Showing posts with label Olympic Energy Drink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olympic Energy Drink. Show all posts

Monday, August 5, 2024

481. MILO ENERGY DRINK, 1980 Moscow Olympics Ad

GO MILO! BUT WE'RE NOT GOING! Olympic Ad, 1980

Nestlé’s MILO began wresting the title of “Olympic Energy Drink” from arch rival  OVALTINE in 1968, when the popular chocolate malt beverage began running an ad that proclaimed itself as the “Choice of the ’68 Olympics”. On the other hand, OVALTINE had touted in its 1972 ads that it had been in every Olympics since 1932. It was to be the last time that OVALTINE—an aging brand on a decline--would call itself “the official energy drink of the Olympics since 1932”.

MILO took over that claim that same year, bannering that “modern day athletes need a modern energy drink”, while casting shades on Ovaltine as “old stand-bys are simply not enough”. MILO’s Olympic Energy campaign thus began officially in 1972 (Munich) followed by the next edition in Montreal (1976).

In 1980, the Summer Olympics were scheduled to happen in Moscow, Soviet Union, from Jul. 19-Aug. 3, 1980, the first games to be held in an Eastern bloc country. It was to be one of the most controversial stagings in the history of the Olympics

A year before, Soviet had invaded Afghanistan,  causing the United States and other Western countries to boycott the 1980 Moscow Olympics. Sixty six countries boycotted the games entirely, including the Philippines, and only 80 nations converged at the Moscow Games, the smallest number since 1956.

In retaliation, the Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries (except Romania) boycotted the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. An alternative international sporting event, the Goodwill Games, was created by Ted Turner in reaction to the political troubles surrounding the Olympic Games of the 1980s.

Nevertheless, Filipro Inc., Nestlé’s local manufacturer in the Philippines, came up with their MILO Moscow Olympic Ads in 1980, despite the country’s non-participation. 

The ad was austere in its message, preferring to “salute the Olympic Year”, with the Moscow reference as just as subhead. Perhaps to make up for the lost Olympic momentum, MILO launched a SUPER ATHLETES Promo, with collectible plastic figures of athletes in action in every can. These were to be played using SUPER SPORTS gameboards published in select magazines and newspapers.

MILO SUPER ATHLETES TOY PROMO, 1980

SOURCES:

Moscow Olympics logo: Wikimedia commons

Moscow Olympics 1980: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980_Summer_Olympics

Goodwill Games 1986: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodwill_Games

Monday, November 23, 2020

298. MILO vs. OVALTINE: The Battle for the Title of the Olympic Energy Drink

OVALTINE & MILO: Official Olympic Energy Drinks

OVALTINE was a chocolate malt drink that was reputedly first produced in Bern, Switzerland in 1865. Originally, it was called “Ovomaltine” as its formulation contains eggs, but a misspelling of the name on the trademark registration application led to the name being shortened to Ovaltine in English-speaking markets. OVALTINE was already advertised in the Philippines as early as 1925.

1972 OVALTINE Ad,Munich Olympics

Since its introduction, OVALTINE had a variety of health claims—from appetite builder, a recuperative drink for convalescing patients, fatigue alleviator, vitality and energy giver.

OVALTINE OLYMPIC AD, 1948. Credit: Alamy

When the Summer Olympics was held in Los Angeles, California, OVALTINE became one of the games’ sponsors—where it was to become the official Olympic energy drink, thus pre-dating MILO’s claim by over 35 years.  In fact, OVALTINE was the health drink sponsor in 9 Olympics!  

OVALTINE OLYMPIC 1948 Tin Sign, Credit: Pinterest

The local MILO print ads however, claimed otherwise: in 1968, it ran ads proclaiming MILO as the choice of the 1968 Olympics. In 1972, it stole the thunder from OVALTINE by headlining the claim in its ads that MILO is the “official energy drink of the Munich Olympics”.

MILO OLYMPIC AD "Official Energy Drink",1972

There was an attempt by OVALTINE to wrest that title from MILO, as that same year, it ran an ad that showed the brand’s consistent presence in successive Olympics from 1932-1972.  But the strip ad was no match for the media juggernaut of Nestlé. And too bad as well—at that time, there really was no advertising regulatory board that the makers of OVALTINE could go tom to file a complaint (the PBA was founded only in 1974).

MILO 1968 MEXICO OLYMPICS AD,  "Choice of the '68 Olympics

OVALTINE let it go, gave up without further fight, and continued with variable thematic promises,  while MILO picked up the “Olympic Energy” title and went to town with that strong, single-minded message in successful campaigns that went on for years, featuring the country’s best and brightest Olympians in its ads. OVALTINE'S loss is MILO's biggest gain.