What do you expect of rock legends doing TV ad for butter and saloon insurance?
Alice Cooper, Iggy Pop, Johnny Rotten have all done them within the UK
Answers:
shake appeal is that Joe Strummer that sold his song to Levis?Its been stirring since the start of music im afraid.
I think Joe Strummer said it best when he wrote the chain "he who f*cks nuns will later join the church".
Johnny Rotten is a whore but he'll at most minuscule admit that he is. As for the rest, well let's merely say they probably spent money like nearby was no tomorrow in their youth and very soon it's tomorrow.
"Hope I die before I get old" - Pete Townshend. Pete's still alive.
Edit: To Col: I infer what you're saying, but I didn't say Strummer be without guilt. That said, The Clash never sold any song while they were still together. The sign sold "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" to Levi's, not The Clash, and Joe never appeared in anyone's advert. The Clash were guilty of not reading the fine print and, as a result, selling their lives over to Epic Records. Strummer, when he wrote that chain, was pointing out how artists had be selling out since the very beginning. That's why I quoted him- not because I see him as setting some standard of perfection.
I thought it was very funny when Peter Frampton was on that Geico commercial...."do you feel approaching I do".... lol.
It all depends on how much of your fortune went up your nose or into your vein. You know, it is up to the artist... No matter who you are or what you do it comes down to putting food on the table and keeping the roof over your head.
Maybe someone that does not really know an artists music will see them on some dumb commercial or tv show and desire to check our their catalog. These guys know what they are up to... it is all about exposure and staying within the minds of the public.... marketing.
Well, the truth is that Johnny Rotten, see as the face of angry working class youth, has within real life be acting like an upper class country squire for at least a few years in a minute, dressing in tweeds. In a way that make him ever more of a rebel these days because various of the upper class probably wouldn't dress as self conciously 'old fashioned' as he does and it's the most truly rebellious thing he could do presently. So his butter advert isn't out of the ordinary for him- I suppose that it shows him as a great English eccentric, which is how he truly seem to want to be regarded.
Alice Cooper's ad is smaller quantity satisfying- he ponders, on behalf of Norwich Union, now Aviva, whether he would have have as much success with his old-fashioned name 'Vincent', as if that sounds too ordinary a heading for a glam rock star. Well, actually, Vincent would have sounded moderately out of the ordinary for a rock star too.
But Iggy Pop is just so comfortable surrounded by his own skin that I think that his advert does him the most favours.
My 6 year old Son loves the Iggy Pop Ad, he strolls around the house axiom " Riiiide, Riiiiiddddee, I love my wheels man!", Iggy Pop style, so I think it's great.
I fastidiousness not for talk of degrading, shooting veins, or fiscal baloney. Some of the stars mentioned may very well have donated part or adjectives of their fee to good cause. Would you be tempted if you spotted some Anarchy in the U.K butter ? Source(s): Don't hand over great concern to commercial advertising, because then they've get you where they want you.
You have to ask yourself what you yourself would do. Even if you have satisfactory money for yourself, that would be extra money for your heirs, your family and any charities you may similar to. So I really don't see much wrong with it anymore, although there be a time when I thought about them "selling out".
extremely sad and pathetic and they really must deduce of something better to do with there time. bring up knitting for example
consequences of risky mp3 downloads and tough fiscal policy
It all comes down to money and if some idiot waves a big satisfactory cheque in front of you then why not.
i think its very down grade. its kind of embarrassing- is this all they're worth immediately? butter ads?
i think they deserve more respect afterwards this because of what they have contributed to the music world
i rather not talk nearly it...=(
Related Questions:
Answers:
shake appeal is that Joe Strummer that sold his song to Levis?Its been stirring since the start of music im afraid.
I think Joe Strummer said it best when he wrote the chain "he who f*cks nuns will later join the church".
Johnny Rotten is a whore but he'll at most minuscule admit that he is. As for the rest, well let's merely say they probably spent money like nearby was no tomorrow in their youth and very soon it's tomorrow.
"Hope I die before I get old" - Pete Townshend. Pete's still alive.
Edit: To Col: I infer what you're saying, but I didn't say Strummer be without guilt. That said, The Clash never sold any song while they were still together. The sign sold "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" to Levi's, not The Clash, and Joe never appeared in anyone's advert. The Clash were guilty of not reading the fine print and, as a result, selling their lives over to Epic Records. Strummer, when he wrote that chain, was pointing out how artists had be selling out since the very beginning. That's why I quoted him- not because I see him as setting some standard of perfection.
I thought it was very funny when Peter Frampton was on that Geico commercial...."do you feel approaching I do".... lol.
It all depends on how much of your fortune went up your nose or into your vein. You know, it is up to the artist... No matter who you are or what you do it comes down to putting food on the table and keeping the roof over your head.
Maybe someone that does not really know an artists music will see them on some dumb commercial or tv show and desire to check our their catalog. These guys know what they are up to... it is all about exposure and staying within the minds of the public.... marketing.
Well, the truth is that Johnny Rotten, see as the face of angry working class youth, has within real life be acting like an upper class country squire for at least a few years in a minute, dressing in tweeds. In a way that make him ever more of a rebel these days because various of the upper class probably wouldn't dress as self conciously 'old fashioned' as he does and it's the most truly rebellious thing he could do presently. So his butter advert isn't out of the ordinary for him- I suppose that it shows him as a great English eccentric, which is how he truly seem to want to be regarded.
Alice Cooper's ad is smaller quantity satisfying- he ponders, on behalf of Norwich Union, now Aviva, whether he would have have as much success with his old-fashioned name 'Vincent', as if that sounds too ordinary a heading for a glam rock star. Well, actually, Vincent would have sounded moderately out of the ordinary for a rock star too.
But Iggy Pop is just so comfortable surrounded by his own skin that I think that his advert does him the most favours.
My 6 year old Son loves the Iggy Pop Ad, he strolls around the house axiom " Riiiide, Riiiiiddddee, I love my wheels man!", Iggy Pop style, so I think it's great.
I fastidiousness not for talk of degrading, shooting veins, or fiscal baloney. Some of the stars mentioned may very well have donated part or adjectives of their fee to good cause. Would you be tempted if you spotted some Anarchy in the U.K butter ? Source(s): Don't hand over great concern to commercial advertising, because then they've get you where they want you.
You have to ask yourself what you yourself would do. Even if you have satisfactory money for yourself, that would be extra money for your heirs, your family and any charities you may similar to. So I really don't see much wrong with it anymore, although there be a time when I thought about them "selling out".
extremely sad and pathetic and they really must deduce of something better to do with there time. bring up knitting for example
consequences of risky mp3 downloads and tough fiscal policy
It all comes down to money and if some idiot waves a big satisfactory cheque in front of you then why not.
i think its very down grade. its kind of embarrassing- is this all they're worth immediately? butter ads?
i think they deserve more respect afterwards this because of what they have contributed to the music world
i rather not talk nearly it...=(
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