ABOUT ADS OF THE WEIRD

With Ads of the Weird, MSNBC.com takes a look at some of the oddest, most eye-catching, controversial and just plain interesting advertising out there today. Primary writer Allison Linn covers the retail and advertising industries for MSNBC.com. The Ads of the Weird team is always interested in hearing what ads have caught your attention, whether it's online, on television or in print.


We're a lot like Pemco says we are

Posted: Tuesday, April 29, 2008 3:00 AM by Allison Linn
Filed Under: ,

Even if you don’t live in the Pacific Northwest, you probably have some stereotypes about us lurking in your head. Well, here’s a dirty little secret -- for all our talk of individualism, all of your stereotypes about us are true.

We are a region of smug hybrid owners, recycling fanatics and recumbent bicycle commuters. We love to broadcast our beliefs via bumper stickers. Before we moved here we may have been more fashionable, but now we see nothing wrong with wearing socks with our sandals, preferably paired with those pants that can unzip to become a pair of shorts should the weather improve. If we want to get fancy, we might throw a fleece vest over the whole ensemble.

Image: Sandals and sock guy ad
Pemco

Our region is home to many long-haired, caffeine-addicted, socially challenged software geeks. Far too many Pacific Northwesterners are still sporting the bad hair and flannel shirts of the elsewhere long-forgotten grunge era. The only thing we love more than using our rain barrels and compost bins is boasting to our friends about them.

The regional insurance company Pemco Insurance knows all this, and it’s created a brilliant ad campaign around it. Using the tagline “We’re a lot like you,” Pemco manages to poke fun at residents of the Pacific Northwest without offending us. (Of course, if you live in the Pacific Northwest, you know most of us would be far too passive-aggressive to say anything even if we were offended).

People who don’t live in Seattle or its environs may not get all of the company’s spot-on “Northwest profiles.” But chances are anyone can laugh at “The Super-Long Coffee Orderer,” “Gluten-Free-No-Refined-Sugar Lady,” “Accidental Tech Millionaire” and, most notably, “Confused East Coast Transplant.”

Also, you don’t have to live in the Northwest to see your friends -- or yourself -- in “Your Friend Who Won’t Stop Talking About Real Estate,” “Art Gallery Crawler” and “Walla Walla Wine Wine Woman Woman.”

(By the way, the editor of this blog has self-identified as “Too-Late-For-The-Grunge-Party,” while yours truly admits to being “Obsessive Compulsive Recycler.”)

In an age of when mergers have folded so many regional stores into national behemoths, and every mall seems to carry the same clothes from the same stores, it’s refreshing to see an ad campaign -- and, by extension, a company -- that’s focused on one part of the country. Better yet, it’s nice to see a local company making ads that are any good.

Click here to watch the television ads, listen to the radio spots, peruse the profiles and even submit your own.

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Comments

The Pacific Northwest is bigger than just the west side of Washington and Oregon.  Your stereotype only fits those smaller geographical regions of WA and OR. Those of us who live in larger, dry, and sunny east side of WA and OR definately do not fit the same mold as your stereotype (thank goodness).  Limit the wet-side stereotypes to the west side and don't presume to think the wet-side speaks for the entire Pacific Northwest.  The east and west sides have nothing in common with each other and should be separate states.
Howdy! I was once confused-Midwest-girl, but now I'm ride-my-bike-in-the-pouring-rain-lady. I've lived here for 8 years and am proud to call it home, while wearing sandals with socks. As my new-to-the-Northwest friend from New Hampshire would say, "Live free or die" and this is as close as it gets.
I have been a Pemco customer for years now as a native Washingtonian, and I can attest that their customer service and company attitude in general definitely matches the area.  On a personal note, these are the kinds of things that make me loathe the thought of leaving the area.

As a customer, I have done my duty searching and comparing time and time again their services and products with other companies, and I can say that every time I have looked to see if anyone is cheaper, etc, they beat the price and have the best service hands down.  

