the 1984 Belding Award Show from the night before. I don't remember where it was held. Either at the Beverly Hilton or at the Century Plaza Hotel. The event was like a Chiat/Day show. "Let's go bowling boys and girls." Bob Kuperman, who was at DDB at that time, was one of the judges.
(The newspaper which was founded by William Randolph Hearst in 1903, published its last edition on November 2, 1989.)
THE MCELLIGOTT DAYS
In 1989, Chiat/Day/Mojo held a creative conference in Marina del Rey. Creative guru Tom McElligott was invited as guest speaker.
In 1990, when Chiat/Day/Mojo in New York saw an unusual loss of clients, it hired McElligott as creative director. He was also in charge to oversee the creative work in the London and Toronto offices. But within nine months Tom McElligott left to start his own agency.
A MO, JO AND JAY DAY
A rare gathering in Los Angeles, 1990. Jay Chiat with the guys from Mojo. They invited the ex president from the U.S.A. to open a conference Jay Chiat hosted. From left to right: Allan Johnston (Jo) Don Morris, Ronald Reagan, Alan Morris (Mo) Jay Chiat and Richard Whitington.
MORE NIKE DAYS
A 1984 Nike billboard comp on foam board. One of several concepts by Gorman and Johns that never left the Biltmore Hotel... ...but this one did, with Carl Lewis, and was plastered all over Los Angeles.
Mentioned earlier in the side bar. The great Nike billboards facing each other on La Cienega Blvd., in Los Angeles, from early summer 1984. It stayed up there during the Summer Olympics, well into 1985. Creative team: Gary Johns and Jeff Gorman.
THOSE JANUARY 1984 DAYS
A rare clip from an interview, dated late January 1984, with a young Lee Clow explaining the '1984' tv ad. This was at Chiat/Day Biltmore. Lee had a corner office which overlooked S. Grand Avenue. I remember the sofa and the giant portraits on his wall of Winston Churchill and, if I'm right, of George Bernard Shaw. Here's an interview with Lee Clow talking about himself, Apple and Steve Jobs.
This might be the rarest and strangest photo of Jay Chiat. I stole it from a 2017 article posted by creative director Dion Hughes. And I agree with Dion as he mentions: "For those who never came into Jay's orbit, he was a master at locating the soft spot. He could poke it with a sharp stick, or soothe it with his own special formula of ego-boosting aloe. Whatever would work best. Or, more confusingly, whatever the mood suggested." Thanks Dion hughes.
THE BIRTH DAY
One of the rarest pieces posted for this blog. And the photo of a young Lee Clow is priceless. The text was handwritten by his mother. It was August 3, 1958. The family celebrated Lee's 15th birthday. He was already interested in advertising.
Paul MacFarlane created this birthday card for Lee in 1988. Thanks Paul MacFarlane, for sharing it.
THE VAN GOGH DAYS
After years searching for stories, pictures, old print ads, tv ads, co-workers and memorabilia from the early Chiat/Day Biltmore and the old Warehouse days, I began seeing reflections of myself and thought it time to paint a painting.
