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New Apple Clones
Slate ^ | August 4, 2003, at 7:19 AM PT | Rob Walker

Posted on 08/04/2003 3:46:55 PM PDT by Nachum

When Apple launched its online iTunes music store not long ago, it promoted the new service with a set of distinctive ads. The spots (see them here) each featured an individual, against a white background, listening via headphones to an iPod portable music player and singing along to a favorite song. We couldn't hear the song, of course—just the person, singing a cappella, with or without musical ability. You could love these ads or be driven to distraction by them, but they stood out.

More recently another music-download service has emerged, BuyMusic.com, with its own commercials. (See them here and here.) In those spots, individuals wearing portable digital music players with headphones sing along to music the viewer cannot hear, against a plain white background. In other words, they're basically the same ads. (The only thing they seem to have overlooked is calling their service BuyTunes, to get the rhyme.)

This is odd. So much so that I kept re-watching the BuyMusic ads to try and figure out what I was missing. Is there a hidden critique here? A satire? Not really. They're just knockoffs. It's as if, by borrowing the look and feel of Apple's ads, BuyMusic is explicitly interested in underscoring that its service is a copycat. Why?

Presumably the answer can be found in a phrase the pops up on screen partway through the BuyMusic ads—"Music Downloads for the Rest of Us." The great weakness of Apple's service right now is that it works only for Mac users who are running the OSX operating system. This is a relatively small number of people. Apple is supposed to release a PC-compatible version before too long, but in the meantime, "the rest of us" is a large market.

Actually that bit about making something "for the rest of us" is also borrowed (intentionally or not) from Apple, which pushed iMacs with the same phrase. In this case it seems that BuyMusic is employing it in a vaguely populist way that suggests only some sort of privileged elitist would own a Mac.

The Apple ads each focus on a single individual—such as a boomerish-looking guy singing "My Generation," or a young woman singing Pink's hit "Get This Party Stared," and sort of charmingly messing up the lyrics at the end. The BuyMusic spots each cut back and forth among several people (the masses, I guess) singing the same song—"Rapper's Delight" in one ad, "Superfreak" in the other. And instead of charm, there's a tendency to play for low-comedy laughs. An overweight woman and a central-casting middle-aged square are among those dropping lines from "Rapper's Delight." Another Clark Kent whitey gets to sing "She's super-freaky" in the other ad, which also inexplicably includes a man who apparently is supposed to be a Hasidic Jew and who has a very bad singing voice.

The attempted humor is probably meant to make BuyMusic seem more approachable, but this notion is more or less drowned out by the overwhelming message that BuyMusic is a me-too idea. And that message ignores the fundamental truth that advertising is a form that's essentially antithetical to self honesty: It may be true that in real life "the rest of us" are trend-followers, not trendsetters—but none of us like to think of ourselves that way.

Thanks to reader Robert Lendvai for pointing me to the BuyMusic.com ads.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: appleclones; buymusiccom; new
There are links to the commercials from the original article's site.
1 posted on 08/04/2003 3:46:56 PM PDT by Nachum
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To: Nachum
I love it... Slate is owned by Microsoft, and they're discussing how another company ripped off Apple's idea? Would anyone like to send them a dictionary opened to the word "irony"?
2 posted on 08/04/2003 3:54:00 PM PDT by mwyounce
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To: mwyounce
"Everybody steals in commerce and industry. I've stolen a lot myself. But I know how to steal. They don't know how to steal..."


-Thomas Edison
3 posted on 08/04/2003 4:10:21 PM PDT by Orangedog (Soccer-Moms are the biggest threat to your freedoms and the republic !)
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To: Nachum
http://www.buymusic.com
This company looks to be a sure winner!
.79 - .99 for a track, NO monthly membership charge. (And they have full U2 library!!)
Only question I have that isn't answered by: http://www.buymusic.com/support/legal.aspx
is: can you transfer your license to a new PC when you break/retire/sell your old/current PC?
4 posted on 08/04/2003 4:33:00 PM PDT by Drago
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To: Orangedog
Great composers don't imitate, they steal.....I believe Stravinsky said that...
5 posted on 08/04/2003 4:52:27 PM PDT by zarf (Dan Rather is god.)
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To: Drago
This company looks to be a sure winner!

Not hardly. They have a couple songs for $.79 so they can say "songs from $.79" Most songs are $.99 and many are $1.29. You CAN NOT presently burn these songs to a CD, nor transfer these songs to an MP3 player. Each song has a unique license agreement and you have to go thru some BS special agreement button before you can listen to any song. Imagine having to hit a button for each song if you want to listen to more than one song at a time. No thanks.

6 posted on 08/04/2003 5:18:21 PM PDT by SengirV
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To: SengirV
I haven't bought from them yet (I am still at work, will probably try them out tonight)....but this U2 album page:
http://www.buymusic.com/product.aspx?sku=200491262&loc=18937
shows "1 PC", "Unlimited Transfers", & "Unlimited Burns".
I would imagine that the license agreement is a 1 time button push.
7 posted on 08/04/2003 5:24:49 PM PDT by Drago
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To: zarf
If you take from one source it is plagerism. If you take from many sources it is research. - tom
8 posted on 08/04/2003 5:32:25 PM PDT by Capt. Tom (anything done in moderation shows a lack of interest -Capt. Tom circa 1948)
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To: Nachum
OK...after checking out http://www.buymusic.com/ further...it is not as good as I had hoped, most of their downloads are 99 cents, but x-fer and burn rights are limited on alot of them, (esp. Columbia records selections).
Here is what I want in a service: 50-99 cent downloads (based on popularity, etc.), with whole albums at a discount on top of that. Unlimited x-fers to portable players for personal use. Unlimited burns for personal use.
No monthly charges. ALL major/minor record labels available(including getting Michael Jackson to make The Beatles available, he could buy a new rubber nose with the proceeds!)
These 3 come close, but no cigar yet.
http://www.emusic.com
http://www.realone.com/realone/rhapsody/
http://www.buymusic.com/
9 posted on 08/04/2003 9:00:16 PM PDT by Drago
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To: Nachum
I am just SO glad the iTunes commercials are over. I loved the young girl singing the Michael Jackson song. She had a sweet voice.

But ...a boomerish-looking guy singing "My Generation,"? He was a disgusting pig--he looked severely constipated, and I had to change the channel when he came on. EEEwwwww...

10 posted on 08/04/2003 10:58:32 PM PDT by lorrainer (Oh, was I ranting? Sorry....)
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