Monday, December 1, 2025

The Perfection Trap

 

Done > Perfect

“Perfect” is procrastination in designer shoes. It’s fear with a thesaurus.

“Done” is what gets campaigns launched and clients paid.


While “Perfect” sits on Google Docs like a diva refusing to leave the trailer until every comma sparkles, “Done” shows up, ships, learns, adjusts, and comes back swinging harder.

So hit publish.

Send the draft.

Ship the thing.


Perfect is a trap. Done is freedom.

Done > Perfect. Always.


Stephen D. Seymour




Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Thanksgiving Rant

 

Thanksgiving Rant

Ah yes, Thanksgiving. The sacred holiday where we celebrate gratitude by sprinting through grocery stores like we’re looting in a polite apocalypse.

Every commercial promises: “Make a perfect, stress-free feast for your loved ones!”

Yeah, sure. Nothing says “stress-free” like wrestling a 24-pound frozen turkey the size of a toddler while questioning every life choice that led to this moment. I don’t need culinary inspiration, I need a support group and oven mitts reinforced with emotional stability.

And every ad shows a beautiful family in matching plaid, smiling like no one has ever argued over stuffing moisture … while I’m over here trying to remember if yams and sweet potatoes are the same thing or if this is one of those culinary conspiracies like “vegan cheese” or “gluten-free bread crumbs.”

Then there’s the Thanksgiving table. You’ve got:

  • One cousin who suddenly has opinions on inflation
  • A loudly keto in-law
  • A child secretly slipping cranberry sauce, a known laxative, to the dog
  • And your elderly aunt, who has brought a mystery casserole that seems to contain both raisins and trauma

But hey … we’re grateful. We have gratitude. We say things like, “We should do this more than just once a year,” as if we haven’t aged 8 emotional years since sunrise.

Anyway, pass the mashed potatoes. I will be eating them like they are emotional bubble wrap.


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Ahhh ... a good rant always makes me feel better. And holidays always strikes a spark ... even though I’m actually a fan of Thanksgiving. It’s the family reunion that doesn’t require receipts. You just show up with a side dish and a reasonably clean shirt. That’s it. That’s the bar.

There’s something beautifully democratic about that. Everyone brings something to the table, literally and metaphorically. Aunt Pam brings her famous sweet potatoes. Your cousin brings her new boyfriend who “doesn’t really eat turkey.” And Grandpa brings stories that get a little more suspicious each year.

And somehow, it all works. The house smells like butter and sage, everyone pretends to understand football, and for one miraculous day, the only thing we’re expected to exchange is gratitude.

Thanksgiving is the rare holiday that doesn’t ask us to buy love, just to show up for it. 


_________________________


Want to join me for a Thanksgiving memory from my youth?


 


Friday, November 21, 2025

A Lesson in Copywriting from Neil French

Neil French
Neil French

Neil French (9/9/1944-11/20/2025), regarded as one of the most influential and creative figures in global advertising, was a colorful character who, before becoming a copywriter in high demand, was a nightclub owner, a bullfighter, and the manager of the band Judas Priest. Here is an example of the long copy ads he was known for. Read and learn from the master.

Nobody reads long copy any more. 
Here's why.

More importantly, absolutely nobody reads newspapers any more.  This is a well-known fact, right?

And yet, tragically ignorant of this, many thousands of journalists spend their lives pointlessly gathering information, news, and opinions, and writing about it.  Day in, day out, day after wasted day.

Sadder still, many more thousands of lost souls are glumly occupied in setting the result in type, designing the newspapers, and printing the damn things.

And strangely enough, millions and millions of otherwise seemingly-sane people one assumes, go out and buy (yes, buy) a newspaper, every day.  This is because they need a cheap substitute for an umbrella, an inexhaustible supply of drawer-liners, or kitty-litter for a herd of terminally-incontinent cats.

But nobody actually reads the newspaper, surely?  Dearie me, no.  Whatever next?

Next is the news that Elvis, having been abducted by aliens, has returned as a small rodent, and is living with his auntie, in Papua New Guinea.

And I’m a little teapot.

Go away.

You’re not still reading this drivel, are you?

Why, for heaven’s sake?  Believe me, it’s not going to get any better.  Go and do something useful.  Count your socks.

Go along now.  Shoo!

(Have they gone?)

Right, then.  Sorry about that, but you’ve got to get rid of the riff-raff.  That’s the other problem with newspapers: all kinds of people pick them up.  Many of them not our sort of person at all.

Now, where were we?

Erm…nobody reads newspapers; that was it.  Well, I suppose we might admit that the people who write the newspapers read their own stuff.  So do their mums, unless there’s wrestling on the T.V.

