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Ken Fisher is what is the kind of person
I want to be when I grow up? Even though
he's younger than me.
>> No, you don't want to wear that.
>> It messes up my hair.
>> You don't have
>> I Oh god. No. Are you sure? No.
>> Oh my god. When I left with a ch I You
get into this part of town, everything
goes. I'm left West Hills with a chup. I
have better hair than him. I have like a
coma. I look like Adolf Hitler. A little
thing here. You better kick you. I get
here. Garnet. I'm telling you. They say
my people taking over.
>> Roco,
>> lick him. Lick him. Roco, lick him.
>> Now you make a bra.
He still plays
shabas. He doesn't have meat before. So
>> I'm not going to say who the client is.
I had a client who had a mag come four
times a week.
>> Okay.
>> And I was working on site and I used to
bring him because I had a friend who was
a special needs kid in Burough Park who
like Brock. These dogs are amazing
intuitively. They're very good. They
sense it. So the market chair comes over
me one day and rockless all day in my
office comes over he goes down
can glutton I go why not everyone you
know comes over get my go come back for
a couple days later come in couple
couple days he come back goes next he
get to I used to walk him I go he's
walking he asked me you know couple
I'm in a lane market I said open leash
>> take him for a walk
>> yeah open leash yeah and then no problem
and He he started walking rock and a
couple of days. I said, "Oh, let me get
you a picture." He goes, "Oh, no, no.
Why?" He goes, "My my
>> turned out he was in UTA over there.
Dog's a suit."
>> He says, "They learn he's younger than
me." He's like I'm He's probably in his
50s or he goes, "They taught us a dog is
a suit." There's an Sutin.
>> So, you know what's fascinating? And
I'll go back falling down steps because
when they fall it's like a black in my
I'm sorry just you can't get that image
out of your head now right the rest of
the day every time you go like a domino
every time you see steps then the
>> we just lost the whole tell about what
the whole Catholic audience
>> that's it no nuns are going to watch
>> Welcome back to another episode of the
What It Takes podcast where we interview
people who did what it takes and have
incredible stories to share to help you
learn how you can take it next level in
your career. Today on our today's guest
is a marketing and brand powerhouse. You
may know him as the creative mind behind
campaigns for Polaroid, Brother Zinc,
Arf Pets, and other iconic brands. He's
a strategist.
>> Are we allowed to say HBO? We shouldn't.
>> We could say HBO.
>> HBO.
>> HBO as well. He's a strategist, a
storyteller, and someone who understands
that today's consumers don't want to
think and they want to feel. His name is
Schlloy or Schlommo or Sam Ash, not the
music store. And that's literally his
private email address. And in this
episode, we're diving into how he's
turned creativity, data, and a little
bit of humor into marketing campaigns
that actually work, how he spots
opportunities that other people miss,
and the lessons he's learned from being
over for being in the industry for over
25 years.
>> Yeah.
>> Welcome to the podcast. Okay, first of
all, remind me you get a new private
email when this is over. Um, that aside,
>> his email address is not the music
[email protected]. You ever heard of Sam
Ash?
>> Sure.
>> Yeah, they're not business anymore.
>> I outlasted them, even though they sued
me, but that's for another time. Um, I
don't know who you introduced there, but
that guy was really imp. I just write
stuff and I just like figure out like,
wow, people are paying me to do this,
you know. God bless. when the person who
introduced us was our previous guest,
Aaron Zutler from Pop Insanity.
>> Now, he's the real deal.
>> Here's my question. When he was
describing you and then he sent me uh a
link to some of your work, I would have
thought of you as a very very good
copywriter,
but then I saw over your career doing
some research before the episode, I saw
your creative director.
>> Interesting.
>> I'm a writer. I I started out as a
writer. Anybody you start out as a
writer,
you you you you inherently get into the
strategy because you have to understand
what you're writing about. You have to
understand how the strategy got there. I
had the added plus or minus I look at
have coming from from yeshiva
background. So you know gamar everything
becomes gammorus.
>> You don't see video editors who are also
creatives becoming creative directors.
No,
>> you don't see
>> I don't think I I think nothing nothing
against
>> nothing against No, but in general like
the different um levels of creativity.
>> No, because we get the
>> graphic designers don't
>> No, no, they do. A lot. Yes. A lot of
you know because we get both writers and
art directors get involved on you know
in the beginning of the process. Video
guys get involved. It's already you know
this there's something there to shoot.
We get involved a lot of times when it's
a prototype,
>> right? when it's an idea on a page, what
are you going to name this? Well, who
you know, we get involved very often in
the abstract,
>> right?
>> Years ago, and I'm going to date myself
with this, but I don't care. Brother
launched something called a pouch
labeling machine.
>> Brother, the printing company. Okay.
>> Yes. I the brother pouch, which is
label. I launched that for them. I
literally my son
>> worked for an agency. You worked
>> a I was brothers at I was at that point
I was the writer of brother's agency,
but they gave that to me because I was
the geek and this was a whole new
product. This was a $100 labeler, but
until then, labelers were $10.
>> It was a dozen, but
>> and my my son, my middle son, Ellie, was
born at four in the morning. At seven in
the morning, I was on the set.
>> To shoot the commercial and I had to be
there because I wrote the commercial.
What?
>> Your wife killed you.