Here's to Pemco for a truthful ad campaign and a wonderful company!  Never change!
Born and bred in the PNW, lived on the East Coast for a while and then the Midwest, now temporarily back in the PNW before relocating permanently to Japan; love the PNW and its endearingly quirky people and bizarre weather, always have, always will.  I've been all over but this place is always home to me.  

Shannon: I remember hearing about a sign on the Oregon border, facing south, years ago; the sign allegedly said, "TURN BACK NOW.  WE SHOOT EVERY THIRD CALIFORNIAN, AND THE SECOND ONE JUST PASSED."
To Dave in Louisiana

There are dorks of different stripes in all parts of the country.  I grew up in Spokane, lived in Seattle for 11 years and since have lived in several parts of the US, now in Houston.  Some might think you good ole boys in Luziana do nothin but chase gators, catch catfish and drink beer (I have a friend with a fishing camp in Lafayette, which has a weird pronunciation but that is a different story).  Being a dork is relative.  We beleive the PNW that includes both sides of the Cascades and Idaho as well as No CA is a great place, just don't like the rain on the west side of the mountains.  Each part of the country has its own positives and negatives.  PNW dorks are fine just as Louisiana dorks are fine as well, even if a different breed.  Same applies here.  

And if anyone cares, we have been to NYC several times since 2000 and have found New Yorkers to be friendly, helpful and decent.  As with most people, they respond to the way people treat them.  It is our differences that makes the US great.
I lived in Seattle during the "60's and  graduated from the "U-Dub" as a result. I have fond memories of the Pacific Northwest and all the places mentioned. I was also an entertainer in several of the venues there where I met a lot of people of different likes but with a satisfaction for having chosen this beautiful area of our country. I still have a few friends who continue to wear pendletons and socks with their sandals, I still do and I now live in Tucson, Arizona! Regards to all of you.
Weally, weally wiked wiked Walla Walla Wine Wine Woman Woman weference weference.
I am for sure the blue trap camper and when I saw that ad I e-mailed it to all of my family because it brought back memories of us as kids.
Dave in South Jersey, I live in Seattle now, but am originally from NYC (with a few years in north jersey).  Since moving here 3-1/2 years ago I actually have never used an umbrella.  It never rains hard like it does in NJ/NY.  So, while I don't do it, it's totally possible to wear sandals with socks.
I just cracked up when I ran across this blog today.  I work for a different insurance company based in the Pacific Northwest, but I'm wearing socks with sandals as I write this and I think PEMCO's commercials are great.  Blue-tarp-campers unite!  It's better than scorpions in your tent.
grunge sucks
I used to live in the Puget Sound area.  Moved to Southern California a long time ago.  We do travel to see the family up there quite often -like just a month ago.

A lot of the stereoptypes of the NW are from the imports from Marin County and the East Coast.  The old NW'rs have low ID number REI cards (you oughta see how their eyes pop at the REI store...), know what Ufda! means, remember when the Bremerton Ferry was bigger than the Winslow and can still taste the Tacoma Aroma.

Also, in the old NW folks knew how to drive in the rain.  We never stopped for that.  All of them transplants today freeze on the 405 when it rains... Yikes!

Anyhow, I love the NW but it's too cold for me, I love California's fast freeways and I think Margaritas are better than coffee.
How about rubber boots to the Post Office? We are also a "Carhartt" county, Lewis that is....
I grew up in the Willamette Valley, western Oregon.  Few folks in N. VA where I now live know how to correctly pronounce Oregon, much less Willamette.  Later I lived in Portland, and then Seattle, and my folks are from the central and eastern part of Oregon so I feel pretty well versed in most PNW aspects.  And I love every aspect!  I miss Fred Meyer, a lot.  I LIKE having gas pumped for me.  I love breathing the air.  You can keep your windows open because there aren't a lot of bugs!  I remember one time coming to a four-way stop in Seattle's Queen Anne district.  There were four of us all there at about the same time, and everyone actually waited for someone to make the first move.  The drivers made eye contact! It was a treat-that would never happen in DC.
For the person who wonders why wool socks with sandals when it rains; if you've worn wool where the weather is wet, you know that wool continues to insulate, even when wet. Not as well, perhaps, as dry, but it still is better than barefoot.

