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.


JCPenney can’t forget about "The Breakfast Club"

Posted: Monday, August 11, 2008 4:00 PM by Allison Linn
Filed Under: ,

At a time when retailers, and especially department stores, are struggling with a weak economy and fickle shoppers, JCPenney has lately been pulling out all the stops with pretty, musically interesting and eye-catching ads for its American Living line.

Now, it’s switching gears -- in the wrong direction -- with a back-to-school campaign that plays off the 1985 cult classic movie "The Breakfast Club."

JCPenney

Here’s the first problem with the campaign: "The Breakfast Club" came out 23 years ago, several years before this season’s back-to-school shoppers were even born. While it can be fun to go retro, we have to wonder whether some people who see the ad simply won’t get the reference.

Second, JCPenney apparently doesn’t truly get the reference, either. The core message of "The Breakfast Club" -- that it’s OK to be weird and different, and that, in fact, most people are weird and different at heart -- goes squarely against the idea of going to a big department store and buying mass-produced clothes that make you look just like every other kid in America.

We recognize that it's often an advertiser's job to co-opt popular culture for their own sales pitch, but seriously, is nothing sacred?

Of course, in JCPenney’s version of "The Breakfast Club," the characters are not weird, quirky and strange-looking at all. Instead, they are normal, trendy and strikingly beautiful, no Ally Sheedy-type makeover required. (Actually, the ad does include one such makeover, but the model was cute to begin with and doesn’t look very different after it’s done.)

Another major theme of the "The Breakfast Club" -- feeling alienated from one’s parents --also is apparently lost on the marketers at JCPenney. Instead, a corporate marketing executive, Mike Boylson, said one reason the company used the 1980s-era movie is because "we recognize the importance of delivering a marketing campaign that's relevant to today's teens, yet approachable to Mom."

On the surface, that makes sense -- Mom does have the credit card, or at least pay the credit card bill, and perhaps kids these days can find common ground with their parents in celebrating the bygone era.

But still, the idea of using "The Breakfast Club" to bond with your parents, rather than your peers? Cue the Molly Ringwald eye roll.

The ad does have one thing going for it, however: It resurrects one of the great pop songs of our time, Simple Minds’ "Don’t You Forget About Me." While we’d rather have seen the song used in a better ad, at least it gives us something catchy to hum along with.

Click here to watch the ad, and click here to see an elaborate Internet campaign. Or if, like us, the ad just really made you want to see the original movie again, click here to watch the real trailer.

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Comments

My 17 year old son loves The Breakfast Club and was horrified by the commercial-JCP you now have some one who will NEVER step a foot inside your store! LOL!
The Breakfast Club was just a movie. The J C Penny ad is just an advertisement. How can you take any of it seriously?
Am I the only person who's seen the ad who thinks it's a third-rate, poorly performed, hackneyed copy of the original?  If you're going to rip off a classic, ya gotta either match it or top it with your own unique spin.  The only thing JCPenney's saying to me is, they're selling s really lousy product.
First of all, this ad is obviously a huge success. Look how much we're talking about it -- how many back to school ads get this much attention? Secondly, I think it's funny. Whoever came up with this idea should get a raise.
As the father of a twin boy and girl, I have enjoyed watching movies over the years with them that were my movies from the 80's - Ferris Bueller being their most favorite of them all. When I saw this commercial, it didn't make me want to jump up and go shopping at JCP so as to max my card or wear out any savings account, but it did attract my ears/eyes to the cool re-make of the Simple Minds song that I loved as a teenager and then to also enjoy the use of the movie in their sales pitch. Yes, I could sit here and shout about how everyone and every band has sold out to the mighty power of the dollar by lending their "art", but this was a unique ad, it caught my attention and I give it to the creator's that were able to not only appeal to the kids, but also to the parents now holding the dollars and who also happen to have been the kids that enjoyed this movie and song. I wonder how many who watched this commercial rushed to Netflix or Blockbuster and reserved a copy in their que of the movie in hopes to share it with their kids - they need to pay JCP a portion of their rental profits gained as a result? Kudos to the advertising team at JCP on all fronts here!

