Showing posts with label Diddies and Spoofs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diddies and Spoofs. Show all posts

"Shoe" Comic Strip Spoofs Pfizer's Chantix (unbranded) Side Effects

My Sunday newspaper comics section prominently features the "Shoe" comic strip on the front page. It's a favorite of mine. Today's Shoe spoofs the side effects of Rx drugs -- specifically a smoking-cessation drug. Although it doesn't mention any brand names, Chantix is the only non-nicotine drug approved by the FDA for smoking cessation currently available by prescription.

Here's the comic, which I pinned on my "Fun Pharma Images" Pinterest board:


According to the Shoe web site "The strip's namesake, Shoe, is based on legendary North Carolina journalist Jim Shumaker, Jeff MacNelly's first newspaper boss. P. Martin Shoemaker is a grouchy, cigar-smoking, newspaperbird with a tough side and an even tougher other side."

Even tough birds, it seems, can suffer drug side effects. Shoe mentions "chest pains, bad breath and a hacking cough" as his main side effects. This is funny in context of the quit smoking indication but Chantix has been linked to a much more serious side effect: suicide. For more on that see "Chantix May Be More Dangerous Than Smoking!" and the chart below:


Of course, Shoe may be taking some other drug such as a generic version of Zyban.

The question remains: would Shoe be better off smoking his cigars or taking a medication to quit?

I'm not a cigar smoker, but I wouldn't inhale cigar smoke if I were. But there's the secondary effects of inhaling the smoke that's released into the surrounding air by cigars.

In any case, Shoe would be a terrible boss to work for whether he quit smoking or not!

Pharma DTC TV Advertising Is a Joke. Seriously.

No wonder CBS refused to run the following "Stoogesta" ad during the NCAA basketball tournament. According to Deadline, network execs were concerned because the spoof, which promotes the forthcoming “The Three Stooges” movie, makes "light of prescription drug ads."

I've seen some pretty funny spoofs of drug DTC ads in my time (eg, see "ADHD Boy"), but this is the best I have ever seen. It convinced me to visit my movie theater & ask for an Rx of silly!



I imagine that pharmaceutical advertisers sent a clear message to CBS that they did NOT find the spoof funny. Rx drugs, after all, are serious and should not be made "light of."

However, it's not the drugs that are being spoofed. It is the drug advertisers who have rolled out the same formulaic DTC TV ads for years and years. Even kids think most of these ads are a joke.

Will the formula ever change? I don't think so. Here's why.

One of the funniest lines in the spoof is "Three in 6 billion people are afflicted by Stoogation (?), a disorder that causes the brain to ricochet and bounce..." That's just slightly more outrageous than some claims made in real drug ads about the prevalence of some "disease" you never heard of before.

I've commented on the topic of DTC ads making outrageous disease prevalence claims before (see "Disease Awareness or 'Disease Mongering'?", for example). In many cases, it is absolutely necessary for drug ads to make such claims to justify the millions of dollars spent on mass media TV ads to reach the "three in 6 billion" people who may suffer from the condition advertised.

So, the tradition of "making light of drug ads" will live on as long as advertising agencies and TV networks rake in millions of dollars to air ads that would be better off targeted to the truly appropriate audience.

BTW, the NCAA basketball tournament audience is PERFECT for the Stoogesta ad! But the ad that was chosen to run in its place is totally wrong; that ad spoofs Christianity! Where's the religious right when you need them?

Up Yours, Rush Limbaugh, Say Women Lawmakers!

In Virginia, state Senator Janet Howell reacted to a bill that requires women to get an ultrasound before an abortion with an amendment requiring doctors to perform a rectal exam and stress test before prescribing impotence pills.

I'm pretty sure Rush Limbaugh would not like to have a rectal exam every time he went in to refill his Viagra prescription!

Peter O’Toole, a Pfizer spokesman, said by phone that the company doesn’t comment on specific legislation.



HT: Pharmalot ("Want Viagra? See A Sex Therapist And Notary First!")

Also see "Women Lawmakers Turn the Tables on Men Who Take Viagra".

Funny or Die Spoof: "Paula's Victoza Injected Sneaky Snacks!"

"All of my desserts are injected with Victoza to lower my blood sugar and keep me immortal," says "Paula Deen" in the spoof YouTube "Paula Deen's Diabetes Ad" posted by Funny or Die (see video here).


Next: Saturday Night Live!

Lipitor Won't Go Gentle Into that Good Generic Night

Today's Wall Street Journal reports that "Pfizer Inc. isn't rolling over and conceding the market for its cholesterol-lowering drug Lipitor after the blockbuster brand loses its U.S. monopoly at the end of the month" (read the article here). Pfizer has an aggressive co-pay card/PBM discount plan that it hopes will allow Lipitor to maintain a 40% share of the combined market for Lipitor and its generic equivalents for at least 6 months after generic brands are launched.

This has prompted me to man-handle Dylan Thomas's famous poem as an ode to Lipitor and its fight against patent expiry:

Do not go gentle into that good generic night,
Patent expiry should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the innovator's right.

