madmenfootnotes:

“Get me Bert’s man at the Wall Street Journal”
Well, today, that would be me:

When you see copywriter Peggy Olson swilling scotch with her new blue-eyed layout designer Joey, flirting and pitching Ham ads on the premiere episode of the new season of “Mad Men,” you are actually witnessing a recreation of a revolution in advertising. Up until the 1960’s, advertising was considered a written medium. The most successful ad campaigns, it was believed, had the most convincing argument. An agency’s creative powers were stationed squarely in writer’s room while art directors were considered subordinate “lay out men.”

 
‘Mad Men’: The Promiscuous Mingling of Art and Copy at the WSJ

It’s an interesting read 

madmenfootnotes:

“Get me Bert’s man at the Wall Street Journal”

Well, today, that would be me:

When you see copywriter Peggy Olson swilling scotch with her new blue-eyed layout designer Joey, flirting and pitching Ham ads on the premiere episode of the new season of “Mad Men,” you are actually witnessing a recreation of a revolution in advertising. Up until the 1960’s, advertising was considered a written medium. The most successful ad campaigns, it was believed, had the most convincing argument. An agency’s creative powers were stationed squarely in writer’s room while art directors were considered subordinate “lay out men.”

‘Mad Men’: The Promiscuous Mingling of Art and Copy at the WSJ

It’s an interesting read 

27

July

59 notes

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  1. monpetitmon reblogged this from madmenfootnotes
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  4. carlstewart reblogged this from madmenfootnotes and added:
    It’s an interesting read
  5. awesomejuice reblogged this from madmenfootnotes
  6. donotenter reblogged this from madmenfootnotes and added:
    Very interesting.
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  8. telltaler reblogged this from natashavc and added:
    I humbly disagree. See Pernod, Cycles Gladiator, and any number...other famous...