but they either disappeared or changed names. Like French ad agency Euro Advertising which was gobbled up by Eurocom. Then RSCG merged with Eurocom in 1991 and was renamed Euro RSCG. And like this great Dutch ad agency called Prad, in Amsterdam, where I've worked with some great copywriters. Years later, Prad was gobbled up by Publicis. Then FCB was added and it was called Publicis/FCB/Prad. In 2009 the name Prad was erased. Similar name changes happened with ad agency Chiat/Day which was called Faust/Day before. In 1989 Chiat/Day added Mojo and was called Chiat/Day/Mojo, but in 1992 went back to just Chiat/Day. In 1995, Omnicom bought Chiat/Day and Chiat/Day merged with TBWA, naming it TBWA/Chiat/Day, then reversed the / into TBWA\Chiat\Day. In the early 2000's, Lee Clow started his 'Media Arts' philosophy. In 2018 he had the idea that all employees become 'Media artists', to create breakthrough, 'disruptive work', whatever that means. Then Creative Chief Lee Clow retired in early 2019. Now that Lee dropped his sledgehammer, will we be hearing less of TBWA\Chiat\Day? Note from November: While Apple beefs up its inhouse ads group
Ad land Los Angeles by Hyesu Lee (Ad Age)
Sometimes I do miss California. It's climate, palm trees and beaches. And staring at this neat map of Los Angeles, it seems all looks swell. But if California is such a wonderful place, why are so many people leaving? In the last few years, nearly 700,000 Californians have left it. No doubt that California's economy and creativity comes with innovation (and I'm not talking about advertising) but many people are struggling with the high cost of living and ridiculous taxes. They're thinking if it's worth the hurdles. According to a poll, 53 percent of Californians are considering leaving the state due to the high cost of living while the percentage of those with kids is 57 percent. And more people leaving California than coming in. L.A. suffers from the worst population outflow: last year almost 99,000 left the city, many leaving for Idaho, Arizona, Nevada, Texas or Oregon. Affordable housing is no more. It doesn't exist. Par exemple, in North Carolina you can buy a whole golf course for around $300,000. Try to buy a decent home in L.A. for that amount. Even rentals are now out of reach of many. I remember from the early eighties you had to make at least $4,000 a month in order to live comfortable. Nowadays it's five times that much. while Los Angeles County alone has 60,000 homeless. Also, from the Daily Newspaper:
According to Bob Kuperman: "In honor of Jay Chiat being named one of the top 25 CEO's of the decade by California Business Magazine, it's a pleasure to share with you some of his words to live by." In April, 2002, a little red book with Jay's quotes was handed out to employees of TBWA\Chiat\Day. Here are a few: "Taking risks gives me energy." "Well, the next time you tell me something, make sure I listen." "Everything you say is right, but I have a problem with it." "My real talent was for losing clients."
into the American Advertising Federation Hall of Fame, the industry's greatest honor.
It also could have been a Chiat/Day ad. Created by agency Abbott Mead Vickers-BBDO London. Copywriter: Richard Foster.
Two great interviews by the Wall Street journal from the Creative Leaders Series from around 1990. Bill Hamilton and Steve Hayden were great writers at Chiat/Day and both became creative directors. Bill left for O&M while Steve was at BBDO.
"Good writers come in all shapes and sizes. What they seem to have in common is an ability to hear, to listen, to understand- and to distil what they hear and learn into something that's human and persuasive."
(Still searching for the dates of publication of the three ads)
Lee having fun The 1986 California Cooler :60" tv ad, one of a series, shot on the beach of Topanga , slightly further west of Pacific Palisades. The campaign won several awards. art directors: Mike Moser and Lee Clow copywriters: Dave O'Hare and Dave Woodside agency producer: Francesca Cohn director: Mark Coppos Music: 'Gimme Some Loving' - Spencer Davis Group, 1966 California Cooler :60" tv ad
Though not intentionally, and I might be wrong, was this commercial directed to white America?
Behind the scene. A rare and precious photo of the cast and crew
Launched in April 1994, this was the piece of heavy metal to have. Just like the Hummer and Toyota's Landcruiser at the time, Apple's Power Mac G5 sold itself. It barely got advertised. Macworld Magazine described it as "The most important technical evolution of Macintosh since the Mac II." Showing here is a spread of the 'Tower' from a French brochure: Innovative on all floors. The G5 was discontinued in August 2006. The new Mac Pro is here and starts at $6,000. Putting wheels on it costs you $400.
The first true laptop from Apple. It inroduced the Powerbook G3 in November 1997. Soon it was dubbed the 'Coke laptop' after the Coca Cola bottle for its similar rounded shape. It went through four generations till January 2001. The G3 was my workhorse when freelancing It was kind of heavy but it fitted nicely in my leather briefcase. When freelancing at Ogilvy & Mather in New York with Bill Hamilton, I purchased the Powerbook at Ogilvy's expense. They never did found out.
