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PENGUINS CONQUER AD WORLD : MADISON AVENUE SUDDENLY MAD ABOUT FLIGHTLESS ANTARCTIC WATERFOWL.


Byline: Linda A. Johnson Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

For a bunch of flightless flightless

see ratite.
 birds confined to the Southern Hemisphere, penguins are really getting around.

They're driving BMWs, riding trains and exploring the jungle to get a Bud Ice, trekking across ice floes to a Canada Dry Canada Dry is a brand of soft drinks marketed by Dr Pepper/Seven Up, a unit of Cadbury-Schweppes. Canada Dry is best known for its ginger ale, but also manufactures a number of other soft drinks and mixers.  machine, even strutting inside a Smirnoff vodka bottle wearing tuxedos complete with cummerbund cum·mer·bund  
n.
A broad sash, especially one that is pleated lengthwise and worn as an article of formal dress, as with a dinner jacket.



[Hindi kamarband, from Persian : kamar, waist
.

The often-comical birds also hawk N'ICE cough drops, Aetna retirement plans and the Mercury Mountaineer The Mercury Mountaineer is a near-luxury SUV manufactured by the Mercury brand name and owned by the Ford Motor Company. The Mountaineer shares many features with the Ford Explorer, and in terms of hardware, the vehicles are virtually identical. . They've helped market a photocopier photocopier

Device for producing copies of text or graphic material by the use of light, heat, chemicals, or electrostatic charge. Most modern copiers use a method called xerography.
, and lent their name or image to Penguin Cookies, Penguin Books, Munsingwear golf shirts, and numerous lines of water ice, frozen yogurt and ice cubes.

``There seems to be a flurry of things connected to penguins right now,'' says Arlene Gerwin, Smirnoff's consumer marketing manager. ``There's just something charismatic about penguins.''

Smirnoff is using emperor penguins - at four feet, the tallest of the 18 penguin species - in its ``Pure Thrill'' campaign contrasting extraordinary things inside its bottle with the mundane outside. The penguin in the bottle sports tailored formal wear, while the ones outside are in their birthday suits.

Marketing executives say penguins test very strongly among focus groups.

``They get attention,'' says Charlotte Campbell, president of the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 advertising firm Diagnostic Research International. ``Everyone seems to gravitate grav·i·tate  
intr.v. grav·i·tat·ed, grav·i·tat·ing, grav·i·tates
1. To move in response to the force of gravity.

2. To move downward.

3.
 to them.''

Campbell's firm tested a print ad Xerox used to promote its copier-printers' ability to integrate color with black and white, illustrated by a colorful parrot amid four Adelie penguins, the classic black-and-white penguins known best.

Campbell - now testing another penguin ad for a client she can't name - notes most ads using penguins are for products associated with cold or rugged conditions.

That's true for N'ICE cough drops and the Mountaineer ad, which shows the four-wheel drive vehicle driving past a flock of penguins. Ditto for the Canada Dry ads and Anheuser Busch's popular ``Beware the Penguins'' campaign for its Bud Ice brand.

The Bud Ice penguin, who stalks people until they hand over the beer, is actually an actor in a suit whose image is reduced and superimposed su·per·im·pose  
tr.v. su·per·im·posed, su·per·im·pos·ing, su·per·im·pos·es
1. To lay or place (something) on or over something else.

2.
 on each scene.

Canada Dry uses real and computer-generated penguins in TV and billboard ads linking its soft drinks with ``the freshness and outdoor quality'' of the birds, said Catherine Van Evans, spokeswoman for brand owner Dr. Pepper-Seven-Up.

Some penguin species are getting so much exposure, one would think they had an agent.

Some do, sort of.

``They love to work,'' says penguin trainer Linda Arnold, whose nine ``kids'' appeared in ``Batman Returns'' and ``Hook,'' several television programs and commercials for Canada's Arctic detergent, Aetna and BMW BMW
 in full Bayerische Motoren Werke AG

German automaker. Founded as an aircraft engine manufacturer in 1916, the company assumed the name Bayerische Motoren Werke and became known for its high-speed motorcycles in the 1920s.
.

They are African black-footed penguins, which live in relatively warm weather and can withstand studio lights, unlike emperors and other Antarctic species.

``The last two years, we've done quite a bit,'' says Arnold, a trainer for Birds & Animals Unlimited of Lake Forest, Calif., which provides animals for the advertising and entertainment industries.

Her penguins, also called jackass penguins for their braying sound, appear in a print ad for Aetna Retirement Services. The ad had a picture of a beaming middle-aged man approaching the flock, and text promoting financial planning Financial planning

Evaluating the investing and financing options available to a firm. Planning includes attempting to make optimal decisions, projecting the consequences of these decisions for the firm in the form of a financial plan, and then comparing future performance against
 ``for your next grand adventure.''

The birds also drive a BMW 328i, once considered lousy in the snow, in TV ads touting the car's new traction-control system. A computer-generated, generic-looking penguin keeps slipping down an icy slope before the real African penguin The African Penguin (Spheniscus demersus), also known as the Blackfooted Penguin (and formerly as the Jackass Penguin), is found on the south-western coast of Africa, living in colonies on 24 islands between Namibia and Algoa Bay, near Port Elizabeth, South  drives off. (Arnold won't let her penguins risk a work injury.)

``The advertising has had a definite impact'' on sales, says Richard Brooks, marketing manager at BMW of North America in Woodcliff Lake, N.J. Response to the ad has been ``tremendously positive, so much so that we have developed penguin ties and penguin stuffed animals that are sold through our dealerships.''

Anheuser Busch also markets items related to its ads, from T-shirts and caps to key chains and cooler cups. It also exhibits a huge, inflated, Bud Ice-clutching penguin outside arenas at sporting events.

One of the first products to use penguins regularly was N'ICE cough drops, which started in 1989.

``I do believe we were penguin pioneers,'' says Linda Cornelius, a senior partner at manufacturer SmithKline Beecham's advertising firm. ``They were a really logical choice for us,'' given their connection to ice.

``There was sort of a cute aspect to the theme as well . . . with these lively, anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs.  penguins,'' she says. The talking, cartoonish penguins first used have been replaced by a documentary-style footage of emperor penguins enduring the Antarctic winter while a narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete.  declares N'ICE is preferred ``where it's always cold season.''

Even when they're not selling a particular product, penguins are popular. The inside cover of a recent Eddie Bauer catalog shows a flock of king penguins

next to copy beginning, ``Fortunately, dress codes aren't as rigid as they used to be.''

Penguins, which have their own World Wide Web site, are just as marketable themselves.

Besides plush versions of Adelies, chinstraps, rockhoppers and other species, there's the ever-popular Opus character from the ``Bloom County'' and ``Outland'' comic strips. Milton Bradley introduced the Penguin Shuffle game for Christmas, and the ``Playful Penguin'' and other toys have been around for years.

Baltimore and New York each boast a Next Stop South Pole shop selling everything penguin: adorable slippers, plush animals, clothing, jewelry and housewares house·wares  
pl.n.
Cooking utensils, dishes, and other small articles used in a household, especially in the kitchen.
, even shower curtains.

About the only thing you can't buy there is a real penguin.

CAPTION(S):

2 Photos

Photo: (1--Color) Budweiser's television ad campaign for Bud Ice features a penguin, actually an actor in a suit whose image is shrunk and superimposed on scenes, that stalks people and takes their beer.

(2) A cardboard penguin adorns a BMW Z3 at a dealership in Edison, N.J. Ad penguins are credited with increasing the automaker's sales.

Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1997 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:BUSINESS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 3, 1997
Words:949
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