On another note and I forget the company using the song, but The Beatles "Dear Prudence" is now being used in a sales picth without the song revealing the title in the newly composed version. It caught my ears and I kept singing along for the title words to appear in the song, but it wasn't there and ultimately, the commercial left me with the song in my head and rushing for my vinyl White album copy so I could listen and be relieved of it. :)
Really and truly who cares!  It is just a commercial nothing more and nothing less...let...it....go....people
The ad (a 2-letter word and most of you still can't spell it???) is a cheap rip-off with a terrible cover of a decent song. it doesn't make me nostalgic, just sad that nobody has any original ideas or seems to care about getting it right. I don't care if you want to reference a great movie, but then get the characters and themes right!
Something that seems to have eluded the producers and JCPenney is that reason the "CLUB" was running through the halls in the movie was to avoid getting caught by the principal after they went to get the marijuana from Judd Nelson's locker...As would think they'd prefer to avoid any association with that concept.. unless they are saying you'd have to be high to shop at JCPenney!
Re: Yeahright Chicago,

Not everyone can afford the sleazy how much do you charge ho look.  Some kids actually would like to dress decent and there parents are happy for that.  JC Penney has reasonably priced clothing and good sales.  Their American Living collection line has some nice clothing.   Just because you are able to afford better priced clothing take a look at the tag.  I am pretty sure it wasn't made in the good ole USA.
Love the commercial. It was very well done. Quite honestly, in comparison to the other advertisement out there, it is quite refreshing. My wife and I got the reference immediately. I feel that it is original and it does appeal to those of us who actually pay for the clothes. Most importantly, it achieves the goal it set out to do - it got all of us taking about JC Penny. Isn't that the point? I heard two people discussing the ad in the train this morning. I would also like to point out that 80s cloths, music and nostalgia are back in fashion.
To those who criticize JC Penney for being a cheap store for hicks.  Not everyone can afford the sleazy how much do you charge ho look at the more expensive stores.  Some kids actually would like to dress decent and there parents are happy for that.  JC Penney has reasonably priced clothing and good sales.  Their American Living collection line has some very nice clothing.   Just because you are able to afford better priced clothing take a look at the tag.  I am pretty sure it wasn't made in the good ole USA.
While I do find the ad a bit on the boring side, I just wanted to throw in that dressing "normal" doesn't mean that you're not an oddball. I find it corny that people go out of their way to make their weirdness into a social statement. Almost as boring as the commercial is to be honest.
Regardless of the rightness or wrongness of using something as beloved as The Breakfast Club in an ad hocking back-to-school stuff, the first time I saw it, I was walking out of the room, and it stopped me in my tracks. I came back in the room and watched the whole thing, and I even remember what company the commercial is for. I'd say it's pretty effective.
Get a grip people! (John Osborne, San Diego CA,me, syracuse ny & Molly Y, Dallas, Texas)  @ least they're not cussing or making sexual innuendos!  It's a decent commercial & Ur generation has the slighest idea of how to deal w/it!  It's called-respect!  The ad worked - take a close look @ Ur reaction!  Ha-Ha!!!  
Personally I think JC Penny hit the mark with this commercial.  What is being failed to be recongized is that parents are the ones who buy their kids clothes.  Yes, we all would like to think we let our childern be liberated in what they wear, but as parents, we drive our childern to the stores we want them to shop in.  This ad is extreamly clever, it appeals to adults while showing trendy clothes that childern would want to wear.  I think we need to give the JC Penny Marketing Department a little more credit.
As a "mom" that has seen the movie countless times, I love the ad. I also see JCP trying to make a connection between this movie and the current trend of "musical" tween movies - as in the kids are much more "polished". On the other hand, my kids hate the ad, even though they have seen and love the movie. But they wouldn't think of wearing anything from JCP anyway.
If John Hughes were dead, he would be rolling over in his grave... Its obviously a successful ad because it has people talking (I certainly never noticed their ads before).  However, it seems wrong to take such a great movie and use it to peddle cheap clothes.  Tweens know Penneys isn't cool.  Parents know its not cool.  I really don't want such an awesome movie associated with something so incredibly uncool.  
Keep in mind that the parents of the kids in this commercial were the ones who this is targeted towards.  The kids in this commercial would probably also wonder who Ferris Bueler and Duckie from Pretty in Pink were.  Our generation remembers it well (both of us 38).  If you hook the parents, you have won the battle.
I'm torn.... When I saw it it brought back a great movie but I also thought that I could have done that commercial and I'm not in advertising. Let's face it, it may be a great move for JCP because if you're a teen the last place you will go willingly to get your school clothes is JCP. Your mom will be taking you and that comercial will remind her of when she was in school and guess where she will take you... That's right JC Penny's. It may be corny but it also may be briliant.
It's irrelevant to kids and offensive to parents. Way to alienate all markets!
I saw this ad for the first time in the movie theater, I thought oh no, they are going to try to remake the Breakfast Club, an all time classic movie, in my book. Then I realized it was a cheese-ball commercial for JCP.(kinda a relief) Nothing against JCP, I shop there, but BLECH! it was awful. Totally didn't hit the point the Breakfast Club was trying to make with teenaged angst and pressures. It was too feel goodie and not at all representive of what the 80's highschool era was like. But like some of the previous posts the point of the commerical might have been to get the attention of the actual clothes buyers (mom/dad) not the kids wearing them.