THE DOODLE DAYS
Tom Lichtenheld from Fallon McElligott did some funny drawings of his colleagues during retreats at Tom McElligott's river house in Wisconsin. Doodles of McElligott, guest speaker Dan Wieden, Houman Pirdavari, Dean Hanson, Bruce Bildsten, Pat Burnham, Jarl Olson a few others and of course Pat Fallon. See Tom Lichtenheld's doodlesTHE SANTA ANA DAYS It's so rare, this stationery might well become a museum piece. For his first ad agency, Jay Chiat asked Hy Farber to design his letterhead. I'm not sure why Jay used the F Horn. Was it meant for 'F you'? Jay got into advertising by writing recruitment ads for Aerojet-General, an Air Force contractor. Then, in 1958, he was hired as a copywriter at Leland Oliver Co., a small agency in Orange County, California. Jay was promoted to creative director but soon after left to form his own ad agency in Santa Ana with a budget of $4,000. That was in 1962. He named it Jay Chiat & Associates. A few years later Jay met Guy Day in Los Angeles. In 1968, as the story goes, Jay received a phone call from Guy Day who had just broken with his partner Tom Faust. After a meeting, Guy and Jay went to a L.A. Dodgers baseball game where they closed the deal. After a silly toss game with Tom Faust, Jay Chiat merged with Faust/Day. Faust left and the ad agency became Chiat/Day, Inc.
A déja vu, but here's the complete Nissan 'Manifesto' tv campaign, created in 1991 at Chiat/Day/Mojo, Toronto, which won several awards. Marty Cooke wrote some great copy for the Nissan Sentra, Maxima and the Pathfinder. But his masterpiece was the :60" 'Manifesto' tv ad. Again, the tagline 'Built for the human race' which was used in the U.S. finally meant something. The tv and print campaign made Chiat/Day/Mojo agency of the year.
Posted in the side bar, here it is once more since it's my favorite ad from Chiat/Day. One of the reasons why credits were left out It also appeared in CA - 50 years of creative excellence. Read the Tom Pfahlert memories
which aired during the Oscars Academy Awards. The opening scene is from Hitchcock's movie 'Dial M for murder', followed by 31 movie characters. All fitted nicely into a :30" spot while the list of credits runs like a 60 seconds one: ad agency: TBWA\Media Arts Lab chief creative officer: Lee Clow creative directors: Duncan Milner and Eric Grunbaum art director: Alain Briere executive producer: Cheryl Childers agency producer: Anne Oburgh Green Dots Films: directors: Mark Coppos and Virginia Lee producer: Sharon Lorick director of photography: Rebecca Baecher executive producer: Rick Fishbein Nomad Editing: editor: Jared Coller executive producer: Nicole Steel Colorist: Stefan Sonnenfeld at Company 3 Sound Mix: John Boland at Play with producer Pam Doyle music: 'Inside Your Head' by Eberg cleaning lady:....... Watch the iPhone commercial
THE MIGRAINE DAYS
It was 1994. Welcome to Chiat/Day New York. Just follow the red arrow. It was almost painful to walk the painted floors which were coated with layers of melted resin. The Maiden Lane virtual office on the 37th and 38th floor was designed by Olafur Thordarson and Italian architect Gaetano Pesce. I thought, this time Jay Chiat had really lost his mind. It took some time finding Marty Cooke's office. Somebody told me he didn't have one. Walking around the funky space felt like being Alice, in Wonderland. Literally littered with colorful doodles, Mid 1995, the very last time I've worked with CD Marty Cooke. It lasted not even four days. Lucky me, I was freelance.
I found this condensed but funny article by Stephen Todd about Jay's Disneyland titled: 'It was like sitting inside a migraine.'
Lee Clow's quote was printed on all the recycling bins at TBWA\Chiat\Day Grosvenor factory.THE RSCG DAYS Kind of the equivalent of Jay Chiat and the best known adman in France. He started Axe Publicité, his first agency. Then, with Bernard Roux, Alain Cayzac and Jean-Michel Goudard, Séguéla created ad agency RSCG. That was in 1969. In 1991, RSCG merged with Eurocom who previously bought Euro Advertising. RSCG became Euro RSCG. Then in 1996 it merged with Havas. Séguéla wrote numerous books about the ad business of which the one shown, written in 1979, is still the most popular. "Don't tell my mother I'm in advertising... She thinks I'm a pianist in a whore house."
For those speaking the French language, here's a neat story. Vanity Fair article about RSCG
I remember this photo from the 1972 New York's Art Directors annual. agency: DDB New York art director: Bob Kuperman copywriter: John Noble photographer: David Langley
appearing in ad magazines like Lurzer's Archive and Adage, are with copywriters? Some of them, with egos, never mentioned the art director they've worked with. Hey, a ad copywriter ain't a copywriter without an art director. Here's a somewhat different interview I came across, conducted by Josh Sternberg at Digiday from 2012.
