How Ricky Gervais wrote Coke their best ever ad
The new Ricky Gervais film, The Invention of Lying, casts the comedian as a man who invents lying in a world where everyone else can only tell the truth. Although it deals with various themes one of the film’s best jokes is the way it portrays big brand advertising in a world where marketing exists without the tools of exaggeration, cherry picked facts and, that old favourite, the lie of omission. I was so intrigued by the film’s take on an honest Coca-Cola ad that I had a go at mocking it up in Photoshop:

Coke: It's basically just brown sugar water
And to show there wasn’t any kind of bias against Coke the filmmakers also took the time to level a satirical swipe at Coca-Cola's main competitor whose fictional ad agency were compelled to deliver an even more damning creative: 'Pepsi. For when they don't have Coke.'
I've talked before on my blog about the trend of honesty in advertising and Ricky Gervais has certainly taken this modern marketing technique to its natural conclusion. Although many will be certain that we'll never see an ad for Coke that confesses that ‘it’s basically just brown sugar-water’, I for one would get a kick out of big companies having the faith in their brand to lay out the basic truth about their products.
It may be a risky strategy for a corporation like Coca-Cola but I've got a feeling that an ad like that would give them licence to run an incredibly satisfying and successful follow up campaign: 'Coke is just brown sugar-water. Coke drinkers don't care.'




January 6th, 2010
Nice observations. Made me chuckle.
July 7th, 2010
cool