One of Saturday Night Live’s most popular advertising parodies almost didn’t make it on the air.
The fake ad was for “Kotex Classic” — feminine pads described as “the original” and “your mother’s pad.”
Some historical context…for the men in the audience or those women too young to remember:
Sanitary pads were much bulkier back in the day. They were held in place with an elastic belt.
In a real magazine ad decades ago, Kotex pitched it’s “New Freedom” pad by touting “No belt. No bulge. No blushes.”
Fast forward to 2002 when the fake ad showed women wearing “Kotex Classic” pads under tight dresses, jeans and swimming suits. Lots of bulk. Big belts.
In the ad, a man (played by a young Tracy Morgan) checks out the women and says with admiration, “Them girls is old school.”
The ad ends with a narrator saying, “Kotex Classic: The next big thing.”
You can watch it here.
It’s funny…
…if you get the joke.
But the males who dominated the SNL writers table didn’t get it.
So they passed on the parody…
…Until Tiny Fey, SNL’s first female head writer, lobbied for it.
She explained all that stuff I just told you about big, bulky, belted pads. Then the boys got it. And the parody made it on the air.
Tiny Fey tells that story today to demonstrate the need for diversity at the writers’ table.
The boys weren’t maliciously sexist when they rejected a female writer’s pitch, she said. They just didn’t have the perspective and experience to understand why this parody would resonate.
Reminds me of some marketers I know.
Like the marketer who says, “I don’t like getting commercial emails so I’m not going to use email for my business.”
Or the one who says, “Tele-prospecting annoys me so I’m not going to use that tactic.”
You may not like the joke. You may not get the joke.
But that’s not the important thing.
The important thing is this: Will your audience go for it? Will your message (and the channel through which you deliver it) resonate?
To answer, you may need to broaden your perspective. Put yourself in your audience’s shoes. Seek others’ opinions.
Sometimes the funniest jokes and the best marketing ideas fall flat for you — until your perspective broadens.
Tom
MarketVolt
p.s. Wondering how to improve your marketing content so it resonates with your audience and doesn’t fall flat? We can help you do that. Email me at tom@marketvolt.com to learn how we help businesses tune up their sales stories and marketing content. For no charge and no strings attached, I’ll review a marketing piece or the front page of your website and offer some suggestions.
p.p.s. If you like these emails, please do me this favor: Forward this to someone who might also enjoy it and encourage them to sign up for future emails on our website at MarketVolt.com.