The copywriter has a hallowed history in advertising that stretches back to the dawn of propaganda. It's a field filled with smart, often wickedly funny and cynical souls. Here are some confessions of a junior copywriter at a large ad agency, who is starting his climb up the creative ladder and dealing with the harsh realities of unimaginative clients, killed ideas and petty account people.
Being a junior copywriter at a big agency is a lot like Edgar Allan Poe's 'The Pit and The Pendulum.' You're strapped down on an oak table but instead of an oscillating blade, it's a swinging dick. Sure, there are egos at a big agency that a young junior has to answer to. It's just that some of those egos can be nurturing to a junior, while others suck the ego out of you and feed it to their own, like Shang Tsung in 'Mortal Kombat.' Your soul is mine.
Nothing can prepare you for dealing with account people. I still have no idea what their job is.
I do do great work. Every day. But less than one percent of that work ever makes it in front of a client, and less than .O1 percent of it gets produced. A lot of great work gets killed before it even makes it out of the building. Part of the problem is mid-level creative management. We need more ACDs. When a young junior shows an ECD a dozen scripts or concepts, they get skimmed through like an email from a cable company. Every day I have to take good ideas out back behind the barn and shoot them. We need more ACDs to pay closer attention to the work.
What's the one thing you'd change about agency life? More free food.
Writing.
Account people pretending they're creative directors.
Credit means nothing to me in the advertising industry. We're not in the business of art; we are the art of business. You've never seen an ad with a copywriter's byline or an art director's signature at the bottom. Advertising has recently become a masturbatory industry. We're doing work for ourselves instead of the clients that hired us to sell their products and promote their brands. There's loads of work these days that is incredibly renowned and respected, within the industry and yet, Dick and Jane never heard of it. Is that doing our jobs? We need to stop making work for ourselves and start making it for consumers again. Who the shit actually uses QR codes?
Fear. Fear of doing ambitious work. Fear that we know better than they do what's best for their brand. Fear that we only want to do work that will satisfy our own egos as opposed to their balance sheets.
It takes a village to make bland work. And a whole lot of village idiots. There's a lot of people that go into the equation that makes a campaign. To paraphrase the quadratic formula, X equals negative account people plus or minus the square root of creativity squared minus four times clients times focus groups divided by two times the budget. From 2008ne of those variables can make for bland work.
THE PERRIER DAYS It was in 1990, agency Ogilvy & Mather in Paris put Perrier on the world map with a great tv ad. It was shot in Africa. A thirsty woman versus a thirsty lioness. It won numerous awards including a Cannes Lion in 1991. For the model's stretching face expression, Jean-Paul Goude used a convincing morphing technique which was at the time state-of-the-art and produced by VFX Studio BUF. concept: Christian Reuilly and Jean-Paul Goude art direction: Christian Reuilly copywriter: Patrick Margot director: Jean-Paul Goude composer/singer: Screaming Jay Hawkins music: 'I put a spell on you' from 1956 production: PAC model: Rosemary McGrotha ?
Lee Clow's office at the Biltmore. With the checker pattern couch. That famous couch Hy Yablonka left behind. Many people sat on it. For meetings, briefings and interviews. Like Jay Chiat, Guy Day, Bill Hamilton, Penny Kapasouz, Rick Boyko and Jane Newman, to name a few. And of course many other creatives, including me. The couch survived about 10 years of abuse. It didn't make the move to the old Warehouse in Venice.
THE PRAD DAYS A rare house ad from Prad done in the mid 1970's, Wanted: young copywriter. Prad, located in Amsterdam, was at the time one of the best ad agencies in The Netherlands. The offices were painted white and had pink doors. Accounts included Dutch Milk, Douwe Egberts Coffee, 7-Up, Bi-Fi, Walt Disney, Caballero cigarettes, Amstel Beer and Hero Jams. Creative director and friend Huib Ebbinge got me in there. Theo Strengers was creative officer and Paul Mertz was at the helm of Prad. It was Paul telling me to search for a copywriter myself. I'd interviewed several at a nearby bar, but it was writer Wim Hoffman who could kill more Heinekens than me. I'd hired him on the spot.