>> She was killing me during labor and I
kept asking the doctor, "Do you think
we'll be done by six?" because I got to
be the set. And my my boss literally
this is before this is before cell
phones were really a thing and you know
every call is a dollar a minute and my
but my boss has kept me on the phone put
a man to phone the doctor I want you
know like Bob you know but she kid was
born at four I was there now every and
the commercial
>> was you know created a category of by
targeting people who would spend $100 on
a label because we didn't sell we sold
>> say my I have to explain how we got
there because it all ties.
>> Um when we presented the Japanese
>> very big on technology, right? They're
very big on on how it does it a lot of
times more than what it does,
>> right? The Walkman was the footprint,
the smallness or the sound, right? It
wasn't right. You know, how they got to
the engineering. Um Americans were too
lazy. We like we like what's the
benefit. And so when the Japanese came
out with pouch, the brief we got was all
about the rationale why it's 100 because
the labels last forever, which they do.
I have a mail, one in my mailbox for 30
years. It's fine,
>> right?
>> 30 years. It's my winters, summers,
everything says hnok.
>> They were right because it's laminated.
The old style labels, the embossed ones.
He's fine. The old
>> No, I love him.
>> The old style.
>> I want to put him on my lap, but he
wouldn't.
>> No, he's you know the old style. We're
talking about my dog Rocky, by the way,
who you know, he's going to be
interviewed soon. Stay tuned. Um he's
speaking about Roy Kell of the plus and
minuses. Um, so when we presented pouch,
we had this based on this Japanese thing
of the laminate, you know, that was the
whole thing.
>> We had just moved here to Muny and I
took home machine and I started labeling
because our fuse box, nothing was
labeled and I realized because it makes
everything
>> he touches the little
>> the labeler the white and I realized,
wow, this is a really cool thing, you
know, looks good. It looks and it became
addictive.
And when we walked in to present, they
were expecting something about
technology and how it prints underneath
and and I walked in and I said my father
I said my father's a contractor before
that he was in the Holocaust. This was
my presentation and he was he you know
and despite that now remember it's all
Japanese. I'm talking about the Germans
you know that was a long time ago. Pearl
Harbor were cool. Um, we went out, you
know, and I said, "But he used to buy,
but he he buys German tools like Bosch
because people say, "Why why are you
buying a German drill, Joe? Why you
buying Bosch? You can get more." And he
goes, "Okay,
>> and I said in English,
>> you need to do uh English subtitles,
>> right?" So, um, the translation, which I
translate to Japanese as well, was, "I'm
not buying the drill, I'm buying the
holes."
>> Right?
>> And I said, "The mistake we're making
here is we're not selling the
technology. We were selling the labels,
>> right?
>> And I showed him the commercial idea,
which was a guy in a psychiatrist couch
talking to his psychologist about how
obsessed he is with labeling everything,
>> right?
>> And he had to despise his doctor have to
help him with his problem. And he turns
to the doctor and the doctor's covered
in labels. Goes, "What problem?" And he
did very again and I say this Aaron
Zucker turned me on to this every day.
You know you read you start looking back
at the things that happened in your life
and you realize like I wish I understood
this then because you know I was paying
my this commercial bro did very well but
it did yeah and I wrote it I came up
with it and I distract you know but at
the end of the day it's like I have no
right you know like you look at my
background there's nothing that says I
should be doing commercials you know
that ended up being on America's
funniest commercial and ends up creating
a category electronic labeling
>> was created by the brother pouch right
by people seeing this and it resonated
with them because they got it it was
But I shouldn't have been there. I, you
know, it's like that's why I I never
took anybody seriously. Took me
seriously because I, you know, host
because I I know I'm a clown. Fact, I'm
fooling you. That's on you, dude. Like I
said, have this the Japanese
are very big on protocol.
>> Did you act like this at work?
>> Yes.
>> Sorry, I didn't act.
>> I'm not acting. This is me.
>> This is you. Did you put on a
professional front?
>> Nope.
>> I'm the creative side. So I have I have
lead.
>> You're allowed to.
>> But when I first met before when I saw
>> day one you went up for a job interview.
You spoke
>> my first You see again you want to I got
my first job there used to be company
called CBS records record club 10
records for a penny when they still had
records and CDs you know back in the
day.
>> I got a job there because I used to hang
out with Morgan K and David and Shia
Menlitz and they had an office on Cand
Avenue. I go back with Chia since
elementary since elementary school and I
took that and I turned that into a music
marketing experience and I saw a job for
a temp, you know, at a at Columbia
Records. So, I had to go to this temp
agency.
>> How do you feel like working for in an
orange Jewish company? I feel like back
in the day was way more common than it
is today.
>> You have the opportunity to work in a
firm company.
>> No, they weren't firm. I I wanted to do
it for real,
>> right? That's what I thought like you
know but I walked in I walked into this
temp agency to give you a typing test on
those days it was mammish typewriter
>> right
>> I I Steve
>> how long ago was this
>> 1987 80 about 81 82
>> yeah early early 40 years ago
>> yeah I'm not funding the money CBS so I
don't care what
>> I couldn't I type like Stevie Wonder
blind person um so when now these when
you take the typing test they give you a
run through round like you can just get
familiar
>> and I looked around there was some
papers some people had to run through
rounds said looked at the one that
seemed to be the best and I handed that
in then they said okay go and I and when
she wasn't looking I pulled it out
switched it with that one gab
>> did you really do that
>> what were you like in elementary school
troublemaker
>> it's very different I I was in
elementary school with a fry waxman who
you know
>> really
>> yeah I and I was
>> Were you a troublemaker then class clown
or were you studious guy
>> no I wasn't good in sports I just
>> not sports when it comes Sports I would
made you in elementary school,
>> right?