This particular exercise in the art of futility was intended to be one of a series of ads, headed “How to write a newspaper ad”.  Surely a headline so mind numbingly dull as to rival the marvellous “Small earthquake in Peru.  Nobody hurt”, as the most boring ever written.

And the fact is that the vast majority of the folks who bought this rag are never, ever, going to write an ad, and still less give a rat’s bottom about those who insist on doing so.

Most of them will have flicked the page at a glance at the headline.  This does not prove that they don’t read long copy.  It merely proves that long copy (or indeed any copy) has to be relevant to the audience.
But withdrawing copy from the mix, in an attempt to make it more palatable to a wider audience, is plain nuts.  It merely reduces any degree of effectiveness it might have had.

Thus this epic is on the one hand insanely incestuous, and on the other, appears to contradict the very point it hopes to make.

Sod this.  Light relief, please.

Anyone still with us will recognize the first bit of this saga as a plodding attempt at heavy irony.  A useful tool for debunking myths, is the old irony-ploy.

But did you know that there’s an unfortunate myth that Americans don’t understand irony?  Since they apparently don’t read, either, it’s probably academic, but for what it’s worth, and to give us all a break, here’s my favorite irony-story.

An American bloke goes on a holiday to England.  On his return, he’s telling his pal all about it.

“I was coming out of a shop one day, and it was raining hard outside, so I took shelter in a doorway.

Another feller was sheltering, too, and he turned to me and he said, “Nice weather”.  Well, of course, it wasn’t nice weather at all.  In fact it was terrible weather…and then, I got it!  This was an example of the famous British irony.  I loved it!

And I’ve been using Irony ever since.  Like the other day, I was having this barbecue for the family and a bunch of neighbours, and I burned the burgers.

And Joe, from next door, was standing there, and I turned to him, and I looked at the burgers, and I said, “Nice weather”.

(Pause for what…bewilderment, I suppose…and back to business).

Can we acknowledge, then, that all the hundreds of thousands of words printed in this newspaper aren’t put there just to make your fingers dirty?

Irony aside, people buy newspapers so that they can read them.

And since this is obvious to anyone with the intellect of a soap-dish, why is the paper not chock-full of ads for big, sexy, brands?

The short answer is stupidity.

And the combined stupidity of ad agencies, researchers, and (perish the thought) clients can be a terrible thing to behold.

Basically, remember, you can prove just about anything: And if you want to prove that people don’t read long copy, you start by proving that newspaper readers only read a small proportion of the editorial articles in any given issue.

Television viewers, on the other hand, watch every show, every night, and never switch channels.  (Note: In future, irony will be in Italics.  But not all italicised words are ironic.  Everybody clear on this?)

But the seeds of doubt have been sown.  The fuzzy logic goes like this:

People don’t read all the words in the newspaper.

Therefore, people don’t like to read.

Therefore, we must avoid ads that depend on words.

Newspapers are full of words, so we must not advertise in them.

So newspapers become a ‘secondary’ medium, which is never used for its unique strength.

So the ads aren’t very good.

So nobody reads them.

Bingo.  A self-fulfilling prophecy.

Send in the clowns.

But people will read something that interests them.  And my bet is that, by now, the only people reading this are advertising folk.  Mostly creatives.

So, now that we’re all alone, and just between ourselves…it’s the clients, isn’t it?

How many times have you been in a client meeting, and he’s announced, “People don’t read copy any more”  This, coming from a man with a newspaper poking out of his briefcase.  And if you point this out, he says, “Well, I do, of course.  But the public doesn’t”.

You’ve noticed that this isn’t in italics: The bloke seriously believes that he and the public are different species.  This is also the genius who says, when you present an ad, “Well of course, you know, I understand it, but the public won’t”.

(A good exercise with this type of idiot is to substitute the word ‘women’ for the word ‘public’, and play it back to him.)

But you can’t fight really determined stupidity, in the end.

We once produced a campaign that proved, beyond all reasonable doubt, that you could launch a beer in the press, even more successfully than you could on T.V. and at a fraction of the cost.

The big-brand beer manufacturers were not persuaded.  Having been panicked for weeks by a campaign that widdled all over their T.V. commercials, they ignored the evidence once the panic was over.

One somehow doubts that the opinions of the copywriters engaged in this campaign are going to sway the beloved prejudices of most clients.  The present economic oops-a-daisy is really only a symptom of the fact that most businesses are run by buffoons.  And that the world’s occasional booms take place in spite of their poltroonery, not because of their brilliance.