Steve Jobs and Lee Clow, pictured together some time mid 1980's. Lee was Steve Jobs ally for 30 years,
WHAT YOUTH Another Lee Clow interview, from 2015, with What Youth Magazine. About young creatives and his leisure time, what is surfing.
Jay Chiat in front of Lee Clow's office.
at Interlochen Art Academy where he studied cello. After graduating, he moved to Los Angeles to study at the University of Southern California. Hayden graduated in 1968 with a degree in English. His first copywriting job was in 1969 for General Motors, at ad agency MacManus, Johns and Adams in Detroit. Before joining Chiat/Day, Hayden worked at several ad agencies and even wrote a script for the popular tv serie Welcome back, Kotter starring John Travolta,titled 'The sweathog clinic for the cure of smoking.' It aired on 16 December 1976.THE EURO DAYS Collecting ads I'd worked on wasn't my hobby. I don't have much to show for the years working in France. Though I did find a couple shown in Cree, a French creative magazine form 1977. The issue printed an article about Euro Advertising Lyon trying to compete with the big agencies in Paris. One of the print ads was for Montabert jackhammers. Montabert also manufactured giant pneumatic drilling machines for tunnels. I did an ad for it in 1974. Depicting the final drilling of the Channel Tunnel with British and French workers joining together midway. The client loved it, then telling me the tunnel was just a dream and would never be build. They killed the ad. All I answered was, "What's wrong with dreaming?" Headline: 'In drilling, Montabert is ready. For anything. Even the impossible.' Copy: Marie-Noëlle Pujebet. llustration by Jean Michel The construction of the Channel tunnel started in 1988. A whopping 14 years after my layout. The English started calling it the Chunnel and the French the Funnel. The drilling was finished in 1990 without fanfare and the first train ran through in 1994. A freight train loaded with English cars for Italy. Same shit, different piles. It's amazing what you'll find on the internet from the old days. How many times can you talk about stupid linoleum flooring? Well, writer Marie-Noëlle Pujebet and I did. For Gerflor. I even designed the logo. With Letraset. A print campaign from 1974 while at Euro Advertising in Lyon. Photography by Yves Orecchioni. Funny ancient memos, found in an old Kenneth Cole shoebox.
Adgeek at its best from the old days. It ran June 27, 1988. The special 'sweetspot' Prince tennis racquet made for the shoot Chiat/Day on Main street from 1994. With Jay Chiat's 3D painting, the 'wall of fame' and a creative cubicle Lee Clow used a lot.
On the far right the 'Almighty' ad for Prince tennis racquets.
Lee Clow shot by Stephanie Diani in 2006. It accompanied an article in Adage. I did a painting of the one on the left, titled 'Lee Clow's beard'. Just like Jay Chiat, Lee had a way with words: "It's the little compromises that add up to a giant bucket of suck."
The Chiat/Day 'motorcycle gang' photo from 1976 for the Yamaha pitch print ad: The one person missing is Guy Day. Guy left the agency twice. Once in 1974, returned in 1982 then left again in 1986. Three of the gang in the photo are unknown to me. Back row: Hy Yablonka, Tom Patty and Jay Chiat. Front row: Chuck Silverman and Lee Clow. I can't find the photographer. Journalist Greg Farrell interviewed several big shot creatives It appeared in Adweek, July 12, 1993.
THE MARTINE HUNTER DAYS
A very neat homage to the trio who've made Chiat/Day a great ad agency. Martine Hunter wrote the piece in February 2010. She was a member of the production department during the Biltmore days. (posted before in the side bar)
GUY DAY
Guy, born in Chicago on July 30, 1930, was an army veteran
A nice photo of co-founder Guy Day in his cubicle at Chiat/Day Biltmore. It must be from the early 1980's. Guy left the agency in 1986.