>> I sucked at sports and I was, you know,
I always read. I was into pop culture
and reading. I went ashes. I went to
>> more of an introvert.
>> I was overt.
>> Aver not overt, not intro, just I did my
own thing. I was perfectly happy.
>> Really? How did this personality come
out?
>> What personality?
>> The the funny the filter.
>> Anger inward is depression. Anger
outward is with I'm like anger sideways.
So take away but the um the I got that's
how I got family with Chia men and
that's what I'm saying I got in
elementary school because he couldn't
play punch ball either. So we started
talking Jewish music we both like Jewish
music and that over the years about then
I got into electronics and because I
like music I got into electronics and
photography in high school. I used to
hang out in focus electronics in Burough
Park.
>> Really?
>> Yeah. My my big Yeah. My my big kamoy
trip was going to be peerless camera
store in the city. Okay.
>> And hanging out there. That was so when
I started when I decided I wanted to go
into this thing called advertising.
>> Yeah.
>> Which when I again this is you know this
is how because it comes up like how you
know I didn't go to school for this. I
got very hashem sent you know sent a lot
of very patient people to me but when I
was eight years old my my father was to
give me a lift to school and there was a
aftershave brand called Brute
>> right
>> which was terrible but it was by Fabra
so people thought it was good but so
Brute you know you know you knew it
because a kid you know but I I hear a
commercial with Battlefield I'm 8 years
old you're in the car you hear you hear
a war you know you're pay attention
>> and the guys start talking about it
being a battlefield is your cologne like
a b you wear one shampoo, one deodorant
to one and I'm listening Barut makes
everything so you can have one smell,
right? So I'm eight years old and I
remember this vividly that I and I spoke
to the guy who was at the agency. He's
trying to track down the commercial for
me. Yeah, he couldn't. But
>> but
>> I remember vividly at 8 years old saying
I I get that.
>> I get that's an idea, right? It's not
just, you know, at that point, you know,
there was a lot of great commercials,
but that one had a had a message because
I thought I wrote that I thought about,
you know, a medicine, you know, my my
father Old Spice and you write, you
know, wow,
>> everything one fragrance.
>> Yes. And that stuck with me. And then
years later,
>> I remember Brute.
>> Why? I remember Brute.
>> I started paying attention when I got
older because I always like writing. I I
this when I was in when I started
college there's a thing called Johnson
O' Conor. It's an aptitude test.
Aptitude is a hushim you're born for.
Not that you learn, right?
>> So Johnson Oconor to build their metrics
is giving it for free to all incoming
freshmen of Brooklyn College. It's like
a $2,000 test. Corporate America uses
it. They're still around.
>> And it's saying based on your aptitude,
this is what you'll be and enjoy doing.
>> I took it because it's free.
>> And you're Jewish.
>> I am. Okay. Sorry. That's why the nun
joke probably worked. Um, I went ahead,
I took the test and my parents were
because they, you know, at that point I
was going to be a dentist, a lawyer,
whatever. And I took the test and it
said came back journalism or writing
>> really
>> and I never saw the results again.
How do they know for give a kick up the
name Johnson Okconor? They don't know
Jews. Journalist. What's a journalist? A
Jew.
When did you make it
>> in in career? Yeah. When did you feel
like you made it?
>> I never feel like I make it.
>> When did your parents
>> No, they never did.
>> They never felt like you made it that
you were now No,
>> now you do cons my when I showed my
father that my first commercial that was
all mine because I when I was a junior
writer, I was involved in commercials
for Hasbro, but this was all mine,
>> right?
>> I showed it to my father
>> because my son was born. We were staying
by my parents because my mom uses his
burough park. remember and my father's
like you know I was showing him the
rough cut because that's how you did
because when you shoot on film which we
did you had to pick your takes right you
and then those you transfer it was a
process I'm showing my father and my
father goes
I said it's like 27 seconds because you
put available
>> he didn't get it
>> didn't get and advertising he he built
he was bar park's first high-end
contractor never had a sign in front any
of his houses. He did all the first
generation.
>> Were they Did you grow up wealthy?
>> Um
to find wealthy. No, I mean not. No.
>> You knew that your parents had
>> No, I had to shoplift
to get it was you know you have to wear
a big coat and whatever.
>> Wasn't easy especially in butcher shops.
But on stake you do what you have. No.
No. My father worked for a lot of Jews
but you couldn't tell.
>> This was a survivor generation. Right.
Right. Yin yin flaunted.
>> Um, now you're doing consulting
>> or W freelance.
>> Um, yes.
>> What um what's the most amount of money
you made as a W2
>> in a year?
>> Okay, I'm going to sound like a real
idiot now. You have to ask my wife.
>> I don't know.
>> Did you ever negotiate salaries when the
companies were looking to hire you?
>> No, I have Hashem realized I'm an idiot
and he b Hashem. No, I have I mean I
have a pricing thing, a project thing
>> now as a freelancer. when you worked for
>> when I worked for a company
>> or agencies
>> my I worked with well when I was at
Hasbro's agency I was a junior so there
was a scale and raise and review when I
switched to brother agency where I was
at for 20 some odd years
>> I had an amazing boss he understood we
you know we were the we weren't an
expense we you know we were an
investment
>> and you know so he just made sure I was
happy because nish is all you need at
certain points in my life I was going
through rough spells on personal things
financially related and he literally
bailed me out.
>> Wow.