My brother managed K-mart stores for 20 years, being transfered from store to store. When he transfered to the downtown Seattle store, he quit so he wouldn't be transfered out of State. He bought a house in Puyallup and hasn't been seen much from since.
Hi from Spokane.  I can most certainly relate to these.  My grandmother is like the Bloomsday-tee-shirt-collector, except that her collection is from the Clayton, Wa "Brickyard Days" fun-run; and I qualify as the obsessive-compulsive-recycler-dude.  Most of my friends are 'Zags' to at least some degree.

These ads are something like the political cartoon caricatures, where artists emphasize the most glaring features of political or media figures.  This campaign points out the most striking and interesting features of all of us.  We can relate to these commercials because they really are US.  In some form, or in some place, these are people we've really seen, or have actually been ourselves.

My hat's off to Pemco.  They could never hit it so close to home...if they didn't really live here.

SASS has Spoken.
I am a (now slightly homesick!) Long-Coffee-Order/Belltown-Uber-Foodie from Seattle who has been living in Europe for the last few months and this made me smile a slightly teary smile! But one question though... why are there no gays in any of these profiles? Come on PEMCO, if you were really all about the PNW at least one of these profiles should feature the openly gay local politican and his husband or lesbian who owns a coffee stand that does better than the Starbucks next door!
Pemco also has lower rates since they don't have to insure for tornados, hail storms & Katrina victims, only tsunamis, earthquakes & lahars in downtown Orting.
what about the use the left turn lane to cut to the front of the merge on 1st south bridge guy? (after all, nobody else is using it)  I used to hate that guy!
PNW ,great place to vacation, come visit and spend money, I will say hello to you, at least the young ladys !!!!
It's the voice of the guy that does the lexus commercials and the ads are a rip off of the Bud Light "Real Men of Genius" campaign.  Probably the same ad agency...

Somewhat funny...
I recently visited my son who moved to Wa. 3 years ago.  I was just amazed on how friendly the people there really are.  It was actually very noticeable.  I live in the Northeast and wish the people around here were as friendly and nice.  Thumbs up to the people of the Northwest. It's too bad that the rest of the country doesn't follow your example.
We live on the so-called 'brown side' of WA. Investigate our pix and you'll find lots of camping scenes with blue tarps strung all over between the evergreen trees, dripping! and the family gathered (under one) 'round the campfire roasting gunk-free chicken sausages! :)  Way to go ..PEMCO !!!!
"I have a silly question.... how can people wear socks with sandals?"

We wear socks and sandals because we think Croc's look stupid.....I wear socks & sadals when I take my pet geoduck out for his daily walk,(I tow him around in a bucket of water on a skateboard). I also take along my pocket raincoat,sun glasses and some SPF 500...don't want to burst into flames if the sun suddenly comes out
I'm from Spokane and am going to college at Arizona State University. When I flew home the first time, I flew through Seattle. I sneezed and someone said, "Bless you." And it hit me. Only at home are people so friendly. Nobody says anything to you if they don't know you down here.

Oh, and my dad's the socks and sandals guy.
I grew up in Michigan, moved to Corvallis, OR in 1977, Newburg, OR (S. of Portland) in '81 & to Eugene, OR in '83.   Then back to Mich. in '87.  I miss the NW intensely & even more after reading the above blog.  I love wearing socks with berkies, it is SO comfortable!  And I agree with the above, it doesn't downpour in the NW like it does in Mich, it's more of a constant drizzle (in the winter)!  I am a recyling fanatic & family in Mich. don't understand that.  Thanks for bringing up a lot of good memories!
Oh Man. I just read through all the profiles.
I laughed till I cried. Then reached for another Henry's and realized I just drank the last one within 800 miles. Then I cried some more.