Thanks to its work done in the U.S.A., Nissan handed the Canadian account to Chiat/Day. In 1987, it opened an office in Toronto. Not long after, Chiat/Day pitched Labatt Beer and the Toronto Zoo.The Chiat/Day/Mojo Toronto executives posing around a tree stem holding up the building. Back row: Jay Bertram, Marty Cooke, Steve Hancock, Jack Neary Front row: Duncan Milner and Ira Matathia The photo appeared in Strategy, the Canadian ad magazine, from 1991. The midnight sign-off for 1970's French tv channel Antenne 2. The animation was done by Jean Michel Folon with a soundtrack composition by Michel Colombier, who was inspired by the 1708 oboe concerto Adagio in D minor by Alessandro Marcello. For the sign-on, the animation was played in reverse. The theme ran from 1974 till 1983. This was French television at its best compared to the crap of today. (In 1992, Antenne 2 became France 2) A FEW MORE BILTMORE DAYS
Two newspaper ads from 1984. A lesser known three pager from 1984 which I did with copywriter Steve Rabosky. It ran in newspapers and business magazines and won an Andy award. Photography by Bo Hylen.
Yet another version of Chiat/Day Biltmore's Apple creative team. This is the one that was used for the extensive Apple article printed in the May/June 1985 issue of Communication Arts."Not tonight, dear, I have a headline." Young copywriter Steve Hayden in his cubicle at Chiat/Day.
On the left, a 1984 print ad done at Chiat/Day Biltmore by art director Gary Johns and copywriter Jeff Gorman. Photography by Carl Furuta. The second print ad, from 1981, was not created at Chiat/Day. It was a poster from a student team at the now-long-dead British ad agency called French Cruttenden Osborn. Nike ran this ad poking fun at John McEnroe's tendency to curse on the court. Another version of the ad reads 'McEnroe's favorite four-letter word.' McEnroe won that year at Wimbledon.
The 'Air Jordan' tv ad from 1985. The NBA banned shoes made them even more popular.
NBA players wore bland shoes in black or white with perhaps a splash of color. The league's idea was to emphasize team unity over individual stars. It was kind of a rule. But at a Madison Square Garden preseason game, Nike put star Michael Jordan into a pair of black and red shoes anyway. The NBA informed Nike that, because the shoes clashed with those of his teammates, Jordan couldn't wear them in games. Chiat/Day promptly produced a :30" ad to capitalize on the infamy: "On September 15th, Nike created a revolutionary new basketball shoe. On October 18th, the NBA threw them out of the game. Fortunately, the NBA can't stop you from wearing them. Air Jordans. From Nike." Created in 1985 at the Biltmore. copywriter: Jeff Gorman art director: Gary Johns producers: Richard O'Neill and Susan Ashmore director: Peter MooreLOST IN TIME Ancient photos from my Euro Advertising years in Lyon. Mechanical artist Frankie at work. You can see my Afghan coat in the foreground. And me, creating an ad for Black & Decker. The photos were taken by in-house photographer Yves Orecchioni. Euro Advertising occupied the top floor of a big, luxury apartment building nestled along the Rhone river. In 1976, famous photographer Helmut Newton did a photo session of women for French magazine Vogue. The issue was a hit. A Paris ad agency jumped on it and used one of the photos for a perfume ad. It appeared in either Elle or Vogue magazine at the end of 1976. It shows a maitresse kissing her chauffeur at the service entrance of a classy hotel. I wonder why this ad got ignored by the French art directors club. It's one of the best perfume ads ever. I can't find the original and forgot the name of the brand. Shown is a reconstruction. Visit the French Art Directors Club
Obscure 1984 video clips from the Biltmore days. Lee Clow and Steve Hayden with copywriters Brent Bouchez and Penny Kapasouz. Lee in Amy Miyano's office and Lee explaining the Porsche insert. THOUGHTS OF THE DAY
Jay Chiat reveals that the 'real lie in advertising' involves the way the media shapes audiences' perceptions of reality. His short essay 'Illusions are forever' appeared in the 2006 book 'Mirror on America' by Joan Mims and Elizabeth M. Nollen. Read the essay here
A funny story about Jay Chiat. Jay visits Chiat/Day/Mojo in San Francisco, some time early 1990's. A story written by ATX-Rider who worked at the agency and got to know Jay.
Mid 1988, Herman Vaske from Lurzer's Archive met with creative directors Lee Clow and Bill Hamilton at the Chiat/Day office on 5th Ave in New York.