>> You know,
>> and it was he came to me and there was
like and um did I tell you the twin
story or
>> so that's who he was. He understood that
we were that nephesh
>> right
>> in his creative department m he used to
tell me this people in my department he
goes if anyone you know give me a heads
up if they're worth it you know I had a
story with my house where we after we
had our twins we thought we sold a house
we didn't people for a year
we went to contract on in October after
him he called me to shab to back out for
a whole year and we had another house on
the line said I end up in the hospital
with chest pain don't ask
when my boss knew he was going because
he spotted me as a down payment for this
other house we were going to buy.
>> Wow.
>> And I told him what's going on. He says,
"Okay, when it works out, don't worry
about it." And I gave back obviously,
you know, but
>> Right.
>> He understood
he understood that it's just, you know,
you got to keep, you know, it's like,
you know, it's like you have a farm, you
keep your cows healthy,
>> right?
>> In agency. So um the the problem today
not problem is the wrong word the
challenge today is a lot of from pe a
lot of from people they don't look at
what people like myself do as an
investment were an expense they'd rather
not
>> and I noticed my father was almost the
same I couldn't I was I offered free
signs for him for his jobs he never
wanted it every other pitcher who got a
license by the way getting construction
license you know like really you can be
in a wheelchair deaf and get one
apparently but my my father was legit
and he he wouldn't be in you know fair
whoever needs to know they'll know
>> right
>> and you walked in some of the houses he
made some real dever you couldn't tell
from the outside
>> wow
>> they weren't you know I couldn't tell by
their cars there was one guy we do with
we found out he was nephew own 400
apartments in the city and used I see
him on the train in the morning and he
used to brag to me about the briefcase
he got from his bank for free
>> different world they they didn't have to
make a point
>> right
>> to today. It's a different
>> those people's kids feel like they need
to make a point. Those kids
>> because they're living because they're
living in the shadow, right?
>> That's why, you know, that's why I said
the best thing I did for my kid was
never being home.
>> Don't say that.
>> No, I I I
don't advise it today.
>> Parents should be home.
>> It's a different world today. And I talk
to my wife all the time how we would,
you know, the internet was just starting
and we had filters at home. We had a
system at home where every night I got a
print out of everything that was done on
the kids computers,
>> right? Right. But today with the kids,
it wasn't like today where screen, you
know, where devices
>> and look, my my grandson's going to be
prime minister in two weeks. He still
doesn't have a smartphone.
>> They don't need it till they don't need
a smartphone.
>> He's in Yavna, which isn't, you know,
school, right?
>> It's But but my my son and
daughter-in-law doesn't need it.
>> Doesn't need it. I think kids should get
phones just calling, not even text. When
>> I think kids should get pay phones,
>> pay and then allowance. So use up their
allowance. That's it. Yes.
>> No, not going to pay for them.
>> But um the but I my wife and I talk
about we thank God that you know we're
not raising kids today because the
challenges he hear challenges are we
have five boys and Barashem
the metric for for today is all your
kids are talking to you. You're okay.
>> Right. And Barash all my kids talk to me
or make believe it. No. No. But the the
the but when they were growing up I was
never home. I worked full-time. I was an
agency creative director. We had real,
you know, it was a 50 60 million $75
million agency depending. We got real,
you know,
>> agency.
>> Yes. On my own, I was doing my own
things. I did like the homeack. I did
the Buzz. I did Hamish accounts, which
my boss loved because it got us into
other places. I used to walk into like,
you know, commercial place. There's
always some from guy says, "Oh, I heard
you on." There was one day it was a
couple not for like couple of years I
did Howard Stern show in the morning for
his birthday because
>> isn't he west coast? No, he was
national. He was on now he's on. He was
always New York, you know, East Coast
base. On the morning I was on his
birthday show on on 923 Krock. At night
I was on Seagull for the homo and the
buzz beagle, you know,
>> that that was and this happened more
than once. So I was like that
>> but that dichotomy between that and
everything else I I wasn't you know
>> I should I should have would have could
have been not could I should have would
have been home more but but I always
made but what bash did my kids benefited
from mother ways you know they used to
be able to walk into the buzz and pick
out anything they wanted for khan
>> right
>> you know we used to you know I used you
know for the bar mitzvah my liquor
clients you know like not just the
liquor but other you know it was kids
you
So the gotchi is they did and quite
frankly you see what I'm like it's
probably better I wasn't around my kids
like you know things like restraining
orders come up but there was one point
where my my somebody in one of my kids
schools really thought we were separated
I never showed up to anything.
>> Oh my gosh.
>> I I I I don't understand. I I bathe my
kids almost every single day.
>> I bathe my kids and put them to bed
almost every single day.
>> I
>> supper homework.
>> Okay. I I realized I had to work also. I
was from I only took off my ammo once.
>> Why?
>> Why did I take it off that one time? Or
why
>> when I when I when I was looking for a
job, my karus and yes had a cousin who
was a BBDNO which was Pepsi, you know,
BBDNO like BBN one the big you know now
they're all
>> creative agencies. Okay.
>> Yeah. BB knows Apple Pepsi. Okay.
>> I had a cousin who worked on accounts.
He got me an interview.
>> I I had a starter portfolio. The guy who
did it for me did go to Pratt. So it it
was presentable, but I I you know,
>> I walked in wearing a blue pinstripe
suit, a red tie, white shirt. Pretty
much how he was dressed. I think I was
wearing black shoes. He was wearing my
penny lovers. Otherwise, I was wearing a
yam. No, blame black leather. Now
>> now I go with stuff like this. Content's
under pressure. I have a whole bunch.