Though wise marketers at patent end know generic is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning their Rx brands
Do not go gentle into that good generic night.

Good Rx brands, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail market share might have danced in a greener pasture,
Rage, rage against the dying of the innovator's right.

Wild marketers who caught and sang cholesterol numbers in flight,
Learned, too late, Lipitor's fate, they grieve it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good generic night.

Grave Rx brands, near death, that see with blinding sight
Off-patent drugs could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the innovator's right.

And you, my Lipitor, there on the sad market height,
Curse, bless, your loyal patients now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good generic night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the innovator's right.

BI's Famously Buxom and Unpronounceable YouTube Video

"In this brave new world there are better marketing tools than Facebook o Twitter," says Ray Cokes (@raycokes), the actor who plays the "new head of marketing" at Boehringer Ingelheim (BI) in a new YouTube video that spoofs efforts to pronounce the company's name through "word of mouth" (WOM) marketing. The agents for this campaign are parrots who are being conditioned from egg to adulthood to correctly pronounce "Boehringer Ingelheim." The parrots are then shipped out to do their WOM thing.

[I accessed the original video is here when I first made this post. A day or day later, however, BI made the video private and unviewable by the general public. In a tweet, BI said "The vid was made for a test & the period of time was short, so that is why the vid must be made private for now." BUT, thanks to crazyParrot, the video has been uploaded here.]

The parrot in the following frame captured from the video is having a problem and says Sauerkraut! instead of Boehringer Ingelheim. Obviously, the bird is distracted by one of the buxom "lovely ladies" that comprise the BI training staff. By the way the bird is staring into the woman's cleavage, it could have said Spaltung! Whatever ... Ray is not happy!


Another lovely lady -- Faith Busch (@faithandcomm), who tweets for the @Boehringer Twitter account -- told me last week during a conference in Lisbon to expect something exciting on YouTube from BI. I guess this is it.

The new video, IMHO, is not as funny -- and maybe not as "famous" -- as the one I found over a year ago (see "How DO You Pronounce 'Boehringer Ingelheim'?" and below).



It turns out that the above video was produced on spec by an agency trying to win BI business by showing off their creativity. I guess it wasn't "new world" enough -- in fact, it has a certain "iron curtain" feel to it compared to the sterile, all-white "new world" feel of WOM!

I'm becoming more and more interested in BI because it is "pushing the envelope outside the boundaries" in social media. See, for example, "Boehringer vs Facebook Social Media Socialism." BI also seems to have a sense of humor.

It's also a "personable" company -- Faith told me that she often runs into Mr. Boehringer (Jr?) in the BI cafeteria and says hello. I can't imagine the CEO of a publicly traded US pharma company eating in the cafeteria with the minions!

I too would like to meet Mr. Boehringer in Ingelheim and say hello. Maybe he'll invite me in to make a presentation to the lovely BI marketing people about what I've learned from observing pharma's social media efforts during the past 5 years.

UPDATE 22 SEPT 2011: No sooner did I give Boehringer Ingelheim (BI) kudos for its recent humorous and playful YouTube video (see above), than I learned it violated Clauses 2, 9.1, 3.2, 22.1 and 22.2 of the ABPI Code of Practice (See "BI Masters the Art of WOM through Its 'Parrots,' er, Spokespersons").

Is It Time for Abrams to Leave?


There were rumors at the recent ePharma Summit that DDMAC would come out with social media guidelines sometime in the next few months -- maybe by April, 2011. The crowd who gathered the following day in the great hall was at first jubilant in anticipation of the speech by Thomas Abrams, Head of DDMAC since 2000.

The crowd's mood changed dramatically, however, when Abrams did NOT mention any specific date during his presentation. Instead, he stated his allegiance to FDA's "Good Guidance Practices," which govern the orderly process of issuing guidance.

It seems that Abrams will remain as head of the hated DDMAC regime for some time to come. But his promises may no longer be enough to stem the growing frustration of the crowd.

P.S. I urge all my readers to support the demands of the Egyptian people for democracy and the ouster of the dictator Mubarak! You can get the best coverage of events by watching the live streaming video with commentary via Aljazeera English here.

10 Reasons Why I Hate Lists

My Twitter pal Jonathan Richman (@jonmrich) has another list: "10 Things to Inspire Your Digital Marketing in 2011."

Jon likes lists. He's written a lot of them. You should read them.

Everyone seems to like lists, especially this time of year. There's lists for Santa before Christmas and there are lists of New Year's resolutions.

OK, I've done lists too; see, for example, "Pharma's 2010 Christmas Wish List for Santa".

But I HATE NUMBERED LISTS, for these reasons:
  1. A numbered list implies that the first item on the list is most important. Who are you to judge?
  2. A numbered list implies that the last item on the list was included just to have 10 items on the list.
  3. All the items between (2) and (10) are worthless. Who cares about #2 or #3, etc.?
  4. You've probably stopped reading this list already!
  5. By now the list is really getting boring.
  6. Ditto
  7. Ditto
  8. Ditto
  9. Ditto
  10. You should "sign" the 2010 Pharma Marketing Yearbook!

