Autograph: Just Slightly Ahead Of Their Time

April 24th, 2009 // 7 Comments


And I’m not just talking about the futuristic setting of the video for the arena bashers’ 1984 MTV staple “Turn Up The Radio”; did you know that the pen employed at the clip’s outset–the one that’s, y’know, erasable–was actually there because of old-time product placement? It was the result of a partnership between Autograph and Paper Mate, who presumably wanted their target demo to carry around a writing implement that would protect them against the brain-wave-destroying vengeance of robotic lady-bouncers. BusinessWeek‘s Jon Fine dredged up an old Los Angeles Times piece that explained the deal:

Autograph’s] album came out last October. A month later, the video for “Turn Up the Radio” was released. At first, album sales were slow-80,000 copies in the first three months. But eventually the video influenced sales, as did a January-March tour this year, and 500,000 more copies were sold.


Thanks to a shrewd advertising tie-in, the Paper Mate pen company supplied funding for the video, along with some other financial support.


“Because of our name and the album title, `Sign In Please,’ our manager (Susie Frank) thought we might get a pen-and-pencil company as a sponsor,” Plunkett explained. “Paper Mate agreed to give us money if we advertised their pen. We were able to make a much more expensive video than the average new band.”


Does the band have any reservations about being linked to a product?


“Not really,” he replied. “We needed the money. You do anything you can to get money when you’re starting out; it’s so expensive to get a band off the ground. [Picky editors’ note: No. It isn’t.] With the name Autograph, it’s logical for us to be advertising a pen. It would only be weird and out of place if we were advertising something like a vacuum cleaner or a roach spray.”



Fine puts out a call to see if there were earlier examples of product placement in videos–which were still a nascent medium when Autograph captured peoples’ attention–but I can’t think of any that weren’t the result of instrument endorsements off the top of my head. (How did this not snag that bug spray deal, anyway?


Product Placement 1.0: Paper Mate And Hair Metal, Perfect (?) Together [BusinessWeek]


  1. What’s weird about this is that I used to expect them to say “Coke” instead of “rock” when they say “things go better with rock”, like the old Coke slogan. My nine year old self was a marketing genius!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coca-Cola_slogans

  2. Oddly enough, I think I remember reading about this tie-in, but then I thought, “Hm, Autograph: Who gives a shit about these guys anyway? They’re no Dokken.”

  3. @righteousmaelstrom: After all, Dokken rhymes with rockin’, as the VJs always used to remind us. Autograph? Not so much.

    Still, I must confess I enjoyed having this dopey song wrenched from the back of my brain. I really think 1984 made everything better, even spandex-metal. (Look at Ratt! “Round and Round” is awesome, and they’re a terrible band.)

  4. oh, Chris, must so totally disagree. Ratt were a middling band that came up with one of the best songs of their era. Autograph were a terrible band, and this song is . . . in keeping with their, ah, terribleness.

  5. That’s a cool story. Autograph opened up for Van Halen on most of the 1984 tour, and everyone’s right, they were terrible. But… I still hear their song a pretty good bit on the radio. Dokken(who I like), hardly ever.

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