Arizona Daily Wildcat - Nov. 18 - WildLife

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• wednesday, november 18, 2009 • arizona daily wildcat

step in time

Jacob RaderArizona Daily Wildcat

Dance master’s students Gregg Hurley and Kristin Chew perform the act ‘Four Bits’ during last Friday’s Vaudeville Revue at the Stevie Eller Dance Theatre.

JEANS

Levi’s ad a gem — but a deceptive one

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passionately to the last word as the minor-keyed music fades. A shirtless man runs through crackling fireworks before two people run along a dark beach bearing a banner reading “Go Forth.” Directed by SoCal native and NYU grad Cary Fukunaga and filmed mostly in areas of Katrinaravaged New Orleans, these spots are everything you could hope for in an ad: artistic, smart, brave and varied, they try to make you feel good, but also think — and, of course, buy the product. If all it takes for this determined, sweaty, sexy America to become a reality is to buy a pair of Levi’s, count me in. According to these ads, America is earth, youth, rebellion, literature and campfires — and a collective backside that looks great in a pair of blue jeans. This is genius marketing, capturing exactly the spirit of the times and the feeling of the people at this moment in history. We relate to the shirtless, the dirty, the dark, the barefoot, the rough-around-the-edges. Our future is poorly lit, our present tense and tight. “I am the new American pioneer,”the Levi’s Web site reads in handwritten script superimposed over a snapshot of Niagara Falls.“No longer content to wait for better times. … I will work for better times.‘Cause no one built this country in suits,”it reads. The styling, the language and the unsmiling-yet-gorgeous models all catch exactly the tenure and the tension of the times. But don’t be fooled, O Pioneers: as much as we all would love to be a Levi-clad nation of sweaty, equal bodies perennial with freedom, law and love, Levi Strauss and Co. is the Man these advertisements suggest we stick it to. “Start a rebellion!” they shout, while they whisper: “buy our product.”While the company was started in the U.S. well over a century ago, the company closed

its last American plant in 2003. No matter how their ad plays to the cash-strapped ethos of today, they still sell $300 jeans. While the ad is not shiny and glossy like ad campaigns we’ve loved to hate in the past, it is only because those ad agency geniuses have tapped into the nation’s desire for the humble, matte and scuffed. As advertising commenter Seth Stevenson wrote at Slate.com,“This 60-second film is, to me, a small artistic gem. Right up until that Levi’s logo at the end.” Levi’s is working with activists to better meet fair labor practices, has increased its use of organic cotton, encourages energy-friendly linedrying in its care labels and has partnered with Goodwill to encourage people to donate used jeans. As environmental journalist Jen Boynton wrote on triplepundit.com, “It’s a genius partnership, and I have to say it felt like an authentic and effective effort to develop and market the partnership.” But is the company doing this because it is an ethical business, or because people feel better about shelling out major cash for jeans they think make the world better? The ads promote beautiful imagery, creative production, and expose the TV-watching public to more literature and art than they might otherwise encounter in a week. But if Levi Strauss and Co. is really going to convince any young counter-culturists to buy its pants, it is going to have to take off the ad agency suits. Take a note from your unwitting spokesman Uncle Walt: stop trying to manipulate us and maybe become one of us. We western youths call your bluff, Levi’s. We’ll watch your ads for free on YouTube, and sure, we’ll buy your jeans — at Goodwill. Keep your $300 stone washes and 501 flares — we go forth in jeans with holes and scuffs of our own making.

concert

Centennial show already sold out

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has continued its success with its latest album, simply titled The Fray, which was released in February. With a little help from iTunes downloads, The Fray gained much attention despite the band’s hiatus for the last four years. Its resurgence proved the band’s ability to crank out more than a few hits off a single album. Given The Fray’s growing success, one can hope its appearance draws a better crowd than last semester’s Jay-Z, Kelly Clarkson, The Veronicas and Third Eye Blind financial disaster. Hopefully the band will not make

absurd dressing room requests, either — which last year included several food items and a plethora of liquids ranging from Fiji Water to hot tea. Luckily, ASUA is giving students and faculty a discount on tickets and providing a venue that offers a respite from the November chill. The Fray is sure to heat up the evening with its crowd-appeasing songs and wholesome demeanor. The Fray plays tonight at 8 p.m. at Centennial Hall. Admission: UA students/faculty/staff $40, $30, $20; general admission $45, $35, $25.


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