Enrico, who passed away on June 1, created “the choice of a new generation” and modern pop culture marketing.
Today, it’s everywhere. Celebrities endorsing brands, brands integrating themselves into pop culture through film, TV, music, and social media. But in the early 1980s, this was all new, untapped territory. And that’s when Pepsi bought the biggest pop star in the world.
The man behind the deal, former Pepsi CEO Roger Enrico, died on June 1 at the age of 71. It was Enrico who signed Jackson to a $5 million deal in 1983 to be the face of Pepsi’s “choice of a new generation” marketing campaign, which became so popular that it forced Coke to alter its formula in a desperate move to seem progressive. And we all know how New Coke went down—as one of the biggest product and marketing failures of all time.
Jesse Kornbluth, who co-wrote Enrico’s 1986 book The Other Guy Blinked: How Pepsi Won The Cola Wars, wrote this week in the Huffington Post about the cultural impact those Jackson ads, that 97% of the American public “watched them at least a dozen times.”
It didn’t hurt that the ad was an adaptation of Jackson’s hit song “Billie Jean,” changing the chorus to “You’re the Pepsi generation/Guzzle down and taste the thrill of the day/And feel the Pepsi way.” Oh, and the mystery and controversy around the accident on set of that first ad that burned Michael Jackson’s scalp only added to its popularity.
In a way, Enrico launched a new era in modern marketing, a version of which we’re still living in, where brands crave, scrap, fight, and create to become part of pop culture.
Check out five of Pepsi’s top Michael Jackson ads from the Enrico era:
SOURCE: Co-Create
i’LL be there is my favorite by far. It brings a tear to my eyes every time I see it.
Me. too!
I’m surprised “Dressing Room” didn’t make this list.