Classifieds

Dancing Cup Noodles Shows Silly Sells in Times Square

[ad_1]

On any given day in Times Square, a visitor can sit for a street artist portrait, get his name printed on an M&M, watch the Naked Cowboy playing his guitar and run from a marauding band of Elmos. With excitement like that on offer, how many visitors notice the billboards?

Hard to say, but the odds are good that tourists will take note of an ad that debuted last week. It’s the one with a cup of soup boogieing inside of a three-story tall microwave oven.

This is how Japanese food giant Nissin has elected to drop its marketing dollars to advertise an innovation half a century in the making. The maker of Cup Noodles recently did away with its familiar polystyrene cup in favor of one made from paper, letting instant ramen fans do something heretofore impossible: nuke their noodles.

“[It’s] even more convenient for consumers because now they can microwave the cup,” said Priscila Stanton, Nissin Foods USA’s svp of marketing.

“Our founder had a saying: Be meticulous and bold,” added CEO Brian Huff. “It doesn’t get bolder than being on a billboard in Times Square.”

Not just any billboard, either. The 102×180-foot colossus that turns the corner of 1540 Broadway at 45th Street is among the largest digital 3D signs in New York. Even so, Nissin’s challenge was still formidable: how to get visitors already dazzled by the spectacles of Times Square to ponder the comparatively blah message of convenience cooking.

Stanton and Huff recently sat down with Adweek to explain how they did it.

Cup Person’s big gig

The anthropomorphic dancing soup is called Cup Person, who trots and skips and knee slides so smoothly he could hold his own on The Lion King’s stage down the street. Daffy as it looks, this in-oven performance is the product of weeks of strategizing by Nissin USA and agency High Wide & Handsome.

As commercial history has shown, when a marketing maneuver is too bizarre for humans to pull off, a mascot can be just the thing. (While Cup Person may not be familiar to American consumers, he’s well known in Japan, where entrepreneur Momofuku Ando perfected instant precooked noodles in 1958.)

For the “playful” and “quirky” assignment of strutting around in a microwave oven, Cup Person “was perfect to deliver the message,” Stanton said.

Viewers might also notice lightning flashing around the character as he dances. This spectacle actually has nothing to do with zapping a snack. Instead, it borrows from the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, another Japanese import. Much like the six youths who morph into superheroes, “for us it’s been a transformation from the polystyrene cup to a paper cup,” Stanton said.

1 2Next page

Related Articles

Back to top button