November 7, 2007

No Longer a Key Demographic

The other day I was filling out some form, and I got to the section where they list what age group you are in. Much to my chagrin, I now fall in the 41-55 category. When the hell did that happen? Wasn't I just buying Boomtown Rats and Clash albums just the other day? Or was it really 25 years ago? I used to get so excited when I'd come home with a new album. You never know what lay inside.....lyrics, a poster maybe? Now I find myself getting excited when we get stuff for the house. Like the new sinks and faucets we got for upstairs in October. For a week I kept saying, "I LOVE my new kitchen sink!" What the hell happened to me?


It was just in the news last week that the first of the baby boomers are collecting Social Security!! How did time fly by so quickly? Why don't boomer opinions matter any more? How come no one cares about what we have to say? Why do I find myself sounding like my mom, "What is wrong with these stupid kids today and that gawd awful music they listen to? It's nothing but noise!" You know why? Because boomers are no longer a key demographic. No one cares about us anymore. We're a bunch of aging hippies whose kids....and grandkids....just pat us on the head patronizingly when we talk about the good ol' days of protests and free concerts in the park. Sort of like we did with our parents who would wax nostalgic about jitterbugging to the big bands or how they managed to survive the Great Depression.


Anyways, Brian and I approach our television-watching from a totally different perspective than most people. It's sort of a science with us. We like to see what kinds of commercials run during some shows, just to see the demographics that the advertisers are trying to reach. Like if you are home sick and watching TV, all the ads will be for vocational schools & personal injury attorneys, because the people that are most likely at home watching TV are people out of work for one reason or another.


So we were watching TV the other night, and this commercial comes on for some whole grain cereal. Total maybe. Can't remember the product. The graphics are all psychedelic and Peter Max'ian and the music being used is Canned Heat's "On The Road Again", a staple 1960's tune. Brian's like, "Oh wow maaaan, check out the trippy commercial!" Unfortunately the first thing that came to my mind is OMG! They are peddling whole grain cereal to aging hippies to keep them regular in their old age, by using groovy music and graphics!!! Was the summer of love really 40 years ago? Cadillac has also been trying to tempt us aging baby boomers by using Led Zeppelin music for the past 2 years. Let's face it, the only people who buy Caddies and Lincolns are old. In fact, many of the commercials targeted at us doddering old fogies use "our music", because people our age are currently making the commercials.

But I swear, I will have to smash my TV if I ever see a laxative commercial using "Shake Your Booty".

11 comments:

  1. *lol*
    i'm sorry. your post had a serious core, but your last statements just made me laugh.
    i think humour is the only way to take all that. we'd be lost if we couldn't laugh about it anymore. ;)

    ReplyDelete
  2. True story Tamara! :D

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous2:49 PM

    I have decided it's the world around me that's getting old, not ME ;0)

    ReplyDelete
  4. What I hate is being invisible. Middle-aged women don't exist in some people's universe. Pity for them that I'm so vocal they can't actually ignore me for long. They get the full benefit of my sarcasm.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous4:44 PM

    What I don't get is why it seems so jarring when we hear that kind of music on commercials. Demographically, it makes sense. But in reality, it's just so offensive! Is that hypocritical?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous4:45 PM

    this post had me cracking up;
    there's a commercial on the
    radio about something or other
    being hard, so one girl asks,
    what men, and the other replies
    no, going to the toilet or
    something like that...
    what the hell is that all
    about??? like we need to know
    she's constipated... LOL

    I wish I was in the same age
    category, but I had a birthday
    (or two) since

    girls, your comments crack me up
    too...

    when I first started blogging
    someone wrote a post about the
    chance of winning $1m but dying
    at 50, so would you take it or
    leave it... the answers were
    amazing. I was one of the few
    who would've taken the money,
    but they never knew how old I was

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous5:24 PM

    I was actually happy to hear Target use "New Toy" last year. It was just good memories. I loved hearing the Jam in a car ad- what the Jam? On tv? I even like the Honda one with ELO. But I agree only old people buy Caddies and Lincolns and I don't care how much money I have- nothing will make me ever love anything more than my eco-friendly hybrid. (It's a good thing I love it so- I'll be making payments till I'm in the nobody tries to sell you anything demographic!)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Yes, I was pretty stoked when New Toy was used, and the Jam as well...it just surprised me.

    So does this mean in 20 years all the commercials will feature hip hop/rap music? If so, I might have to quit watching TV.

    ReplyDelete
  9. noooo! in 20 years they'll be playing commercials w/ new kids on the block! (they don't actually classify as hip hop do they?)

    ReplyDelete
  10. *lol* nah, i don't think the nkotb ever classify as hip hop. that's almost like saying that vanilla ice is a real rapper... ;)

    ReplyDelete
  11. Diane, I'm with you,babe!
    Though I understand, Jojo, what you're saying...LOL....I think of myself as timeless.

    But that doesn't help when a 19 year old calls me "Aunty" !!!AAARRGGHHH!!!

    ReplyDelete