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Thursday, September 29, 2011 | 7:07am
Steve Stoute’s New Book Demonstrates ‘Tanning’ isn’t just for Guidos
Understanding Mental Complexion: How the American Ad industry gained its Swag.
@SteveStoute
As an Advertising executive myself, I’ve got a lot of respect for Steve Stoute. No he was never a rapper (at least not that I know of) and he doesn’t wear sunglasses inside or sport $1500 jeans around his hips but he’s a great media mind with a hip hop network (I was going to say rolodex but they’re not really around anymore.) One of my major motivations for contributing over the past 4 years to Highbrid Nation has been the global impact that hip hop has had not only on mainstream culture but the advertising dollars being allocated to support the growing.
In Stoute’s new book, The Tanning of America he discusses how hip hop and the music that defines it has increasingly impacted the general market advertising industry and not just niche discretionary budgets.
“I was inspired by…watching the images that were portrayed in advertising and seeing how they haven’t changed much,” he Forbes Magazine. “This younger consumer was no longer seeing the world the same way it was seeing it the generation previously. And I wanted to write a book about that phenomenon.”
Today we most commonly associate “tanning” with the GTL generation characterized by the Jersey Shore kids but as Stoute describes, tanning is also “a mentality that no longer determines your ethnicity, no longer determines what drives you spiritually or culturally, [that] comes from the shared values of other people.” In other words, Hip Hop is the Jackie Robinson of music. There are no color boundaries. Kids no longer see their friends as being white or black but hip hop or not and Stoute’s book seeks to highlight the fact that his success and the long-term ability for advertisers to reach the Hip Hop 2.0 generation hinges on their ability to target the culture and not the race.
Stoute also warns ad executives from thinking that just throwing a rapper in a commercial or hitting play on your hip hop ipod playlist will make your product sell.
“You can’t assume that people just want to sit around dancing and drink soda,” he explains. “Play the music, drink the soda … there’s nothing about it that’s compelling except for, ‘Look, Pitbull is doing it, so you should do it, too.’”
I couldn’t agree more. Highbrid Media (Sister company to Highbrid Nation) has always made it a core responsibility for to educate our clients on the fact that acceptance in Hip Hop or any ethnic audience for that matter means not only studying what it looks like an emulating in your ad creative but also displaying a fundamental understanding of the marketplace. Ever culture has a language. They might speak English but if you can’t decode their dialect in and speak it fluently in your advertising you’ll ultimately flop.
I have yet to read Stoute’s book but I’m excited to say that its on its way from Amazon as we speak. I am however somewhat surprised that he would be so giving of the secrets that have clearly made his successful as a very small but specialized fish in a big pond. On the other hand, with the still shocking lack of respect for the power of the Hip Hop brand in corporate culture his secrets will be safe, tucked between the paper’s lines.
Shout: Zack O’Malley Greenburg for the assist.
FILED IN Business & Marketing, Need to Know


Great post, Juan.
Advertisers have a big responsibility when it comes to accurately portraying the Hip Hop community. I’m glad that Highbrid doesn’t need a lesson on that. That’s why I’ve been a fan for almost 4 years now.
Stoute is right on the money. You really can’t throw any rapper and have them endorse your product and expect the sales to increase. Its not about the race at all. Its about the culture and if the people (whether they are white, black, latino, asian, etc.) connect then its good for business. I don’t give a damn if Eminem was endorsing my choice of beer or if George Strait was. If its the beer that I like to drink I’m still going to buy it.