Stan Freberg



Iconic multitalented comedian, author, actor, voice actor and innovative creator of advertising.

Freberg is probably best known for his comedy recordings, most of which are considered classics today (although many will recognize his voice work on various vintage Warner Brothers' Looney Tunes cartoons, where he played characters including Tosh of the Goofy Gophers and the dimwitted Pete Puma). Starting with his record "John and Marsha" in 1951, Freberg created a seemingly-endless string of hit novelty records, in which he satirized everything from the pop music of the 1950s to the overcommercialization of Christmas to Lawrence Welk. His 1951 "St. George and the Dragonet", in which St. George channels Jack Webb's Joe Friday in his attempt to arrest a dragon on a rampage, was a #1 hit and launched Freberg into the public eye. (He would eventually make no less than four Dragnet parodies, turning it into something of a trademark for his work.) Freberg also created the seminal audio work Stan Freberg Presents the United States of America about the founding of the USA. The original was produced in the 60s, with the second volume created in the 90s (and featuring, amongst others, Tyne Daly and John Goodman). He has indicated that there could be third and fourth volumes forthcoming.

In both his recordings and his subsequent radio shows (1954's That's Rich, 1957's The Stan Freberg Show), Freberg never backed down from potentially controversial topics. "The Old Payola Roll Blues" was a two-part double-sided narrative that (prematurely) celebrated the demise of rock'n'roll music in the wake of the payola scandals of the 1950s, for instance. Politically-themed sketches from his radio show were often censored by network executives. And his famous 1958 recording "Green Chri$tma$", which viciously skewered the overcommercialization of Christmas, was almost suppressed by a record company terrified of offending powerful advertising agencies. Los Voraces (The Greedy) slammed both Las Vegas' opulence and the Cold War ( Freberg later skewered censorship in Elderly Man River, which anticipated Political Correctness Gone Mad by decades with a censor who forces him to change the lyrics of Old Man River until it becomes an unrecognizable mess. Point of Order mocked McCarthyism, leading to an executive asking if he'd ever been "part of any groups" leading to Freberg joking "actually I've been a member now for many years of..." the executive turned purple "the Mickey Mouse Fan Club." Despite this, it was still broadcast. Freberg also had difficulties because he refused to accept sponsorship from tobacco and alcohol companies. The combination of his moral stand on advertisers and a network nervous about his politically-tinged humor eventually forced his second radio show off the air after a mere 15 episodes.

Although he would continue acting in films (It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World) and on television (The Monkees, The Girl From UNCLE; more recent audiences will know him as "Mr. Parkin" from Roseanne), Freberg's greatest contribution to television was as a creator of advertising.

After leaving radio, Freberg moved into the field of advertising -- and carried his sense of humor along with him and applied it to the commercials he made. This was a revolutionary development -- before Freberg, commercials had never been funny (at least, not intentionally). Ad agencies and their products were deadly serious, convinced that inviting the viewer to laugh at the commercial meant that they would also be laughing at the product -- and would not buy it.

Freberg turned this staid, petrified attitude on its head with a series of innovative advertising campaigns that, for the first time in television history, were intentionally humorous and often poked a little sly fun at their own expense. In Freberg's hands, commercials became entertainment for the first time, instead of simple attempts to convince customers to buy. From his "Who put eight great tomatoes in that little bitty can?" for Contadina tomato paste to Anne Miller's showstopping production number for Heinz soups, Freberg proved that humor made a commercial -- and thus its product -- memorable.

His commercials were also the first to play with and subvert the tropes and cliches that advertising had already accumulated by the 1950s. A prime example would be his famous "nine out of ten doctors recommend!" ad for Chun King Chinese food, featuring nine smiling Asian doctors, and one frowning white doctor. Eventually Freberg would win 21 Clio awards for his work in advertising, work which genuinely revolutionized the field. Freberg's willingness to buck the "conventional wisdom" of the advertising agencies in the 1950s is directly responsible for decades of amusing, entertaining and -- most of all -- memorable commercials. Remember him the next time you enthuse about Superbowl ads, or when you ask a coworker, "did you see that commercial where...?"

For a more detailed biography of Stan Freberg, see That Other Wiki. You can find a vast selection of his work with a simple YouTube search.