NBC - Proud as a PeacockBy Wikipedia
"Proud as a Peacock" was an advertising campaign used
by the NBC television network from 1979
to 1981.
By 1979, NBC had fallen to third place in the ratings. This was
partially the fault of Fred
Silverman, a network executive who previously led CBS
and ABC to the
top of the ratings.
During Silverman's tenure as president of NBC, literally dozens of new
shows failed, among them Supertrain
and Pink
Lady and Jeff. The 1980-81 season was the low point for NBC-the
network had only three shows (Little
House on the Prairie at 10th, Real
People at 12th, and Diff'rent
Strokes in a 3-way tie for 17th) in the Nielsen
top 20. This was unheard of in a time when there were only 3 networks. In
addition, NBC paid $87 million to broadcast the 1980
Summer Olympics, only to lose an estimated $80 million in ad revenue
(in addition to its initial investment) when the Games were boycotted by
the United States.
In an attempt to present a positive image in the face of failure, an ad
campaign called "Proud as a Peacock" was used, complete with a
revised version of the famous NBC Peacock. However, the slogan only
generated ridicule. The most infamous parody of the campaign was
"We're Loud/Loud as a Peacock", which was recorded by the same
ad agency that NBC hired to produce "Proud as a Peacock". |