Bill Hamilton One of the best creative directors of our time. He had a few words about Jay Chiat. "Look what Jay has done in his career. He had an innate sense of what opens consumers' minds and how to overcome their resistance. I don't think anybody has been quite the visionary Jay has been" says Bill Hamilton. "Jay is a great organisation man. He hates smugness and complacency and led the league in forward thinking. Jay set the context and it was CD Lee Clow who manifested it day-to-day. We once worked 39 days in a row on a Yamaha project. Nobody but Lee Clow could get everyone to stay up 39 days in a row. And the moral to this biblical tale of non-stop exertion in the creative department: Jay came in and threw it all out on the 40th day!" Hamilton's copywriting career started at age 20 at ad agency Marchalk in Cleveland and included stops at Ketchum in Pittsburg, N.W. Ayer in Chicago and Chiat/Day in L.A. In 1986, Jay Chiat convinced Bill Hamilton to move to N.Y. where he became creative chief at Chiat/Day. He left Chiat for an eight year position at O&M, then left in 1998 for JWT. After about 40 years in advertising, Hamilton quietly retired to spend time in Colorado. He remained as a consultant for JWT until his death at his home in Pennsylvania, November 8, 2017. He was 74.Love came from everywhere An evening for Bill Hamilton. The tribute was held at Ogilvy in New York, on Nov. 11, 2017. Similar stories about Bill Hamilton were covered by Adage, Adweek and The Drum. MORE FROM THE WAREHOUSE DAYS
Lee Clow in his cubicle, the cubicles of the suits and another shot of the Fish. Read: Chiat/Day packs up and moves out of the Warehouse
The logo at the entrance of the old warehouse on Hampton Drive in Venice.
Four Jays. From the 1970's, 1980's, 1990's and 2000.
A nice pic of Jay Chiat. Seems from the early 1990's. Jay posed for a photo session shot by Ron Krisel.Jay Chiat at his beach apartment in Playa del Rey. He liked blue. Photos by Jay's friend Fernando Stickel, November 1985. A young Lee Clow. He liked fishing. It made me think of a British sailor from the 18th century. Captain Lee Boo sailed to Macao and was astonished at the size of Portuguese fishing boats and yelled: "Clow, clow, muc clow!" (Large, large, very large!)The 20th annual Belding Awards was held at the Century Plaza Hotel in Century City on April 1, 1985. Present were Jay Chiat and Keith Bright with friends. And Lee Clow, accepting one of Chiat/Day's 13 Belding bowls from Philip Joanou, chairman-ceo of Dailey & Associates and actor William Shatner. An old stationary, designed by Tibor Kalman at M&Co, from the late 1960's when Jay Chiat worked with photographer Donatella Brun in New York. Jay married her in July of 1991. He was 60 years old. Jay spent his honeymoon on the Riviera while his bride stayed home in New York. Five hours after marrying Donatella Brun, Jay hopped on a plane for an important meeting with top executives of American Express. As Donatella waited, Jay successfully sold the executives on a new Chiat/Day/Mojo ad campaign to revive the lagging Green Card. "The meeting was planned." Chiat laughs, "The wedding wasn't." On Nov. 7, 1991, Chiat/Day/Mojo N.Y. won the $65 million Amex account which was previously at Ogilvy & Mather.
during the era of famous Volkswagen ads. He became creative director at DDB Los Angeles, then landed a big Chiat/Day position at the old Warehouse in Venice. He was a tough but smart guy and loved to be around creatives. Being retired, he picked up painting. See Bob Kuperman's paintings
Precious photos taken in April 1985, published in the May issue of Trans World Airlines inflight magazine. One, shot at Chiat/Day Biltmore with Lee Clow and Guy Day in Lee's corner office, sitting on that famous couch. The second photo was taken on the roof of the Biltmore Hotel. A big thanks to Paul MacFarlane for sharing. TWA filed for Chapter 11 in 2001.