Made in Japan contents under pressure,
you know, because it's cool. People like
it with their name. I don't want people
to know my name. Let them see. For the
people listening and not watching, he's
talking about his couple
>> or yarmoka depending where you depending
where you're listening. I'll just
subtitle in nonaredish [laughter] in
English or those. Okay. So, yes, I'm
wearing a couple. No. Anyway, but I went
ahead and I uh I I'm sitting across from
this guy who he you know he also had a
Jewish last more Jewish last name than
Ash.
>> I'm sitting across from him and he
basically looks at me. He looks at the
work. He says he could see, you know,
but he says somebody who looks the way
you do is going to have a problem in
this business, right? And I'm like, am I
fat? I I I was so dense. I was remember
I was I I went to yeshiva during the
day. I went to college at Brooklyn
College at night. I was name during day
by girls, you know, that was my world.
And I grew up in Bor Park. I I whatever
I knew about pop culture, I knew it was
Kalakad. And here we are. and he
disguises and then it dawned on me it's
the ama
>> right
>> and I and I said at that point look I
I'm I'm going to whatever I'm going to
give up for this it's not I'm not I'm
not moving on that
>> right
>> and I and over and I gave up with kids
you know all but I I only took up my ama
once for pittney bows which is
>> pitney bows huh
>> pitney bows we we launched their a
division for them
>> very cool
>> and I present when I went and present
the first time I didn't wear my
>> right
>> because it was pittney bows Connecticut
A and we got the account. The second
meeting we came back start took the idea
and the head guy come pulls me over and
he goes Sam and he literally points to
he wasn't Jew. He goes what's that? I
said wait goes were you wearing that
last time? Like he was
>> he made a comment.
>> And I said and I said no. Said you
forget I said no. I said, I don't, you
know, I said the first, I said, it's
like the first date, you know. I found
some people judge you by it
>> as opposed to I like being judged by
what's underneath it. It's, you know,
it's it's
>> it's who I am more than what I, you
know, I really, he got the message,
though, you know, right?
>> Because there's a whole routine on Mel
Brooks has an album 2000-y old man has a
whole dream about Connecticut,
Connecticut. It's about wasps and Jews.
He goes, "Oh, he's from Connecticut."
And it's an inside joke in the 60s. So,
I just kind of pivoted to that because
it changed the subject, but he got the
message. And then we were doing these
commercials for them, but we shot in
Seattle. And he was the one that called
me a dozen times to make sure everything
was covered with my kosher poop.
>> Wow.
>> He was the one that he just because he
was, you know, then when we got friendly
and I explained to him
he, you know, he took it he took it to
heart and he, you know, when we shot in
Seattle, you ever hear of the television
show Cheers?
>> No.
>> It was very popular. So one of the
characters is a mailman. So we hired him
for Pittney Bose
>> because obvious reasons
>> and
>> for those people for those people who
don't know what Pittney Bose is they are
a mailing
>> they any if you see a postage meter and
it's an amazing business model they have
because you don't buy post you have to
rent it from them because they rent it
from the government.
>> So we launched a home for small business
because that was the target because
people were pivoting.
>> So we we shot I got
>> mailing machines. Yeah. People will mail
out hundreds of thousands of pieces of
mail every single day. You run an
envelope through the machine, it puts a
stamp on it stack. Yeah. Or and you put
a message. So when we got this guy, John
Ratzenberger,
>> I was in touch with him and he was very
helpful because he was getting into
directing, whatever.
>> And then at one point I said, so you
know, it was like a month before, six
weeks before. I said, "So where do you
want to stay in the Marriott or or the
um downtown the inter?" And he goes, "I
thought you guys are coming here,
>> right?" And
>> I thought he was joking. We're paying
him 250 grand for a week's worth of
work. something 150 250 don't hold me to
the number
>> $1,000
>> 150 or 250 don't hold me to the number
with like a long
>> over $100,000
>> yes for a week's worth of work
>> plus all expenses and he he's saying oh
and I and he know what he told me says I
did cheers for 10 years I don't like
traveling I miss my family he basically
said he had a family and because he was
shooting in LA lived in Seattle
>> I go to Pittney Bose and I said we got a
problem we because it was so close to a
shoot he couldn't get good everyone good
is booked and we gave him the number
>> and they said okay
>> here's what it is when I got he was
ready to walk and he wasn't being a jerk
he says use the guy from Seinfeld use
the mailman guy from Seinfeld
>> I hope you're enjoying today's podcast
today's episode is sponsored by
Blackbird Recruiting
>> Chad GPT what do you think about
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>> Blackbird Recruiting the team that finds
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>> You heard it here first. Enjoy the rest
of the episode.
>> Just for reference of the people
watching, you can't see this under the
table. The dog Rocco laid down. I did
not realize that it's not the carpet for
a second.
He's trying to tell me the dog needs a
haircut. I was He's getting one before a
Yontiff. I'm making it into a winter
stry. Okay. Okay. We just took a dog
break. I'm sorry. We're back slate. Take
two.
>> I I'm sitting with He used to keep me
company for dinner because I had my
kosher meals at the hotel.
>> Okay.
>> And we were talking about the whole
thing with a mixup with No. And I said,
"Let me ask you a question. How much
money does one need to turn down 150
grand per week's worth of work, all
expenses paid? How much? What's I know
>> how much do you need to have in the
bank?"
>> You know what he told me? Sam, it's not
a number. It's so we'll change your
life.
>> Right?