Growing up in the Willamette Valley, It took me 6 years of living in Colorado before figuring out no one else wears socks with sandles. It seems as natural to me as the wet stripe up a bicyclist's backside.
As a life-long Portland resident, I think it is interesting that the Pacific NW seems to be defined as Seattle.  Portland and Seattle are about as similar as New York City and Boston, but oh well.  To address one of the comments made about this article... To generalize, people from the NW are far too passive-aggressive to hate anyone, including people from California.  But we are frustrated that people from California decide to move here because they love it, but then proceed to try to make it more like California. And, I absolutely agree with the folks who say that Eastern and central Washington Oregon and most of Southern Oregon are not described in this article.  These parts of the states share much more in common with people from Boise, ID and Casper, WY then they do with people from Ashland, Eugene, Hood River, Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, and Bellingham.
So funny!  For an insurance company, I'm surprised Pemco hasn't warned Transplated East Coast that Smug Hybrid Owner will stop at the traffic light when it turns yellow.  Now that I'm on the East Coast, I'm slowly getting acclimated to running the yellow light and crossing the street before the WALK signal.
I'll never forget being in Portland and having some dork who was working in a Dell store at a mall rip me
for pronouncing it OR-A-GONE.  Sorry people, but that's how most of the country pronounces it.
I attempted to wear socks with sandals here in Indiana.  The reviews were less than favorable, but I completely agree with everyone who says that they are extremely comfortable.  Out west you guys must have a bit of pioneer left in you. :) haha
Very interesting stereotypes for your people.

For some, the east coast has it's own feel as well.

Being from Philadelphia, if we had a slogan, it might read something like: "Philadelphia, it ain't for everybody" or "Philly, where something's in the water, definitely something"
HA HA HA LOL. I live in Ohio now, but my Oregonian husband and I LOVE the northwest. We're happiest on the overcast days here. I think I'm a Blackberry Hunter. Thanks for making my day.
I really dislike these ads and cannot relate to them at all.

Besides, the idea was funny years ago when Budweiser was doing it.  But even they kept it going a few years after it stopped being funny (Mr. Fuzzy Sweater Guy and Mr. Makes-Change-in-the-Offering-Plate-Guy, anyone?)
Let us not forget "Walla Walla Wine Wine Woman Woman" another classic NW profile as we all know about the Pacific NW's wineries and the fabulous vintages they produce.
Like the ad says: "We're a lot like you a little different" says it all doesn't it?!
Now that's funny. Had to go to the site after reading these great comments and see the ads. Native Oregonians from the Wet Side, hubby & I are both "Sandals & Socks Guy" with a passing resemblance to "Pony-Tailed Software Geek", as well as "Obsessive-Compulsive Recycler." He is definitely "Blue-Tarp Camper, and when I was growing up, I thought everyone was a "Blackberry Hunter." We aren't "Smug Hybrid Drivers" because we're holding out for the Volt or Aptera, or some other ridiculously-green vehicle to replace our aging Subarus with (and honestly, is there a town with more Subarus per capita than Ashland, Oregon?). Gotta love the NW...even the dry dusty side too.

Oh yeah, and does working in public radio count as "Public Broadcasting Pledge Drive Volunteer?"
wow... an entire region of the country where hands are devoid of callouses...
I think the "upitty-hates-Californians-Guy" is missing from the campaign, though not from several of the responses.

What a pity. California has the PNW, including all of these characters, as well as the wine-country, agricultural crowd, snooty city folks, raging liberals, Hollywood gliterati, American SW desert crowd, Asian markets, Hispanic flair, and many other unique and diverse attractions and people.

What's really funny is people who can't find any truth in some stereotypes. I live in North Dakota and found it really hilarious when people here saw the movie "Fargo" and said, "We don't talk like that." Yes we do! That's why it's funny!
The stereotypes are for real, I've known every type of Northwesterner described in them!  I moved to NY about a year ago, and this website made me pretty nostalgic for the place.  I even submitted my own profile, based on my experiences in the Olympic Peninsula.
I now know what to tell my friends when they (jokingly) ask me why I'm so weird.  I'm from Edmonds!