Pacific Southwest Airlines inflight magazine, which included an interview called 'California secessionist'. PSA merged in 1986 with USAir.The 'second motorcycle gang' from 1980. I remember seeing it framed at Chiat/Day Biltmore. Maybe in Lee Clow's office.Not knowing much about this photo, Penny Kapasouz corrected me: "What a treasure. I used to have a huge print of this photo (16x20). The guy behind Amy Miyano is none other than a mustacheo'd Brent Bouchez. The two cops are actually L.A. Police officers who were supervising a Yamaha shoot where we had to block L.A. traffic. It was taken against a graffiti covered wall. I think in the 6th Street tunnel downtown L.A. Tom Cordner is seated on the bike, I'm next to him and Brent Thomas is slightly behind me. What a classic." Photography by Mark Coppos. Mark Coppos does remember Bob Wheeler, the cop on the left. Mark also remarked: "I can't remember Amy being there. Maybe just to give us all a good natured hard time. But it seems she was always too busy for that."
No, I'm not talking about Vietnam, Afghanistan or Iraq. A half page newspaper ad I created in 1982 while at Wells, Rich, Greene in Century City before joining Cunningham & Walsh. Wells did special projects for Continental Airlines. Aside from stupid low fare ads, for this one I rewrote an old Australian proverb due to the lack of copywriters. It's the only decent ad I did at Wells. Illustration by Elwin.One of the rarest photos on the blog. From around 1970. Jay Chiat with Guy Day, together, at Chiat/Day when on Olympic Boulevard.
Some obscure photos of Chiat/Day at the Biltmore Hotel. A view near the lobby, the cubicles and Lee Clow's corner office. Thanks to Paul MacFarlane for sharing.
Jay had his own cubicle at Chiat/Day Biltmore. He used it rarely.
The opening spread of a nice article written by John Peer Nugent appeared in the Los Angeles Times magazine, February 1988. Photography by Deborah Feingold. Thanks to Paul MacFarlane for sharing.
Grandpa Jay. Lee Clow never liked children that much. But Jay Chiat did.Penny and John Byrne on Butterfly Beach, Santa Barbara. It's 1987 Copywriter Penny Kapasouz was freelancing at Chiat/Day New York when Jay Chiat asked her to meet him in his office. Jay wanted to write a book. About the agency, the ad business and... himself. A publisher already had paid him an advance. Jay asked Penny for help. "When is it due?" she asked. "Last year." Jay quipped. Penny agreed, then spent many months with Jay, wherever he was, while recording and taking notes. She already had an idea for a title, but Penny got interrupted so often by the ringing of Jay's phone, she thought the title should be 'Between phone calls'. After several difficult meetings with the publisher in New York, the book was never completed or published. It's 2015 Penny started to write her own book about Chiat/Day. A book, titled 'Knowing Jay'. It's 2017 In December, the Montecito home of Penny and John got destroyed by the horrific Thomas Fire. They lost everything, including the chapters of Jay Chiat's book, along with hours and hours of taped interviews with Jay. All that survived was Penny's foreword. It's 2020 After so many 'lost' years I've found Penny. She and her husband are doing well, temporarely living in their guesthouse. Their daughter Niki makes films and paints and son Julian is a helicopter flight instructor.
The last interview. Michael Wolff spoke with Jay Chiat just a couple of weeks before his death. The article appeared in New York magazine, dated April 8, 2012. Jay was asked about his deconstruction of the traditional office. "Well," Jay said, "I mostly thought of it as a way to get people to quit." Read the interview
A different version of Chiat/Day's Apple creative team, framed and hanging on the wall in Lee Clow's office at the Biltmore. It survived the Biltmore, the old Warehouse, the Binoculars and Grosvenor factory.
A scene from the 2009 documentary Art & Copy about the greats in advertising. With George Lois, Mary Wells, Dan Wieden, Hal Riney, Cliff Freeman, Jeff Goodby, some others and of course Lee Clow. Director: Doug Pray Writers: Gregory Beauchamp and Kirk Souder Narrative consultant: Timothy J. Sexton Producer: David Baldwin
2018
2019 Lee Clow's farewell note, February 14, 2019. A farewell to advertising.My painting of Jay This blog is dedicated to Jay Chiat and Bill Hamilton Many people whom I've worked with at Chiat/Day Biltmore, the old Warehouse, then the Binoculars, aren't mentioned here. They must have left my brain and is done unintentionally. A sincere apology to all those who've made the 70's, 80's and 90's worth living. _________________________________________________________
-Chun Sung II screenwriter of 'Chuno' (Slave Hunters) 2010 South Korean tv drama
|
Comments
Show all comments