>> Said there's no number, dude. He goes,
"Shang God Cheers worked very well." And
he was doing Toy Story then. He just
started Toy Story. And he said, "It
wasn't going to change my life. Missing
my kids would,
>> right?"
>> I said, and I and I and I heard this. I
said, "You're not Jewish, are you?"
>> Okay, I'll talk. Let's let's try to
knock this out. Yeah.
>> Another five or 10 minutes. This I have
a recruiting agency called Blackbird
Recruiting.
>> We'll talk about that later.
>> Um, and it's not about me, it's about
you. But I started this podcast as a
tool to help people learn how they can
level up their careers.
>> You've worked in agent creative
agencies. You've worked from the
clients.
>> You want stuff to help your to help the
hirers or the
>> hire the employees. If someone wants to
build a career in creative,
>> can I be honest?
>> Yeah. Don't say don't do it. Uh
>> no. I
building career in first what passes for
creative today.
>> How much could someone make? do like
looking back at your like you know
>> I I've been found there are from sites
there's a guy schmilting thing called
BAM which is like a favor he I know him
for years a very sweet guy
how much people make a lot a lot more
money
doing what I do there's people very mak
there yel
>> yiddishelt in in our world
>> but you didn't really work no
specifically in the Jewish market
>> no but but I but I was like the go-to
guy like when heshy beagelizing who
owned the buzz launched gia which is now
the number one air fryer brand in the
country. I spent three days with him in
the city, you know, concepting. I came
up with the name, the branding, that
kind that kind of stuff. Okay, Rocky got
the interview. I'll sit it out now. No,
it's okay. Like, I'm having it.
>> You got pictures of this. This is cool.
No, but I guys like Heshi.
>> Yeah.
>> That's why I I know him since he had
Eagle and Burough Park because we're
kind of cut saying he his vision was
never limited to 13th Avenue or Avenue
J. His vision was always and even when
he started and I heard this from people
in the media who spoke to him and they
saw he had engineering degrees well he
knew about product
>> really
>> it was he most of and that's that's
what's missing today everything today
the this whole AI algorithms SEO
that's designed to prevent a brand from
happening because the the platforms like
Amazon don't want a brand they want to
be the king of the hill if you're a
brand and that's why the guys at CNA
were smart years ago and they got
Polaroid because they realize this um
you know this the CNDA right they
realize that only Amazon is the future
>> but the real future is to own a name
>> right brand
>> right like it's like difference between
getting an apartment in a good
neighborhood and buying a house there
>> right
>> right and Kim Fisher also with Sterling
these guys realize he built his name on
shop NBC migrating to Amazon you know
this learning but but if you have a name
Amazon doesn't sit there from anybody
but they think twice if you're a game
and studies have been done. There's a
lot less brands that have come to market
since you know the Amazons of the world
and and the reason I became the go-to
guy because I was I'm that old. I was
there when Staples started and and the
superstore started and and I remember
back then it was saying who needs an
office supply store,
>> right?
>> Who who needs 50 printers? Whatever.
>> Are they still going to be around in 10
years? Staples every time I walk into
the store it's more and more empty. It's
not, you know,
>> the the PL the the vertical will be
around will be around is a physical I
probably a lot less locations. I see I
see it going like popup. I see like
supermarkets or you know whatever
whatever platform still
demands a a tactile retail presence,
right?
>> I see Staples opening popups there.
>> But the the the do I think the plat I
but that was there when these stores
started,
>> right?
>> And and now remember it's like I
understood like Sam Ash, you know, a
music store needed its own thing.
>> Did you ever work with them?
>> They sued me, but they
>> I guess not.
>> No, no, I I knew them from trade shows,
>> right?
>> But one year I got a lawsuit with
Illusion of Trademarks. My website is
also not the music store.
>> Oh,
>> and but it was a nuisance suit.
>> How was the the SEO on it?
>> Non-existent.
>> I I I'm I'm at a weird point. Either
people see my stuff, they don't believe
I did it because I'm a guy from Bark.
how to get to HBO and all this stuff.
>> Aaron once told me a story. I don't know
if he told you. He when he mentioned my
name somebody thought it was a Baltua.
>> That guy can't be from
>> where Bach did you grow up?
>> 5 My mother still was 52nd 14th and 15th
>> 47 15th and 16th.
>> There's a big sign last for five miles.
[snorts]
You know on Pes she has a big sign we
have the Brooks you know
>> that's not true.
>> No it's not. But she refused to put up
the sign going a lot to Bethl.
>> Huh? Oh, Ben see
him. He was a buddy. He was I just saw
him last summer,
>> right?
>> Ben
>> Shulam Leur is now gonna be um
>> really
>> I don't think I think Russ
>> so Benian my kids we had in this home
hotel and Ben was invited as a guest. My
father was show like you can have him
mused
>> so next thing I know Ben comes over and
he goes my father's like a he's a
partisan kills first Nazi at 14. He
didn't argue with him.
>> He killed a Nazi at 14. He
>> was a Bellski partisan. Yeah.
>> He walks over to me. He goes, "Your
father came over and told me I'm
adopting Musf. I'm not telling him no."
[laughter]
>> Like he knew my father from Barb, you
know, around,
>> right?