When a new company begins its first meteoric rise, (actually, meteors fall, don’t they?  Maybe this is a sadly prophetic metaphor), it’s because the guy who started the company is not a clown.  But as his company grows, he has to hire more people, and it seems but a nanosecond before the executive floor is echoing to the flap of big shoes, and the beeping of red noses.

The only time it’s controlled is when the top man takes back his advertising into his own hands, as a way of avoiding the depredations of his minions, who are so diligently throwing buckets of confetti at one another, one floor down.

“You talkin’ to me?!”

So, Rule One of advertising is ‘decide who you’re talking to’.

There is no Rule Two or Three.
The consumer is the only thing that matters.  Once you know that, you’ll find a way to interest him: Big picture, small picture, no picture, no copy, long copy…the consumer and the product will sort out all those problems for you.

But newspapers are so often your secret weapon.  And here is the real point of this ad.
People buy a newspaper.  Do you think they buy it but don’t read it?  That they don’t value it?  Think again.

T.V. is, on the face of it, free.

Radio is free.  Posters are free.  And Internet advertising, damn it to hell, is free.  And advertising in each and every one of them is hated and despised as an imposition, an interruption, and an annoyance.
Not so with newspapers: When did an ad last spoil your enjoyment of the paper?
Sure, newspaper ads these days tend to be so boring that you ignore them.  But that’s not the same as being an irritation.
And it’s your business to change that: Now’s the time to own the medium.

Newspapers are portable: You can read them anytime.  Not just when the programmers decide you can.
They are private: You don’t have to share your newspaper, or argue with your entire family about which page to read.

You need both hands to read your newspaper.  You can’t double-task.  On the other hand, the paper makes an excellent barrier against the rest of the world.

Your entire vision-field is filled.  Even your periphery-vision.  For a few minutes, the newspaper is your world.

Nobody opens the newspaper to provide ‘background’, or as part of life’s wallpaper.  Reading is a considered decision.

Newspapers are not an entertainment medium.  That’s why they are called news papers.  Readers are in the mood to be informed.  Nobody reads the newspaper to escape from reality: They read to get involved.

In other words, if you can’t get people to read your ad in a newspaper, it’s nobody’s fault but your own.

_________________________


NOTE: This ad written by French was designed to look like an article in the newspapers it ran in: black serif text on white background, no picture. 






Wednesday, November 19, 2025

The Sphere

 

“The Wizard of Oz” at The Sphere

In Las Vegas last week I caught “The Wizard of Oz” at The Sphere, a unique a music and entertainment arena featuring a high resolution wraparound interior LED screen..

I was not so much “watching a movie” as being gently abducted by it. The wraparound screen doesn’t sit politely in front of you; it rises up, stretches its arms, and pulls you straight into the story. Dorothy’s tornado doesn’t stay put on the screen ... augmented with huge wind fans, paper leaves, and shaking seats, it's an immersive experience. And Oz doesn’t appear; it engulfs.

And the place itself? Genius, in a loud, Vegas kind of way. That colossal exterior display is like an LED planet dropped in the middle of a neon desert. It might be Vegas's ultimate billboard.

In a city already saturated with spectacular lighting, the Sphere manages to stop traffic. It's a marketing opportunity that's as eye-catching as the technology inside, proving that even in a town built on ostentation, there's room to stand out.

But, as with all shiny new toys, there are seams.

The AI-enhanced imagery swings for the fences but doesn’t quite round the bases. You can feel the tech wobble, like it’s still figuring out which end of the wand does the magic. And then there’s the 30-minute chunk of the film that simply… vanished. Edited out. “The Wizard of Oz” didn’t need a haircut, but cutting out that ½ hour probably saved millions in production costs and lets them run more shows a day … for a venue that charges premium prices and promises the future, cutting up a classic feels like the wrong kind of bold. Really, you cut the Cowardly Lion's "If I Were King of the Forest" number? Not OK.

That being said, would I recommend it?

Absolutely. The Sphere is a postcard from the future of entertainment. Just walk in with your eyes wide and your expectations flexible … it's an extraordinary venue showcasing promising technology that still has room to grow.

_________________________


The Sphere stands 366 feet tall with an exterior sizing 580,000 square feet. To advertise on its expansive 1.2 million LED light screen costs $450,000 per day or $650,000 per week. It is estimated that that investment will deliver about 4.7 million daily impressions on a single day, 300,000 of which are offline impressions, with 4.4 million coming from social media. 

The Sphere - Las Vegas


The Perfection Trap

  “Perfect” is procrastination in designer shoes. It’s fear with a thesaurus. “Done” is what gets campaigns launched and clients paid. W...