(Announcement)

IF YOU’RE BROWSING ON THE INTERNET AND YOU’VE STUMBLED ON THIS WEBSITE AND YOU HAVEN’T GOT SIX OTHER THINGS TO DO AND YOU’D LIKE TO HEAR A STORY* READ ON**

 

*18 years after I first started working on a project about Howard, I was commisioned by the BBC to produce a radio show for their Archive on 4 slot.

It was first broadcast on the 20th May 2023. You can listen to the show here

**To accompany the BBC show we have started producing a podcast series

SYNOPSIS

In a former Fire Station in 1960s San Francisco, there's a party going on, involving some of the most celebrated writers, artists, thinkers and musicians of the age. There's John Steinbeck, chatting to architect Buckminster Fuller. Marshall McLuhan is over in the corner telling another of his bad jokes to a young Joan Rivers and Tom Wolfe is talking to fellow author and Merry Prankster, Ken Kesey, who's hanging out at the bar with the Grateful Dead.

How did all these people come together in one place? The answer lies with a reluctant advertising innovator, an instigator of ideas, an agitator and a mentor - Howard Luck Gossage. The man who came to be known as … ‘The Socrates of San Francisco’.

Howard Gossage was an advertising man first and foremost, a preternatural marketing and propaganda genius – but he was so much more. Defiantly independent, he both proved to be one of the industry’s most inventive innovators, astute prophets – and often its greatest critic.

A vocal thorn in the industry’s side, Howard operated the boutique agency of Weiner & Gossage out of the supposed advertising backwater of San Francisco – a continent away from the Mad Men of Madison Avenue. And yet its influence is still felt around the world.

But upending the world of advertising was never going to be enough for Howard. He always felt that “changing the world was the only fit work for a grown man”. And so, in the mid-1960s, he set about to do just that. Among his many madcap adventures, Howard saved the Grand Canyon from being flooded for profit, tried to start a revolution in the Caribbean, discovered "the patron-saint of the internet", Marshall Mcluhan, and helped to create Friends of the Earth.

In this intriguing tale, celebrated West Coast advertising executive Jeff Goodby, whose own work and ethos has been profoundly influenced by Gossage, explores his life and legacy, which even today exerts its influence on advertising campaigns and agencies all around the world. "He was the inspiration behind the foundation of my agency and taught me about the positive impact advertising could have for society, to do more than just sell, that it can also build communities and drive change".

Presented by Jeff Goodby
Produced by Ashley Pollak and James King
Assistant Producer: Emma Stackhouse
Executive Producer: Rami Tzabar
A TellTale Industries production for BBC Radio 4