KID STUFF. In 1988, the Radio Ad of the Year
was part of a best-selling campaign that hepled endear a softdrink to its young
Pinoy market in an unprecedented way. The softdrink was Royal Tru-Orange,
a purebred Pinoy product of faithful old McCann Erickson client Coca-Cola
Bottling Co. The campaign debuted in TV and introduced a character destined
to be one of the immortals of local Philippine advertising, an amiable, wonderfully
regular adolescent named Joey, played by a charismatic young La Sallite
named RJ Ledesma.
The very first ad began with the jingle strain: “Ganito talaga ang buhay…”, and the first words of Joey’s lighthearted, causally delivered flashback narration which proved to be the durable and permanent opening salvo for a series of ads harping on the natural goodness of the product and how it fitted in, just as naturally, with the ups and downs of a wholesome young protagonist’s life.
The campaign extended into radio advertising , of which the winning “Mantika” was an involving example. As he McCann creative director Letty Javier recounts, she and copywriter Kathleen Mojica collaborated on a scenario straight from everyman’s childhood experience.
The TV ads have Joey mingling with friends, going to school, and eventually falling in love and maturing over a span of several memorable years. RJ Ledesma practically grew up under the consumer’s watchful eye.
The radio commercial however, harked back to those embarrassing, pre-pubescent moments where every boy would die before being caught running a sissy errand for mom in this case, buying a bottle of cooking oil from the neighborhood sari-sari. A bottle of Royal Tru-Orange proves the ideal cover-up in the presence of Joey’s pal, Jake, who, it turns out, was set to buy something just as sissy—bagoong. The pals are on equal footing, such all too familiar chores and the very real feelings of apprehension and relief, and the viewer concludes, are part of growing up. It’s a good thing that the softdrink is around to provide company, or even security, in the face of the possible bad trips of this complicated age.
Even without the powerful TV visuals, “Mantika” effortlessly captured the awkwardness, as well as the little triumphs of Filipino adolescence, and softdrinks guzzlers everywhere were invariable touched.
CREDITS:
CLIENT: Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Product: Royal
Tru-Orange
AGENCY: McCann Erickson, Phils.
Executive Creative Director: Emily Abrera
Associate Creative Director: Letty Javier
Copywiter: Kathleen Mojica
Producer: Jing Abellana
SOURCES: PERFECT 10: A Decade of Creativity in Philippine Advertising, published by the Creative Guild of the Philippines,1995. Written and edited by Butch Uy and Alya Honasan.
RTO
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