"The movie teaches that if you are a Jock, a Prep, a Slacker or a Book Worm you can find common ground. In this case JCP is stating that this common ground can be their clothing."
@Brain Ralph Johnson: If that's true, isn't that a very superficial statement?
The movie was a rip off of the much better "Big Chill" so no problem with JCP coopting what was a painfully dull flick.
This ad was aimed at the parents and not the kids.  People who can remember when the Breakfast Club was originally released are in their late 30s or early 40s and children of their own.  Parents want "cute" and generic models to wear JCP's clothes, because no parent wants to admit that they are now, 20 years later, the parent of the Loser, the Jock, the Princess, the Geek or the Weirdo. The ad targets the parents, not the kids.
Here's my problem as a Gen X dad.  I loved the movie and the theme song even more (the Simple Minds version, thank you), but I've always hated J.C. Penny since my mom made me shop at that depressing store as a kid.  So I correlate "80's and "JC Penny" and think, blecchh.  

I do think the actor kids nailed the dancing, though...
First of all, for all those who say they like the Commercial, and "get it", you are probably between the ages 35-55. The commercial is target for 14-17 year olds, who would most likely have no idea what the commercial is referencing to. Thus the effectiveness and marketability to the nostalgia factor is gone. If you're 35-50 years old, are you going to be buy these teen clothes? Hope not!

And I have to agree with all the comments above about the alienation of the movie premise versus the commercial appeal. If you disagree, the movie must have not applied to you, as some people loved being categorize in "chiqes."

This commercial achieve the condition much like when kids laugh at South Park and the Simpson's and for the stupid jokes, but do not understand the underlining social or political commentary that often goes over their heads. The result is a waste of time!
WORST AD EVER!  I love the Breakfast Club and think this commercial is awful.  I wouldn't usually shop at JC Penney anyway, but now I never will!  Yuck!
I dont shop at JCP and although I love the movie the association to ro with JCP just isn't there. The only character that would have shopped at JCP to begin with was Brian...and most likely because MOM bought his clothes. Claire would have been more 5th Ave or Express so the whole point of the commercial is baseless...
My guess is this campaign was a concept that was probably great when it started and got watered down to what you see here. The commercial is just plain bad. The online effort is interesting, keeps you engaged, and is well-executed from every standpoint except meaningful storytelling. However, the reward (free ringtones of "Don't You Forget About me"--cool; and wallpapers of the actors--lame) is not initially made clear enough.

IMHO, the story is bland and about as vanilla as it comes. The reviewer got it right with that. There are even some slightly racist undertones in it (the black girl's dog is saved by the black guy--the only one willing to do so--and the hispanic kid is the bully set straight by the white jock). And they're all so pretty, and not very good actors. You can almost tell some of the actors think what they're doing is lame.

I don't think the Breakfast Club takeoff is so far fetched for kids to have seen it as the reviewer implies. It's on TV a lot, and it's a great movie with themes that will resonate with every generation. But if this rip-off had been done well, it would have transcended nostalgic references.

The Breakfast Club was a good story--this was not. It does not appeal to the emotions at all--at most it is "cute."

It's a spoof that's not a good spoof, and an homage that does not seem to "get" the original premise of the Breakfast Club.

I'm not sure "The Breakfast Club" is the right parallel for the JCPenney brand, but it could have been a good opportunity to connect with youth--who probably aren't going to want to get clothes there just because Mom does. There's no reason an ad has to target an audience exclusively if it can speak to the needs inclusively. I believe there may have been a better way to appeal to both the needs of parents and children.

I do think the interactive was well-executed technically, and was fun as well. But I suspect that more time spent on compelling storytelling, and less on finding good looking actors, would have helped this campaign a lot.

Still, I applaud JCPenney for trying here. It's a good effort, but I don't think they were willing to take any chances with the campaign, and it suffers for it.

