Posted by Bud on February 03, 2010 at 12:23:58:
5 Questions with...Sun-Times' Lewis Lazare
By Jeff Nuich
CSN Chicago Senior Director of Communications
CSNChicago.com Contributor
February 3, 2010
Want to know more about your favorite Chicago media celebrities? CSNChicago.com has your fix as we put the city’s most popular personalities on the spot with everyone’s favorite weekly local celeb feature entitled “5 Questions with...”
Every Wednesday exclusively on CSNChicago.com, it’s our turn to grill the local media and other local VIPs with five random sports and non-sports related questions that will definitely be of interest to old and new fans alike.
This week…veteran marketing journalist maven who covers the local happenings in the Chicago business landscape for the Chicago Sun-Times…a man known for his bow ties and dry wit…here are “5 Questions with…LEWIS LAZARE!"
BIO: Lewis Lazare writes the Media and Marketing Mix column and popular blog for the Chicago Sun-Times and suntimes.com. He previously was a staff writer at the Chicago Reader, an alternative weekly newspaper where he created and wrote a column called “Culture Club” that covered the business of the arts in Chicago. Lazare also was an associate editor at Crain's Chicago Business, one of the first of the nation's city business newspapers. At Crain's, he covered the media and entertainment industries and wrote a column on advertising. He got his start in business reporting as a Chicago correspondent and critic for Variety, the trade newspaper famously known as the bible of show biz. Lazare graduated from Dartmouth College and received a Master of Science degree in journalism from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.
1) CSNChicago.com: Lewis, with the Super Bowl coming up this weekend, the focus isn’t always on the game. For millions of viewers and the business world in general, a huge focus will once again be the great anticipation for this year’s array of Super Bowl ads. In your opinion, is the cost of a reported $2.5-2.8 million to advertise a :30 spot, which is actually down from $3 million a year ago, really worth it reach an audience these days? Longtime Super Bowl sponsor staples such as Pepsi have even declined to participate this year due to that enormously high price tag.
Lazare: It can be worth that much to buy into the Super Bowl, especially if you’re a company that doesn’t have a particularly high public profile and wants one fast. Another reason to buy in is to give a new product launch a big boost right out of the gate. But established companies like Pepsi that have been to the Super Bowl and done that many times, have decided that they can put the money to use more effectively in other ways.
2) CSNChicago.com: Since you’re the man with the inside scoop of the ad world, have you seen any previews of this year’s batch of Super Bowl ads yet and what’s the buzz this year on what we can expect from advertisers (same old, same old, or is there a knockout punch out there that we don’t know about yet)?
Lazare: Yes, I’ve seen work from several advertisers that will be in the big game this year, and more are being previewed each day now. Unfortunately, I haven’t seen anything yet that has hugely impressed me. But it’s still early. I must say, however, that I’ve noted a sad decline in the level of creativity in much of the Super Bowl work in recent years. With the economic tough times, advertisers have bee more reluctant to spend big the past year in particular, which may make this yet another Super Bowl when we won’t find much to wow us.
3) CSNChicago.com: What’s your personal favorite Super Bowl commercial of all-time? We won’t be offended if you don’t say it’s the “Thanks Mean Joe” Coca-Cola ad from 1979!
Lazare: After a while, even the great Super Bowl ads begin to blur in memory! But if pressed, I’d pick two of relatively recent vintage as certainly among the best – one deeply moving and another more lighthearted. I think the 2002 Budweiser commercial that showed the iconic Clydesdales bowing in respect to the victims of Sept. 11 was a great example of how advertising, at its best, has the concentrated power to touch us all. Advertising can also make us smile, as did the more recent 2008 Super Bowl spot from Coca-Cola that featured a giant Charlie Brown parade balloon proving victorious in a battle for an inflated Coke balloon floating over the concrete canyons of New York City. Wonderful story line. Great visuals. And most importantly, the perfect musical underscoring to set the tone for the whole delightful escapade.
4) CSNChicago.com: The state of Chicago radio has seen tremendous change over the past two years when it comes to talent-driven stations and shows. Do you think the days of on-air personalities making over a $1 million are officially over and, a follow-up question, what advice do you have for radio station managers in town to hold onto their audience going forward?
Lazare: Absolutely, the days of the $1 million talent are over. Even a lot of the talent that used to make those astronomical sums admit that. The economics of radio no longer allow for that kind of money to be paid. My advice would be for radio managers to make certain they know what they want their station to be and then be very smart about making sure everything about the station reflects and plays to that core essence.
5) CSNChicago.com: Finally, back to the Super Bowl, who are you picking to win the big game?
Lazare: I’m going with the Indianapolis Colts. It’s always fun to see a team like the New Orleans Saints finally make it to the big game. I know a lot of people will be rooting for them to do in Peyton Manning and the Colts. But when Manning is on, the Colts seem unbeatable. And I don’t suspect Manning and his team will be in Miami to do anything but win.
BONUS QUESTION…CSNChicago.com: Anything you’d like to promote Lewis? CSNChicago.com readers want to hear about it…
Lazare: Just stay tuned for my big post-Super Bowl assessment of the best and worst ads seen during the game.