Balance | |
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Champagne glass pyramid on LS 400 |
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Client | Lexus |
Product | Lexus LS 400 |
Agency | Team One |
Directed by | Gary Johns |
Production company |
John + Gorman Films |
Produced by | Francesca Cohn |
Music by | Piece of Cake |
Release date(s) | 1989 (Television) |
Running time | 30 seconds |
Language | English |
Balance was a 1989 television advertisement for the Lexus LS 400, which also introduced the luxury car make Lexus to television audiences.[1][2] It was created by Team One, a unit of Saatchi & Saatchi. The ad was designed to promote the engineering attributes of the flagship Lexus sedan.[3] The advertisement received several awards and was emulated by later versions.[4]
Contents |
The advertisement showed the Lexus LS 400 on rollers, with a set of champagne glasses stacked on its hood.[5] The engine is then set to a top speed of over 145 mi (233 km) per hour. Despite the fast speed, the LS 400 engine produces no vibrations to upset the champagne glass pyramid, and not one drop of liquid is spilled. The narration reads, "After years of intense work, Lexus is ready to celebrate...because even at the equivalent of 145 miles per hour, the Lexus LS 400 is designed to stir the soul...and not much else."
The Team One advertising campaign for the Lexus launch, including the Balance ad, received a number of advertising awards.[6] Industry publication Adweek named the Balance ad one of its Best Spots of 1990, as listed in a retrospective.[7] The Belding Awards, presented by the Advertising Club of Los Angeles, recognized Team One for their early Lexus campaign.[8] The Balance ad was also challenged by consumer advocate David Horowitz,[2] who suggested that Lexus had staged the advertisement in some way unseen to the audience.[2] In response, Lexus produced a third-party verification videotape, and performed a live, public demonstration of the same feat—showing that indeed the LS 400 could perform as promised.[2] The stacking of champagne glasses was also used for the formal introduction of the LS 400 at Pebble Beach.[9] In factory, Lexus models use a similar wine glass test.[10]
Several car manufacturers referenced the Balance ad in subsequent commercials.[11] In separate instances, Nissan and BMW mentioned the champagne glasses test in their ads.[12] The Nissan ads, designed for the debut of the Nissan Altima in 1993, duplicated the Lexus displays of champagne glasses and ball bearings.[12] Nissan then stacked champagne glasses on the hood of its less-expensive Altima, showing a similar level of precision. The BMW ads mocked the champagne glasses test as an unnecessary indicator of performance.[12] In the late 1990s, Lexus added advertisements that focused on fun and entertainment, in addition to engineering precision.[13] The earlier ads were seen as a highly rational appeal.[4] In 2006, Lexus referenced Balance with a new ad for the fourth-generation Lexus LS 460. Titled Pyramid, the ad depicted a driver parking a car between two stacks of champagne glasses using the Advanced Parking Guidance System, a new Lexus automatic parking feature.[14]