I'm curious to know if they are actually getting *good* results from it.
I loved the Breakfast Club movie, but I didn't like JC Penney doing this reenactment for their ad to sell clothes.
It's tacky.
I'm somewhat disturbed to see how many posters say their kids have seen an R-rated movie. But I was disgusted with the ad, and the cover of the song is even worse.
I hate, hate, hate this ad. Does corporate America have to pillage everything? What is next year's campaign going to be, a remake of Fast Times at Ridgemont High?
Wow.  The way some people on this board have posted their disdain for this the ad because of a tribute to a John Hughes movie you would of thought somebody wee wee'd on the American flag.  No, its just a silly commercial, folks.  News flash to Allison Linn:  Enough adults and kids alike have know enough about The Breakfast Club to understand the reference.  We have Netflix, movie channels and it was just on TV last week.  I'm sure plenty of kids have watched it.
I am upset that they omitted the scene where they all get high... otherwise the ad is lame.  Nobody under the age of 25 gets the reference and nobody over 25 shops at JC Penny.
I hate this ad. I feel completely ripped off. This was our generation's movie. There is no way that it fits into today's culture.
I remember the first time I heard the ad.  I had the tv on and I was doing something else and I heard the music and when I turned and looked at the television I saw all these kids acting out scenes from the movie.  I was 26 when that movie came out but I still enjoyed it.  I think what went through my mind was that I couldn't believe they were using the Breakfast Club movie to sell clothes to these kids since the kids in the commercial would have no idea probably what the Breakfast Club was.  It would have been like if I had been in ad to sell clothes in 1975 that was set to a movie from 1952.  It is clearly geared toward grabbing the parents attention and making them feel nostalgic and wanting to take their kids to JCPenney to buy school clothes where a good many of them probably got their school clothes.
J C Penney must be doing something right because my 13 year niece and 11 year nephew just requested we shop there for back to school.  Stop taking yourself so seriously, it was just a movie, a  mild form of entertainment.
total disagree...everyone I talked to loves the homage
I hate this commercial with a passion like one person stated it perverts the movie and makes a mockery of it. Forgive me but they need to be hit upside their heads... =@
I completely hate this ad! This is one of my all time favorite movies and I think they ruined it! I love JCP but they didn't do a good job with it, that's just my opinion!
You totally missed the point of this ad. It's aimed at the parents of today's teens. Parents who were teenagers when the movie came out have kids of their own now. They're supposed to connect JCPenney with the emotions they went through at the time and the reassuring message of the movie. That will then make them want to buy their kids' clothes at JCPenney. It might be blasphemy, but it's smart marketing.
Ads are about getting your attention more than anything else.  The second I heard the music, I turned my head to see what was on TV and watched the ad.  In my mind, the ad is thus successful.  I ignore most of them.  This one at least got me to watch.  The fact that the same Cadillac Seville dropped off the one kid like Ally Sheedy's parents' car did, the strings in the sweatshirt, made me laugh.  Ok, so maybe the ad cannot convey the entire theme of 80's teenage angst in 30 seconds.  Whatever.  Good ad.
When I first saw the ad my jaw dropped and I said oh no, please do not let Hollywood remake this movie and ruin it like they have so many others.  I was so relieved to see it was just a commercial!
ChicagolandWhy would not shopping at JCP mean your child dresses trashy?  Sorry, but my son only wears RL Polo, American eagle, Hollister and Abercrombie......pretty preppy to say the least.

I would also like to qualify more earlier comment: My son watched the watered down tv version,  no way is he watching R-Rated movies from the 80's.....
I didn't find the ad offensive, I found it boring.
For crying out load, it's just a COMMERCIAL. Get over it!
I like the black kid in the J.C. Penny AD. I think it's a great AD. It actually made me and my wife go get the movie again.

Great Job JCP
We thought it was great.  We both loved the movie, and while I agree that many kids today may not get it, ours sure do (and Ferris Bueller, etc.).  I think most that are 'in the know' are familiar with such.   And even if the kids don't know it, the other parents, that are spending the money on the clothes, will remember.  It got the parents' attention, it'll get them into the store for the back-to-school shopping, it's worked.
Its ACTUALLY....not bad.  if you separate your own personal experience and think about their demo graphics and target - this ad campaign (and the site is amazing) is spot on.  Kudos!  Must have been a risky internal sell but it works!!!
Will never shop at JCPenney again due to this ad. Totally soulless. I guess everything truly is for sale, including our memories. Consumer culture gone out of control. What's next, 'All You Need is Love' used to sell diapers? Oh, wait...


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