Walter E. Smithe - Commercials

Commercials

The company has become well known in the Chicago area for its television commercials, which star the three Smithe brothers. Most feature the slogan "You dream it, we build it", or "That's Smithe, with an E". The company's commercials were originally straightforward descriptions of the their products and services, but in 2003, the brothers decided to include outtakes from past filmings, which showed the brothers stumbling over words and laughing at each other. The Smithes had been encouraged to air their outtakes on television after Tim Smithe screened them at an interior design seminar and received a positive reaction from the crowd. This began a long series of lighthearted television commercials, which became increasingly elaborate over the next few years.

Many of Walter E. Smithe's commercials have been pop culture parodies. One spot was modeled after Apple's iPod commercials. Others have been parodies of reality television shows, such as The Apprentice and The Bachelor. A 2005 advertisement showed Mark and Tim Smithe dueling with CGI-enhanced lamps in an homage to the lightsaber duels of the Star Wars films. In 2008, they filmed and edited a takeoff of the Sex and the City franchise, with the brothers sipping "Smithe-o-politans".

One of Walter E. Smithe's most discussed commercials aired in late March 2006. The spot showed the brothers at a news conference announcing that they had purchased Wrigley Field, home of the Chicago Cubs, with plans to rename it Walter E. Smithe Field. The commercial included the tagline "Change the Name, Change the Luck", a reference to the Cubs' decades-long struggle to reach the World Series. It also featured an appearance by Dutchie Caray, wife of the late Cubs announcer Harry Caray. The announcement was merely an early April Fools' Day prank, although the Smithe brothers said they had received about one hundred emails from viewers who were not sure what to think.

Chicagoans have had mixed reactions to the Walter E. Smithe commercials. Some have criticized the spots for underemphasizing Walter E. Smithe's actual furniture products. However, Lewis Lazare, the Chicago Sun-Times' advertising critic, has defended the commercials. "In what seems to be their unending and over-the-top zeal to self-promote, they just may be helping drive traffic," he wrote, adding, "If nothing else, the advertising suggests the chain has some suits with personality attached." Maria Coons, a marketing teacher at Harper College, has also defended the advertisements, telling a Daily Herald reporter, "Some people who aren't in that demographic might consider them dorky, but for their target market, they're not. For people who are in their 40s and have families, that's how brothers act around each other when they get together. Plus, they seem like nice guys. Then they tie in pop culture ... it shows that they're sort of a with-it furniture company." Of the commercials, Tim Smithe has said, "We wanted to entertain people first, so then when we wanted to inform them they'd already be paying attention".

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