moneybox
columns
- Cold Cash, Not Cold War
How Russia's new economic ties to the West diminish the possibility of a violent confrontation with the U.S.
Daniel Gross
posted Aug. 21, 2008 - Skirting the Issues
Reading between the economic hemlines of September's fashion mags.
Lauren Sandler
posted Aug. 20, 2008 - The Great Lobster Mystery
Food prices are soaring. So why are prices for the delicious crustacean falling?
Daniel Gross
posted Aug. 18, 2008 - Harming Farming
Low food prices used to hurt the world's poor—now high prices do. What gives?
Liza Featherstone
posted Aug. 6, 2008 - Always Dumb Politics. Always Wal-Mart.
The retailer's clumsy, self-defeating attempts to influence Washington.
Daniel Gross
posted Aug. 5, 2008 - Search for more moneybox articles
- Subscribe to the moneybox RSS feed
- View our complete moneybox archive
Ad Report Card: Adidas' Kobe Stake
By Rob WalkerPosted Monday, June 11, 2001, at 11:30 PM ET
One can debate all day the relative merits of Kobe Bryant, Allen Iverson, and Shaquille O'Neal as basketball players. But apparently there's one area in which Bryant stands especially tall: endorsements. The Wall Street Journal, in a piece last week mulling over the potential for Iverson to convert his soaring popularity into a wider array of pitchman deals (he currently shills for Reebok and Sega), noted that the "urbane" Bryant is perhaps the only current player to have a Michael Jordan-like "broad portfolio" of endorsement deals, with Adidas, Coke, McDonald's, Mattel, Spalding, Nintendo, and Mercedes. This apparently overshadows even Shaq, who, the Journal notes, is not the pitch maniac he used to be. (On the other hand, Shaq is probably still the most insistent promoter of himself, across the most media, with films, albums, and his own Web site, where the most amusing, and creepy, feature is the "Shaq Morph" page.)
I don't have the time, space, or attention span to review Bryant's full ad oeuvre here, so I'll just focus on his spots for Adidas, which produces a shoe called "The Kobe"; these aren't exactly brand-new, but a couple of them popped up during Episode 3 of the NBA finals last night, so they seem like fair game. Those spots can be viewed on this Adidas page, where they're labeled "Speed" and "Style" (you can just ignore the "behind the scenes quiz" that Adidas appends to each ad).
Kobe as motorcycle maniac: A guy dressed in a black leather bodysuit, his face obscured by a dark helmet, zooms along a mountain road. Suddenly he's in traffic. Solution: He travels between lanes, blowing past everybody. He weaves, he leaps, he disregards a yellow light. He arrives at the Staples Center. He is ... Kobe. We get a shot of his signature shoe. "Adidas: Forever Sport" is the tag line.
I find this ad to be incredibly limp. Maybe Bryant considers himself a gutsy daredevil, but no one else does. And why would he, or Adidas, want to push this angle anyway? A while ago, I got a note from a reader complaining that speeding and running lights isn't exactly in line with Bryant's pious role-model image (on display in another ad last night, in which he plays basketball with children on behalf of McDonald's). I don't know if that's really a serious concern or not, but maybe the more important point is that Kobe the Wild One just doesn't wash, and if it says anything about the shoes, it's that they're for poseurs. Give it a D.
Kobe as stylish fellow: Here we have Bryant at home, I guess, or in any case in a highly stylish homelike setting. The camera angle is static. He seems to be waiting around for someone or something and starts killing time by shooting baskets into a trash can, giving a running patter in which he imagines himself taking pressure shots in Game 7. This spot works better: The message is that Kobe (and presumably The Kobe) is not only stylish, but down-to-earth, a regular guy who daydreams like anyone else but also just so happens to have the real-world skills to live out those same dreams.
One problem: There's something oddly familiar in the tone and pacing of the ad, and it took me a while to figure it out. But it's this—the ad feels like a Nike commercial. I'm not sure how Adidas can solve this problem, but it's a big one. (Earlier I wrote about a Reebok ad that, I think, finally made a real impression for that shoe company; but in the same column, I heaped even greater praise on a recent Nike ad. Whatever you think of Nike as a company or a product, it remains the 800-pound gorilla of show marketing.) Can Adidas really be penalized for this? Yes, but only a little. B-minus.
More, more, more Kobe: There are two other spots on the site. One is set in a picturesque Milan backdrop (Bryant famously grew up partly in Italy) and features the Laker musing aloud about creativity. It's completely insufferable and makes the viewer yearn for this fool to shut his yap. A flat F. In the other, he plays hoops with some Italians in a picturesque gym, trash-talking in Italian. So cosmopolitan! This ad is attention-getting and surprising, doing a reasonable job of walking the line between Worldly Kobe and the idea that he can walk his talk, whatever the language. So give that one a B.
So adding all this up, how does Bryant rate as a pitchman? My Kobe beef would be that at this point his packagers seem to want him to stand for everything—a rebellious, cuddly, unpretentious, high-falutin', one-of-a-kind, regular guy. But not even Bryant's game is that complete. And the upshot is that he doesn't stand for anything specific at all; he's just another successful athlete, selling shoes.
Oh, and go Sixers.
Reader Comments From The Fray:
While almost everything Rob said was fairly on the money regarding Kobe's Addidas ads, he missed the single most glaring annoyance of all: In the motorcycle ad, Kobe is obviously using a stunt double. You can't be a gutsy daredevil when we only see your face in the shots after the motorcycle is parked!
--Wamadeus
(To reply, click here.)
Most of the ads that feature Kobe Bryant as a pitchman are extremely pointless to the company paying for the ad. Reading your article leads me to believe that what is really on display is Kobe Bryant himself. Almost as if someone is advertising the many sides of Kobe Bryant to Fifth Avenue. Yes, he is worldly, innocent, and down to earth. Who better to pitch your product? I would be amazed if his agent could do better.
--ABHilliard
(To reply, click here.)
(6/12)
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- Bigfoot Corpse A Fraud
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 09:09:19 -0400 - Netherlands Taught How To Play Softball Seconds Before Being Shoved Onto Field Against U.S. Team
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 07:00:48 -0400 - Michael Phelps Returns To His Tank At Sea World
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 07:00:46 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Tom Toles | John McCain likes to tell a story about the foundation of his political faith.
- Broder: A Bellwether Town's Forecast
- Meyerson: Assembling an Obama Nation
- Froomkin: A Reversal for the White House?
- Editorial: The Bush Administration's Silence
- Today's Headlines
- Readers Fend Off a Croc Assault
Wed, 20 Aug 2008 22:23:53 GMT - Kaplan: The New On-Campus Environmentalism
Wed, 20 Aug 2008 21:52:30 GMT - Kaplan: Are We Educating Enough Engineers?
Wed, 20 Aug 2008 21:50:05 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Remembering Stephanie
Thu, 21 August 2008 16:43:07 GMT - A Dying Breed
Thu, 21 August 2008 15:17:14 GMT - TV One-Dimensional
Wed, 20 August 2008 20:31:50 GMT - » More from The Root

moneybox