>> And I told him, "Okay, but I said, but
do me a favor. This it's my, you know,
so was he Musf did like two seconds of
>> and plow through Musf
>> and you know, my father was happy. I've
been seen, you know, but but Benin was
he's he was a special person. And he was
you know his father also right above Ben
is also an expert in shing venison
>> really used to go up to music on yes
deer he's called on the way back he
always stop and drops some off
>> really yeah what does it taste like it's
good
>> it's kind of like ve with an attitude
>> I'm serious that is isn't venison ve
>> no
>> what's ve
>> ve is like calf or something
>> I thought ve is deer venison
>> no interesting
>> no venison is they're both similar
because it's a muscular it's a gier meat
eat. But it was more honestly to to me
it was more about saying, "Oh my god,
you know,
>> it's cool."
>> Yeah. Like um my kids are like foodies.
To me it's like well to to me it's all
packaging.
>> You know it's like after I go out these
these these nicer places I can't have
steak. I can make that at home. I'll
have six appetizers and and the
>> right
>> because all these places hang their hats
on the steak. Right.
>> Higher side's cool. you know, some
places, you know, overall
I I I I I'm the guy who who's supposed
to make you drop all the money on on
that.
>> Before we finish, I want to ask you two
questions.
>> If Tuesday,
>> um
>> this ain't going to make it on the air.
I see you already.
>> This is just like a personal fun.
>> The first question is if someone um
if someone wants to get into a career in
creative, wants to build a career in
creative, where should they start in the
front belt? Whoever will take him,
>> whoever just take a job even for free as
an intern.
>> Honestly, yeah. I started I I this the
only thing I got from this guy be do you
know I got the advice because we were
talking so I was into electronics. He
goes look if you're going to go up
against other everyone's coming in
package good portfolios which I had I
had like toothp
like electronics niche yourself.
>> Right. That was the only thing and and
that was my only takeaway of that Yamaka
and I I I did like electronics and I
walked out and I and I my after the CBS
Columbia Record Club I ended up in PC
magazine if Davis Publishing because it
was the start of computer revolution.
For those of you that know anything
about computers, my first ad had the
word 8 megahertz and blazing fast in the
same sentence. Now my nickel $6 Casio
watch is faster than that. Right.
>> I was there being
>> I was there I remember when they brought
Windows in 60 discs when they brought to
demo Windows and Davis but I at that
point I I niche yourself. So if you can
niche yourself you can if you want to
get into this you have to be able to not
just talk to talk. You have to be able
to walk to walk. You can say oh I like
watches I like this. I like food. But
you have to walk in with a depth of
knowledge that can be conversant in it
that shows whoever you can bring
something to the table. I'm not just
saying no. And that's the other problem
with today. Today people consider them a
maven an expert because we give a thumbs
up on somebody's social media.
>> Right.
>> Right. That makes you a maven to when we
want to become a we have to like
Harvard. You want to get into jazz. We
have to listen to jazz. You want to get
into drums. You have to listen to Steve.
You have to gadle. But you know today
you want to say you're into jazz. You
click on some schmetric thing and
showing you're into. So the level of
histadus is non-existent,
>> right? And that gets compounded by all
the stuff people think AI and SEO, those
are tools. They're not talent. And
people start, thank God, people starting
to realize that that that AI is it's a
great tool, but there's a is it is it?
No. It'll take all the out there and and
give you something that's that's a a
composite, but it's not going to give
you a thoroughly original. It can't,
>> right?
>> Can God still gave that to us, right?
Right. And no back seats,
>> right?
>> But it's level to to to be to take from
there.
>> I I can still see when somebody send me
an AI letter.
>> For sure.
>> I can still see every time it gets to
me.
>> Um my second question is
>> Oh, you remember the second one. He
doesn't have ADD.
>> Um
>> I was trying to
>> first read these ads that we ran. I'll
tell you what was the concept behind it.
Go right. There's it's five ads. So
press the right arrow.
>> Okay. I don't want to I don't want to
you know
>> the we ran these like uh three or four
years ago graduation season.
>> How does it set you apart?
>> Oh, we'll get there.
>> No, no. Okay.
>> Press the right arrow.
>> Five different variations. You want to
read it out loud for the listeners?
>> Yes. It's probably a good idea.
>> Okay. Let me start with the beginning.
>> Add one.
>> Add. Okay. These are all They're being
shown as billboards.
>> It didn't go on billboards.
>> Yeah. But it's a nice presentation. The
first one says it's called. Now the
headline I guess is in yellow but it's
all the same point size and the headline
for the first one is it's called a job.
And then the subhead underneath is it's
what you do when your school can no
longer babysit you. Um next one in the
series is it's a little longer headline.
Graduation means your parents stop
giving you money and start giving you
advice. That that's the payoff. The next
one is as long as you know the
Pythagorian theorem, you're qualified
for anything.
I try so hard. The next one is will make
your end gert to stop asking what you're
doing with your life.
>> If you hate your teachers, try a boss.
>> You don't want me to do this on the air,
do you?
>> Okay. Yeah. Yeah.
>> So,
>> please don't set you apart.
>> So, hold on. My I was very personable
and real.
>> And this doesn't come across there
either. this um I there was no con I've
never seen any paper ads that were just
everything's too corporaty or too safe.
>> There's no insight and
>> there's no insight. That's true. Okay,
fine. I want something funny. Really
funny.
>> You want something? You want something
funny?
>> What?
>> Off the top of my head.
>> Yes.
>> But it's also a message.
>> Okay.
>> Assuming most of the people you place
stay placed, right? You know, our our um
87% of our our people go nowhere when
>> [laughter]
>> Good. I'm I'm I'm I'm a potent I'm a
looking for a job that tells me you know
you're a good shot.
>> That's probably something though for
employers.
>> No, it's for both,
>> right? It could work for both.
