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January 14, 2006
Reality, Marketing and Aristotle

Charmaine and I were ecstatic. Our son, The Dude, won a small part as Thomas Jefferson's grandson for a movie. When we told our 4-year-old little guy about his new role, he started to tear up.
The Dude cried, "But I don't want to be in someone else's family!"
We were surprised, "No, Dude, it's pretend. You'll always be our boy..."
"I can't be anyone else."
Charmaine and I attempted to reassure. Told him it was good. But the little Dude was convinced that he was being placed into a new family.
And it was true. And this would serve a purpose. He would pretend to be something he wasn't. But we've always taught him never to deceive.
But this was, well, Hollywood.
This is marketing. This is different.
Marketing SuperstarAnd this is what Business Pundit by Rob May wrote about in Lying, Marketing and Perception. Rob was a winner in the 2005 Marketing SuperStar Awards.
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Rob May at Business Pundit has
Lying, Marketing, and PerceptionRob's article and analysis speaks to our sight and sound generation.
Rob reminds us that:

...our reality is determined as much by what happens in our heads as what happens external to them. In other words, perception is reality.
The Dude really thought he was leaving our family. Goodness, we even told him so. It was true. But it wasn't, really.
Rob uses a pollution example:
Why are we so focused on cutting smog when it's indoor pollutants that are killing us? Because we believe all the pollutants are outdoors. So when we are inside, we feel better because we believe we should feel better. And that is what Seth Godin means when calls marketers liars. By believing the lie, it becomes true.
So our little Dude believed the lie and it became true. His portrayal became a truth.
Rob cites marketer Seth Godin again:
So the point Seth was trying to make is this. If you create a product that is targeted towards people with a certain worldview, and you tell them a story about that product that may be, in one sense, a lie, you will change their perceptions so that the lie is now a truth. And that will make their lives better. Yes it's complex and paradoxical, but it doesn't disrespect customers and it isn't unethical.
The Dude's acting served a good, and the presentation was true.
The Dude on set
Rob continues:
People have been doing this forever, Seth just pointed it out to the world. If you believe crystals have healing power and you buy them and wear them, they will probably help you heal. If you believe a magnetic bracelet will ease your pain, it probably will. Perception will become reality. If you are a marketer, your job is to help people perceive your product in a certain way, so that it will become a reality to them.
So The Dude was doing something good. His reality was that he was part of another family. And it became true.
And his performance was beautiful.
Good, True and Beautiful.
Aristotle would be pleased.
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Thank you (foot)notes:
Noah Kagan has more Marketing Best Blogs at Okdork.com. My picks.
The Dude's movie was the CBS miniseries, Sally Hemings, An American Scandal, February, 2000.
Sam Neill .... Thomas Jefferson
Carmen Ejogo .... Sally Hemings
Diahann Carroll .... Betty Hemings
Mare Winningham .... Martha 'Patsy' Jefferson Randolph
Mario Van Peebles .... James Hemings
Rene Auberjonois .... James Callender
Zeljko Ivanek .... Thomas Mann Randolph
Klea Scott .... Critta Hemings
Jessica Townsend .... Maria 'Polly' Jefferson
Larry Gilliard Jr. .... Henry Jackson
Kevin Conway .... Thomas Paine
Amelia Heinle .... Harriet Hemings
Peter Bradbury .... Samuel Carr
Chris Stafford .... Peter Carr
Kelly Rutherford .... Lady Maria Cosway
Directed by Charles Haid
Posted by Jack Yoest at January 14, 2006 09:35 PM
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Comments
What a touching story about the Dude...hey, I can't blame the little guy for not wanting to leave your family after meeting you Jack!
The kid's brilliant..he knows a good thing. :)
Congrats as always!
Posted by: Stacy L. Harp at January 16, 2006 08:37 AM



