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View Full Version : 'Be Like Mike' to re-air during ASG



The_Pharcyde
02-12-2015, 04:58 PM
https://www.youtube.com/embed/0r5Jf_ZU9eA


Twenty-three years, appropriately, after the "Be Like Mike" jingle was the song in every young sports fan's head, Gatorade is bringing it back for the brand's 50th anniversary.

The ad, which first ran in the late summer of 1991 after the Chicago Bulls won their first of six titles, will run again, after being digitally remastered, on the All-Star broadcasts this weekend.

"The return of Gatorade's iconic 'Be Like Mike' commercial during NBA All-Star Weekend is the perfect complement to our brand's continued 50th anniversary celebration in 2015," Gatorade's chief marketing officer Morgan Flatley said in a statement. "What better way to celebrate our first athlete spokesman, Michael Jordan; the NBA, one of Gatorade's longest tenured partners; and the national revival of one of MJ's favorite Gatorade flavors, Citrus Cooler."

[+] EnlargeMichael Jordan
AP Photo/Reed Saxon
Gatorade's "Be Like Mike" ad campaign first aired in late summer of 1991, after Michael Jordan and the Bulls won their first of six titles.
The commercial features a 29-year-old Michael Jordan playing with kids with Gatorade's original lyrics and catchy tune in the background.

The story behind how the commercial was conceived is one of advertising lore.

After Jordan's agent David Falk negotiated a 10-year, $13.5 million deal for his client, the pressure was on the sports-drink titan to welcome its first official athlete partner with a bang.

Gatorade had originally planned to run a spot in which a kid from Yugoslavia was writing a letter to Jordan, but at the last minute Gatorade's ad firm at the time, Bayer Bess Vanderwarker, brought in its creative chief Bernie Pitzel to take a final shot.

He was given 72 hours to come up with an idea and present it to Gatorade executives.

During that time, Pitzel sat down to watch Disney's recreation of "The Jungle Book" with one of his sons. That's when he heard the song "I Wanna Be Like You."

"I knew a million people wanted to be like Mike," Pitzel told me 10 years ago in my book chronicling Gatorade's history called "First In Thirst."

But Disney officials wanted $350,000 to use the song for a five-week run. So Pitzel wrote the lyrics from scratch and brought in songwriters Ira Antelis and Steve Shafer to make it sound good.

"The dunking made him a god, and what we were trying to do was humanize him and bring him down to a level to make him more acceptable," said Pitzel, whose then-13-year-old son was the boy in the spot who unsuccessfully tried to dribble through his legs.

When Gatorade officials were presented with the spot, they knew this was the one. People just had to get used to calling him Mike, which he hadn't been called much since coming to the NBA.

But Jordan didn't have a problem with it.

"You can call me Mike, Michael or Air," he told a member of the press who saw the spot for the first time at an unveiling in August 1991. "I'll get used to it."

The spot played in movie theaters, and the music was such a hit that it ran on radio stations. Gatorade even made the single available and sold 100,000 copies at $4.95 each.

"If we had used 'The Jungle Book,' the advertisement would have been forgotten," Antelis said in "First In Thirst." "Instead, we generated a piece of music that we could own that the world could identify with Gatorade."

Gatorade was invented by four doctors at the University of Florida in 1965. They have made more than $600 million for the trust that takes a piece of Gatorade's royalties and nearly $250 million for the University of Florida.

cool to see, one of the great commercials of all time
definitely added to the Jordan "mythology" and overrated him on the court
sheesh these MJ stans underestimate the power of Gatorade in his career
1/9

http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/12314808/michael-jordan-mike-reairing-all-star-weekend-celebrate-gatorade-50th-anniversary

Springsteen
02-12-2015, 06:28 PM
It's kinda depressing seeing these happy-go-lucky commercials of him now that we all know how much of an asshole he was/is.

andgar923
02-12-2015, 06:32 PM
Twenty-three years, appropriately, after the "Be Like Mike" jingle was the song in every young sports fan's head

Shit, Im old

andgar923
02-12-2015, 06:34 PM
It's kinda depressing seeing these happy-go-lucky commercials of him now that we all know how much of an asshole he was/is.

Why can't people have multiple sides to them? :confusedshrug:

People can be assholes and be a 'happy-go-lucky' person as well.

bdreason
02-12-2015, 06:47 PM
Sometimes I dream
That he is me
You have to see that's how I dream to be
I dream I move
I dream I groove
Like Mike
If I could be like Mike

sportjames23
02-12-2015, 06:58 PM
It's kinda depressing seeing these happy-go-lucky commercials of him now that we all know how much of an asshole he was/is.


I'm pretty sure you ain't all sunshine and roses all the time.

And Mike's ways were known before he retired the first time. Unless you're not familiar with a little book called The Jordan Rules, which came out at the end of 1991.

I swear, some of these ****ing kids today act like a celebrity has to be a saint instead of an infallible person like the rest of us.

Knicksfever2010
02-12-2015, 11:10 PM
Why can't people have multiple sides to them? :confusedshrug:

People can be assholes and be a 'happy-go-lucky' person as well.

They sure can and its called being "bipolar"

Beastmode88
02-12-2015, 11:14 PM
Be Like Lebron aired a while back. I'm surprised they dont re-air that during that ASG. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBVBfM4ZWqQ