A Sony executive recently declared that Marcus Rivers, the smartass âtween flack for the PSP who debuted at E3 last year, delivered âpositive sales effects,â for the handheld. Near as I can tell, thatâs the first anyoneâs heard of the little twerp in more than four months.
Marcus still anchors the front of Sonyâs official PSP page. But he hasnât done a commercial for the device in six months. If Sony fake V.P. Kevin Butler has in fact called his sidekick into the conference room, patted him on the shoulder, slid a box of tissues over, explained COBRA and how to file for unemployment, etc., then it was a quiet severance after a boisterous couple of months over the summer.
Brought in to stop âgood kids playing bad games,â Marcus did plenty of shit-talking in a way most rational adults found grating but, I guess, resonated with the 12-to-14 year olds whom Sony wanted to target.
Scott McCarthy, a PlayStation senior brand manager, told IndustryGamers, the campaign was a success: âI think the Marcus campaign, and the PSP campaign in general, showed positive sales effects,â he said. âWhen the consumers vote, they do so with their dollars, and we saw positive movement on the hardware side.â
Pressed on what that meant, McCarthy had no hard figures to offer. âNot that I can get into,â he said. Reminds me a little of this exchange.
In early September, John Koller, the PlayStation director of hardware marketing, told Ad Age that the PSPâs rate of sales had climbed 20 percent week-over-week since Marcus was introduced in L.A. âPlanning for more Marcus ads is already under way,â Ad Age wrote.
The campaignâs official YouTube channel suggests the ads pretty much stopped just before then. The last commercial spot featuring him went up on Aug. 18. A few web-only videos follow that, including what looks like an abortive attempt at a âMarcus Rivers Gaming Academy.â series.
Although we werenât the object of this marketing campaign, bringing in wiseass children is inherently risky as a matter of taste. E*TRADE, for example, should get a marketing achievement award for making me want to punch a baby.
In the end, Marcus wasnât a straight foil for the bigger-than-life Kevin Butler, nor could he pull off KBâs nuanced smarm. But Marcus does leave a legacy â âLame Castle,â a joke app based on one of his spots deriding mobile phone gaming.
https://lastchance.cc/lame-iphone-joke-turned-into-actual-video-game-453105472%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Sonyâs Marcus PSP Campaign âShowed Positive Movementâ on Hardware [Industry Gamers]