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Page 1 of 2 Revolution DiaryBrands rebel, but to what end?
March 8, 2010
As I grow older (I am nearly 27), there are days in which the
appeal of this revolutionist's life palls. Month follows month, and
it is always the same: the hassle of kidnapping, the tedium of
hostage-keeping, the dullness of cocoa production. Even small-scale
massacres have begun to lose their thrill.
In my jungle fastness, I am surrounded by people with no conversation. Child soldiers as clumsy with a witticism as they are with a Kalashnikov. Hostages (millionaires, police captains, politicians) who are by turns sullen and psychoanalytic: "Why do you think you mutilate people?" The worst of all are the Stockholm Syndrome sufferers, like Ingrid B., who spend all their time tattling on their fellow captives; tale-bearing is a very one-sided exercise in egotism, and it wears on me. But worst of all, I have to admit, are my comrades. They talk only of forced collectivization blah blah agrarian land reform whine whine. Is it any wonder I am on the lookout for hostages? For a week or so, their talk is novel, the edgy banter of the well nourished. And then of course after two weeks in the cage, their conversation loses much of its spice, their wit much of its piquancy. So I become bored. And, to speak plainly, depressed. But just when my despair is darkest, I am jolted back into remembrance of why I do what I do. I am braced by the deathless words of the revolutionist's anthem, words that have meant more to me than the words of Trotsky, or Engels: Don't go unnoticed. Don't blend in. Don't be ordinary, boring or bland. In other words, don't be so mayo. We are our own unique one of a kind flavor. We are Miracle Whip and we will not tone it down. And I realize, with a shiver of recognition, that this anthem is speaking to me, the revolutionary, the rebel, the renegade. After years of toil and danger and violence, my work has been recognized by one of the great food conglomerates on the planet: I exist as a target market. After stopping convoys of trucks and abducting the drivers and chaining them to trees, our search of the various shipments have not turned up a single container of Miracle Whip. Still, I will not rest until I have sampled the insurgent dressing in the ways the company suggests: We will not be quiet. We will not try to blend in, disappear in the background, play second fiddle. When we're in a sandwich, or a salad, a panini or crostini, you'll know it. We're not like the others. We won't ever try to be. We are our own mixed-up blend of one-of-a-kind spices. We are Miracle Whip. And we will not tone it down. That victory is near is certain. Even General Motors -- that hotbed of capitalist hegemony and severe brand mismanagement -- has declared its flagship marque to be "an American Revolution." And indeed many of its cars have come to emulate that great triumph of the great Soviet revolutionary system, the Volga. 1 |2NEXT PAGE »
Want to write an opinion column? To send your idea and/or a draft, click here Revolution DiaryBrands rebel, but to what end?March 8, 2010 As I grow older (I am nearly 27), there are days in which the appeal of this revolutionist's life palls. Month follows month, and it is always the same: the hassle of kidnapping, the tedium of hostage-keeping, the dullness of cocoa production. Even small-scale massacres have begun to lose their thrill.
In my jungle fastness, I am surrounded by people with no conversation. Child soldiers as clumsy with a witticism as they are with a Kalashnikov. Hostages (millionaires, police captains, politicians) who are by turns sullen and psychoanalytic: "Why do you think you mutilate people?" The worst of all are the Stockholm Syndrome sufferers, like Ingrid B., who spend all their time tattling on their fellow captives; tale-bearing is a very one-sided exercise in egotism, and it wears on me. But worst of all, I have to admit, are my comrades. They talk only of forced collectivization blah blah agrarian land reform whine whine. Is it any wonder I am on the lookout for hostages? For a week or so, their talk is novel, the edgy banter of the well nourished. And then of course after two weeks in the cage, their conversation loses much of its spice, their wit much of its piquancy. So I become bored. And, to speak plainly, depressed. But just when my despair is darkest, I am jolted back into remembrance of why I do what I do. I am braced by the deathless words of the revolutionist's anthem, words that have meant more to me than the words of Trotsky, or Engels: Don't go unnoticed. Don't blend in. Don't be ordinary, boring or bland. In other words, don't be so mayo. We are our own unique one of a kind flavor. We are Miracle Whip and we will not tone it down. And I realize, with a shiver of recognition, that this anthem is speaking to me, the revolutionary, the rebel, the renegade. After years of toil and danger and violence, my work has been recognized by one of the great food conglomerates on the planet: I exist as a target market. After stopping convoys of trucks and abducting the drivers and chaining them to trees, our search of the various shipments have not turned up a single container of Miracle Whip. Still, I will not rest until I have sampled the insurgent dressing in the ways the company suggests: We will not be quiet. We will not try to blend in, disappear in the background, play second fiddle. When we're in a sandwich, or a salad, a panini or crostini, you'll know it. We're not like the others. We won't ever try to be. We are our own mixed-up blend of one-of-a-kind spices. We are Miracle Whip. And we will not tone it down. That victory is near is certain. Even General Motors -- that hotbed of capitalist hegemony and severe brand mismanagement -- has declared its flagship marque to be "an American Revolution." And indeed many of its cars have come to emulate that great triumph of the great Soviet revolutionary system, the Volga. As the marketers know, loyalty is the virtue above all among rebel forces, and when a brand speaks to us, we are brand loyal to the point of violence. Let me give you an example: If I can choose between kidnapping a tourist with a Nikon D3000 or one with a Canon Eos Digital Rebel XT around his neck, you know which way I go. And when I expropriate a motorcycle, I prefer to expropriate a Honda Rebel -- unless of course a BMW is on offer. In another sign of our impending triumph, witness the sweet sponsorship deal Fidel made with Adidas. He appears only rarely and (by agreement) only wearing the Adidas Superstar tracksuit. The photographs of him in the Superstar have been transmitted all around the world. Win-win. Even Che's granddaughter, Lydia, inked a deal to be a spokesperson for PETA. She issues a call to "join the vegetarian revolution" and is photographed nude except for a bandolier of carrots, which makes me believe the creative team confused Che Guevara with Pancho Villa. "It's an homage of sorts to her late grandfather," says a PETA spokesperson. How Che would have rejoiced in this "homage of sorts" because when you get animal rights wing-nuts like PETA on board, you're getting somewhere. My boredom and occasional depression lifts as I see that day by day we recruit new champions and sponsors among the greatest brands on Earth. Every time we ambush an army patrol and summarily execute our captives, we know the marketers cheer our boldness. Every time we remove the ear of a captive politician to get a better price, we know the marketers applaud our daring. Every time we enter a village and recruit passels of children to join our army, we know the marketers celebrate our untamed spirit. We are revolutionaries, all of us, dressing eaters and children stealers alike. Thank you, marketers, for your support. Steve Simpson is a partner and creative director at Goodby, Silverstein & Partners in San Francisco. Want to write an opinion column? To send your idea and/or a draft, click here Other Columns
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