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I make sense

Missives on media, marketing and more. Edited by Amar Patel

July 1, 2020

“[Poetry is] a kind of an ingenious nonsense”

by Amar Patel in marketing, poetry


SCDP creative director Don Draper (Jon Hamm) writing in AMC’s Mad Men. One of the books Draper turns to in his existential crisis is poet Frank O’Hara’s Meditations in an Emergency

SCDP creative director Don Draper (Jon Hamm) writing in AMC’s Mad Men. One of the books Draper turns to in his existential crisis is poet Frank O’Hara’s Meditations in an Emergency

SCDP creative director Don Draper (Jon Hamm) writing in AMC’s Mad Men. One of the books Draper turns to in his existential crisis is poet Frank O’Hara’s Meditations in an Emergency

SCDP creative director Don Draper (Jon Hamm) writing in AMC’s Mad Men. One of the books Draper turns to in his existential crisis is poet Frank O’Hara’s Meditations in an Emergency

Sir Isaac Newton said that somewhere around the late 16th Century, quoting his teacher Isaac Barrow. Although uttered as a backhanded criticism – with mild disdain at the obfuscation in the craft – it’s that virtuosity, that lyrical alchemy and affecting wonder, that brands have coveted since the early heyday of advertising.

From the poem in a 19th-century Warren Blacking’s shoe polish ad, to the worldplay in classic slogan “Beanz Meanz Heinz” and Dead Poets Society teacher John Keating (Robin Williams) invoking Walt Whitman in an Apple ad as he asks, “What will your verse be?”, examples abound.

In his book The Science of Story, Will Storr explains how the weapons of poetry – metaphor, simile etc – deployed in prose writing activate our neural regions, giving the language deeper meaning and sensation. That’s the benefit of choosing “she shouldered the burden” over “she carried the burden”, for example.

“A successful poem plays on our associative networks as a harpist plays on strings,” he writes. “By the meticulous placing of a few simple words, they brush gently against deeply buried memories, emotions, joys, traumas, which are stored in the form of neural networks that light up as we read. In this way, poets wring out rich chords of meaning that resonate so profoundly we struggle to fully explain why they’re moving us so.”

But is verse in an advert really a poem if its goal is to sell? This age-told tension between art and commerce goes under the microscope again in a new BBC Radio Four documentary hosted by copywriter and poet Rishi Dastidar. In it, he traces the history of “words pressed into service on behalf of sales”, drawing on the musings of WH Auden, George Orwell, Clive James and Don Draper among others.

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Amar Patel

TAGS: sir isaac newton, warren blacking, Robin Williams, Dead Poets Society, isaac barrow, Beanz meanz Heinz, Walt Whitman, The Science of Story, Will Storr, Rishi Dastidar, copywriter, copywriting, poetry, BBC Radio Four, Poetry For Sale, WH Auden, George Orwell, Clive James, Don Draper, Clare Pollard, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Clare, Dr Jo Bell, Voices Nationwide, Mary Anne Hobbs, Three Minute Epiphany, Robert Montgomery artist, Matthew DIckman, Will Harris poet, Allen Ginsberg, Howl, James Massiah, Caleb Femi, Andrew Long AXA, George the Poet, Kojey Radical, Kate Tempest, Edgar Guest, Idris Elba poem BBC, Jim Thornton VCCP, McDonald's Just Passing By, Rolf Harris, Charles Bukowski, Waitrose Autumn Flowers ad, Guinness Surfer, Tom Carty, Walter Campbell, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Walter Crane, James Joyce, Portrait of the Artist, Moby Dick, Leftfield Phat Planet, Carl Sandburg, Jonathan Glazer, advertising