Want the watch James Bond wears? Here’s why

The last roll Nov. 27: Parsons, Kansas, is place that still processes Kodachrome color film, but Kodak has stopped making it, leaving this little town pondering a big question. NBC’s Bob Dotson reports. |
But there was nothing otherworldly or left-to-chance about this study, the first ever to assess the power (or pointlessness) of this billion-dollar product placement industry. The electrodes had been positioned over specific portions of our subjects’ brains so that from several feet away, behind a pane of glass, the research team could view — and mathematically measure — exactly what their brain waves were doing in real time. Among other things, SST could measure the degree of subjects’ emotional engagement (how interested they were in what they were watching), memory (what parts of what they were watching were penetrating long-term memory), and approach and withdraw (what attracted or repelled them about the visual image). Or in the head researcher Professor Silberstein’s words, SST would reveal “how different parts of the brain talk to one another.”
The subjects took their seats in a darkened room, and the curtains went up.
Product placement in movies is as old as the medium itself. Even the pioneering Lumiere brothers, two of the world’s first filmmakers, included several appearances of Lever’s sunlight soap in their early short films. Turns out, they had an associate on staff who moonlighted as a publicist for Lever Brothers (now Unilever). But product placement truly began to blossom in the 1930s. In 1932, White Owl Cigars provided $250,000 worth of advertising for the 1932 film "Scar-face," on the condition that star Paul Muni would smoke them in the movie. By the mid-1940s, it was rare to see a kitchen in a Warner Brothers film that didn’t have a spanking-new General Electric refrigerator, or a love story that didn’t end in a man presenting a woman with diamonds in a romantic display of undying devotion — the diamonds, of course, being sponsored by the DeBeers Company.
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Still, product placement as most of us know it today can be traced back to a little alien. For those who’ve never seen Steven Spielberg’s "E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial," the story revolves around a solitary, fatherless boy named Elliott who discovers an extraordinary-looking creature living in the woods behind his house. To lure it out of hiding, the boy tactically places individual pieces of candy — instantly recognizable as Hershey’s Reese’s Pieces — along the path from the forest leading into his house.
But Spielberg didn’t choose this particular candy at random. The director first approached the Mars Company, the makers of M&Ms, to ask if they’d be willing to pay to have their product featured in the film. After they turned him down, Hershey agreed to step in, offering their Reese’s Pieces as a substitute. A very smart corporate decision, as it turns out — a week after the movie’s debut, sales of Reese’s Pieces tripled, and within a couple of months of its release, more than eight hundred cinemas across the country began stocking Reese’s Pieces in their concession stands for the first time.
Enter Tom Cruise. In the late 1970s and early ’80s, the U.S.-based sunglasses manufacturer Ray-Ban was fighting to stay alive as their sales figures remained dismally fiat. That is, until the company struck a deal with Paul Brickman, the director of 1983’s "Risky Business," and Tom Cruise gave the retro-looking shades a whole lot of renewed cachet. When the movie became a hit, Ray-Ban sales rose by over 50 percent.
But Cruise and his shades were just getting started. Three years later, in Tony Scott’s "Top Gun," when the actor alit from his fighter jet clad in Air Force leathers and Aviator Ray-Bans, the sunglasses maker saw an additional boost of 40 percent to its bottom line. (It wasn’t just dark glasses that benefited from the success of "Top Gun." Sales of leather aviator jackets surged as well, as did Air Force and Navy recruitment, the latter increasing by 500 percent.)
Ray-Ban’s success with product placement was reenacted again two decades later. In the six months after Will Smith wore what were now extremely retro shades in the 2002 film "Men in Black II," the company’s sales tripled, amounting to what a company representative claimed was the equivalent of $25 million in free ads.
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These days, we’re yanked, tugged, pelted, pushed, prodded, reminded, cajoled, whispered at, overloaded, and overwhelmed by a constant stream of in-your-face product placement. The result? Snow-blindness. Or close to it. By any chance, did you happen to see "Casino Royale," the latest James Bond movie starring Daniel Craig? Do you remember any products that were featured in the film? FedEx? Bond’s Omega Watch? Sony’s Vaio computer? Louis Vuitton? Ford? Believe it or not, they all made uncredited walk-ons. Ford, in fact, manufactures every single car in "Casino Royale," including a Land Rover, a Jaguar, a Lincoln, and Bond’s signature Aston Martin. And Sony showcased not just its Vaio computer but its Ericsson phones, Blu-ray players and LCD televisions. But if you’re like me, the only product you remember from "Casino Royale" is the Aston Martin, and that’s probably due more to a well-known association with James Bond cemented over the years than an actual memory from the movie (and with the cheapest Aston Martin selling for around $120,000, I doubt there were all that many takers).
When it comes to product placement, television is hardly left behind. Leslie Moonves, chairman of the CBS Corporation, predicts that soon up to 75 percent of all scripted prime-time network shows will feature products and plotlines that advertisers have paid for. It’s a staggeringly high figure that, if he’s right, would further muddy the already-fragile lines between advertising and creative content so profoundly as to alter the very meaning of entertainment. Rance Crain, the editor-in-chief of "Advertising Age," once put it succinctly: “Advertisers will not be satisfied until they put their mark on every blade of grass.”
Excerpted from “Buy-ology.” Copyright (c) 2008 by Martin Lindstrom. Reprinted with permission from Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.
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