P.S.  Edmonds, Seattle, and pretty much anywhere near the Sound are the best places to vacation in the summer if your looking for scenery that is not completely dried out.
There is a huge difference between those living on the west side of Stevens Pass, and the rest of the PNW. Those not living in the Sound are normal as far as the boundaries of normality can be stretched. Creatures loving the life in the Sound are rude, bad-mannered, self-absorbed, deeply affected by SAD, indifferent as to pride, and yet strangely vain, fearful of change and in general poorly educated. The quality of products that are produced by the Sound are embarrassing and at times downright dangerous. After a  grueling 4 year study, our company relocated to a more  temperate region. There were prolonged sighs of relief as the jets passed over Mt. Rainier heading east by the staff. We have never looked back. Occasionally jokes are made on rainy days, "At least it's not Seattle!"
Living in the NW for the last 20yrs I've come to appreciate the quirky NW native.  Pemco is such a small insurance company that to even be considered as a new customer you must have an excellent credit rating, perfect driving history in other words walk on water.

Also if you have a claim they will take good care of you just before they cancel your policy.I find this very high handed but there underwriting guidelines are there to keep the company solvent and in profit.

This is what happens when you are insured with such a small company.  One major catastrophe and you can say bye bye to Pemco.

Sounds like Denis knows something about insurance operations, but very little about the facts. It's public knowledge that PEMCO in fact has one the highest retention rates in the industry. To me that suggests D. Seafore's observation about PEMCO so readily cancelling claimants is urban legend. How do I know? Been with PEMCO for 20 years, have had numerous claims and never once cancelled. I pay my bills, I take care of my property. Would never consider any other insurance carrier.
Oh and one more thing for Denis. A catastrophic event will not bring PEMCO to its knees. That's just plain crazy. Well managed insurance companies re-insure for items like earthquake, tornados, hurricanes, etc. This is all watched over by a very "engaged" Insurance Commissioner in the State of Washington. Probably one of the best Insurance Commisioners/depts in the the country. Check 'em out at; http://www.insurance.wa.gov/.
instead of pissing money away on stupid tv ads, maybe pemco should evaluate their homeowner's premiums they charge.  Just cancelled pemco over them raising my premiums by 18% this year (no claims ever with them) and moved my policy with the same exact coverages and saved 22%.  bye-bye forever pemco.
To Dave in South Jersey,
Socks and Sandals guy wears wool socks usually so even if they do get wet, they'll still keep your feet warm!
Hey, I love the Northwest, and I love it's anti Californian bigotry. It's great to hate! I've always been somewhat confused by the Northwest's seeming oblivion to their own form of intolerance. Here's a newsflash- all those "Californians" that you hate so much came from somewhere else before they were in California. I think you just got tagged "it" and just as Califoria lost it's charm decades ago, due to a huge influx of the disenchanted from everywhere else, it's your turn. I still genuinely love the Northwest, but it's disheartening to read so many complaints about outsiders. Growing up in the 60's all I heard was complaints about "hippies", now it's "Californians". If everyone can find a way to tolerate people who are different, eventually they'll see the virtue of sandals with socks and flannel shirts. You can convert them to true Northwesters, you just need to keep being your wonderful selves and lay off a bit of the hostility because it waters down the real charm and virtues that you are trying to claim as your own. Sorry for the preachy tone, but I felt like it had to be said. VIVA the Northwest, VIVA blue tarps and birkies, and especially muddy boots, microbrews and excessive caffiene intake!
So true that Eastern WA / North Idaho folks differ from the "Coasties" portrayed in most of the profiles.  California / Granola / Hippie type transplants have transformed the West side into a hybrid version of where they came from (jupiter? mars?)  I love the ad though - its fun to be able to make fun of ourselves and enjoy the humor instead of taking offense to it and losing the overall message.  All I can say is long live the PNW weirdos and all of the different niches available to lose oneself in.  The only bad thing that could come from this ad? - The chance that it might influence someone to relocate to Washington State permanently - it may seem like a great place to live but don't be fooled - we BITE!! Come visit and spend your money though - anytime :)


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