When I was at college in New York, studying advertising, Americans always said the same thing.
“Ah, the really great advertising was those Burma Shave posters.”
Then they’d chuckle as they fondly remembered them.
It turned out the Burma Shave posters had been done decades before but Americans still remembered them as their favourite advertising.
Burma Shave was one of the first brushless shaving creams.
They ran posters across rural America where Americans drove for hundreds of miles on long, straight highways with nothing to look at.
Except every so often six posters would crop up, with a 100 foot gap between each one, timed to coincide with the speed the cars were going at.
Travelling at 35mph the signs would be 3 seconds apart.
Each poster would have one line of a very simple rhyme on it.
First they introduced the concept of shaving without a shaving brush:
1st poster: SHAVING BRUSHES
2nd poster: YOU’LL SOON SEE ‘EM
3rd poster: ON THE SHELF
4th poster: IN SOME
5th poster: MUSEUM
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
They’d expand on the time-saving advantages of brushless shaving.
1st poster: EVERY SHAVER
2nd poster: NOW CAN SNORE
3rd poster: SIX MORE MINUTES
4th poster: THAN BEFORE
5th poster: BY USING
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
Then they’d have fun with the benefits of a closer shave:
1st poster: IF YOU HAVE
2nd poster: A DOUBLE CHIN
3rd poster: YOU’VE TWO
4th poster: GOOD REASONS
5th poster: TO BEGIN
6th poster: USING BURMA SHAVE
Everyone knew the last poster was always the Burma Shave logo.
So people tried to guess the next rhyme as they drove along.
1st poster: HENRY THE EIGHTH
2nd poster: SURE HAD
3rd poster: TROUBLE
4th poster: SHORT TERM WIVES
5th poster: LONG TERM STUBBLE
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
The historical theme was of course popular:
1st poster: SAID JULIET
2nd poster: TO ROMEO
3rd poster: IF YOU
4th poster: WON’T SHAVE
5th poster: GO HOMEO
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
Obviously so were allusions to sexual success:
1st poster: DINAH DOESN’T
2nd poster: TREAT HIM RIGHT
3rd poster: BUT IF HE’D
4th poster: SHAVE
5th poster: THEN DYNA-MITE
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
The ads became so well known, they didn’t even need to mention shaving specifically:
1st poster: THE MONKEY TOOK
2nd poster: ONE LOOK AT JIM
3rd poster: AND THREW THE PEANUTS
4th poster: BACK AT HIM
5th poster: HE NEEDED
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
And a decent shave became no less than any wife would demand from her husband:
1st poster: MAN PASSES
2nd poster: DOG HOUSE
3rd poster: DOG SEES CHIN
4th poster: DOG GETS OUT
5th poster: MAN GETS IN
6th poster: BURMA SHAVE
Over the decade or so that they ran, there were 7,000 different rhymes.
Nowadays we think any form of technological innovation in media is daring and original.
But eighty years ago people didn’t just wait around for technological innovation, they used their brains to innovate existing media.
Simple, fun, catchy, memorable.
Of course you won’t see any of those ads in an awards annual.
But I don’t think there’s many current award winners that ordinary people will still be talking about in fifty years time.
Interesting point there right at the end. ..I was wondering the other day, could David Ogilvy get hired by the agency he started all those years back?