>> It's for both. And I'm an employer. It
It tells me you know how you know what
I'm looking for. You understand.
>> Was that a sneeze?
>> Yes.
>> Scared me.
>> It's your cologne. Um Kougal 15. Don't
use it. Um and he has the Nanga Brooks
version. That's why. The kidney works
fine. Um the these um honestly these I
apologize whoever did these.
>> No. So here's my question. I'm leading
this is leading into my question. I feel
like a lot of Jewish marketing is
playing it very safe. If you look in the
communic local paper ads
>> I do I asked my wife. I I can't
>> I I take those things apart.
>> You know we we used to we used we used
to play a game. What do we think a great
ad is? And we boiled it down to one
thing. You look at I could never think
of that. Wow.
>> So here's my question. And it usually
starts with the under the foundation of
the what was the what was the strategy
what was the brief
>> what got you to these thoughts which by
the way there is no continuity really in
these thoughts you know
>> so here's my question what is Jewish
marketing missing that if they started
focusing on this or that
>> get me in tr you know something what's
missing
>> in two minutes because we really have to
finish
>> the 90 there the certain guys that have
it on on the agency and this
belongs on go he gets it he understands
the word strategy Y he doesn't just use
it to impress people.
>> Um Ellie Calfman who's an art director
gets it. Art an art director is somebody
who can take a visual a headline and
copy and make one plus one plus one you
will fly right we are the from market
and please pay this is for your
listeners don't want to go into this the
from market is the last great bastion of
print advertising go don't need print
anymore
>> they don't yeah print doesn't work
>> print is what put all the great agencies
on the map Volkswagen was made by print
Avis car rental was made by print lal
was made by print and DDB learn the
history of this industry learn who to
get more because we're one of the last
places that godless of thinking is
applicable because we have Shabas, we
have Jontiff where to the best of my
knowledge nobody's come up with a head
for an iPad
>> and yeah and there's still more print
publications coming out weekly
>> 100% but we are the last bastion of of
of print and and and we're not using it
I can't look at I can't these magazines
I don't see and they're exceptions the
guys who are doing um much called Mar
they have them but they're bright spots
but I It's more cool line. What's the
real thought?
>> So, if a company's looking to reach out
to a creative agency because if they
have this idea, they don't know how to
execute or imple what should they look
for when talking to agencies? How how
should they find the right one?
>> I tell I tell clients
>> and then we'll finish.
>> I tell this is I learned this from my
boss. When you're looking for an agency,
look look at their work and see if you
recognize any of it before you that that
that worked on you. see if if you know
if anything you saw their ads and that's
the reason you bought a certain product
you know that
>> so look at the ads that you like and
>> look at their work
and see what it worked for you because
if you're if you're on the level of
looking for an agency you're more
cynical than the average reader
>> right
>> I'm cynical because I'm coming from a
different place a guy who owns a
business is cynical because to him you
know every but if you look at the work
saying oh I remember that that's why I
got the suit that's why I got these
shoes whatever that's why I went to
>> right
>> so at least you're talking to a place
that that has a kakira
>> right
>> you know certain People get it. Like I
do stuff this guy go. I do stuff for
Klein's ice cream. They get it. They get
they get that they have a brand. They
get, you know, they understand what what
they're selling. That's more than ice
cream,
>> right?
>> You don't have that a lot from, you
know, that's why you walk in. When I was
growing up in the bar park I grew up in,
you couldn't fill a 30 40,000 square
foot supermarket,
>> right?
>> I launched I launched Pomegranate,
Evergreen, and um Rockland Kosher
rebrand. I did all three of them
>> and every one of them fascinated me
more. Pomegran blew me away because what
what a bander had there was so and then
not just me by the way. He was getting
people down from Whole Food. He was
getting like the re I knew some of the
distributors from the mainstream he and
then he set the stage for the evergreen
everyone else.
>> But those things weren't possible when I
was a kid. You was wounds around when
you were growing up in Barbar.
>> That's what right age is now. where
>> on 13th to 52nd Solomon PL across no
>> W bounds was a supermarket kosher was
one there's all your products right but
to open up a store like in you know a
rock kosher but you know everything is
kosher that didn't exist that's you know
and and that's why so many areas have
gotten like sideways is like the wine
business has gotten a lot because you
know the goish business hey we get a
kosher certification these guys drink
wine every week right
>> but it's not so simple we're loyal to
our you know not just because you're
coming try it. You know, it has to be
Mortyn. It's not just a Heshire. And
there's been a lot of wakeup calls. And
that's why the Herszogs are smart and
the guys, you know, at um the guys who
do uh what's what's their name? Dalton
is smart.
>> And he's tapping his watch, ladies and
gentlemen. That means he wants to play
with Rocky. So,
>> no, no, we got to wrap up because I have
to run.
>> Oh, okay. He has to take his kids to the
dentist. That's what he means by
running.
>> Yeah.
>> And that's because he's a good parent,
unlike me.
>> I'm happy my kids still talk to me.
Well, they don't really, but they text.
They don't really text either. I got a
message was through my wife every so
often. I really don't.
>> Okay, let's wrap up.
>> Okay, thank you for putting up with me.
>> Thank you so much for joining us on the
episode. Let me just do a quick after
this is if you get any restraining
orders, you can ignore them. Most of
them, maybe not. Call me. Okay. And if
the FBI with the most wanted list,
that's a better than
>> Okay, fine. Thank you for joining us on
today's episode. I really hope you
enjoyed. Make sure to subscribe on
YouTube and I'll see you next time.
>> What he said.