Pharma's 2010 Christmas Wish List for Santa

A few people helped me put together a short wish list for the US pharmaceutical industry to send to Santa this year (you can still vote or write-in your item to include on the list; see survey here).

There are only 3 items on the list so far that merit Santa's urgent attention:

(1) Left over from last year's list: Guidance from the FDA on how it will regulate drug promotion on the Internet and social networks. This, of course, is the most important item on the list. In last year's letter to Santa (find it here) pharma said: "Do I need to mention how much we would like guidance from the FDA on how it will regulate drug promotion on the Internet and social networks? Right now, we are really hurting because we cannot advertise on Google."

Recently, a Time Magazine journalist interviewed me for an article he's writing on pharma's use of social media. He was shocked to learn that the lack of guidance from the FDA is holding pharma back from doing more on social networks. Of course, I've always maintained that this is a red herring used as an excuse for the unwillingness of most product managers to do something different and essentially unproven.

According to a new Deloitte report titled, “To Friend or Not? New Insights About Social Networks in the Life Sciences Industry," undefined Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines, consumer privacy concerns and a lack of a clearly demonstrated return on investment are the top three hurdles to widespread adoption of social media by the pharmaceutical industry (see more survey results here). Nevertheless, 65% of survey respondents say their company uses or plans to use social networks at a company level in some capacity in the next year.

(2) Everybody seems to have an itch to modify the healthcare reform law. So it's no surprise that 22% of respondents to my survey chose Amend the healthcare reform law so that drug industry won't have to help finance the Medicare "donut hole" through discounts for prescription drugs as an item to include on Santa's list.

As reported by FiercePharma, "starting next year, drugmakers have to give a 50 percent discount on branded drugs for people who fall into the gap, which is between $2,830 and $6,440. Over 10 years, the cost of closing the hole could cost pharma $32 billion, the [Wall Street] Journal reports."

Two pharma companies have responded very differently to this "deal" with democrats to help cover the gap in Medicare drug coverage. Whereas Lilly hemmed and hawed and skirted the issue and mainly defended high drug prices (see "Why Price Controls Are Not The Right Answer" and my comments here: "LillyPad Launches Specious Rocket Attack Against Drug Price Control Straw Man"), AstaZeneca seized the moment to support the coverage and explain how else it is helping senior citizens pay for their prescription drugs (see "Our Fair Share: Closing the Coverage Gap").

Although filling the "Medicare "Doughnut Hole" will cost pharma less than 1% of US sales (see here), it can't hurt to ask Santa for a reprieve.

(3) Of equal importance to the doughnut hole wish is pharma's wish that the FDA adopt A regulatory pathway for the approval of biosimilars that the drug industry can live with. 22% of my survey respondents voted for this item. Biosimilars are generic versions of large-molecule patent drugs (biologics).

At one point in the negotiations with FDA, the drug industry argued that biosimilars need to be tested in humans before being approved as generic substitutions for patented, FDA-approved biologics. Marc Monseau, Director of Corporate Communications at Johnson and Johnson, once wrote: "These products [biosimilars] would be 'similar' to a branded product, but they would not be the 'same' and therefore, scientists do not consider them to be generics. Since laboratory testing isn't enough to detect many of the clinically important differences in biologics, testing in humans will be necessary to ensure their safety and efficacy."

Nowadays, however, the industry is focused on making sure new regulations "should include a data exclusivity period of 12 years - meaning that the FDA would have to wait 12 years after a biotech drug has hit the market before approving a follow-on version. The generic drug industry, represented by the Generic Pharmaceutical Association, as well as several consumer and patient advocacy groups, favored a five-year exclusivity period similar to the one used for pharmaceutical drugs" (see here).

(4) The last -- and least important -- item on pharma's wish list for Santa is Much fewer "warning" letters from FDA in 2011. As you may know, the FDA has been sending out more of these letters during Obama's administration. This is nicely summarized in the following chart prepared by EyeOnFDA (see here):


At this rate, the number of warning letters will get back to Clinton-era levels before the next election when a new FDA commissioner may be named by a newly-elected republication president (John Boehner?). Now that the next Congress will have a republican majority, we're likely to see this wish fulfilled as FDA officials are grilled by Senate Committees headed by Republicans.

Not that Santa Claus is a Republican! He surely is a Democrat because he's in favor of entitlement -- all good boys and girls and even pharma companies (good or bad) get gifts!

BTW, there were a couple of write-ins for the list:
"A pipeline in a pear tree" -- I have added this to the official survey voting block.

"Human Genomes Sciences' Lupus Drug, "Benlysta"! We Lupies need this quickly-Unfortunately, I know a woman who may not see Christmas because of the FDA delay now. She's in the hospital on a respirator, because Lupus has attacked her lungs and now kidneys. Please help her Santa!" -- I can't argue with this, which I put in the same category as "increased pipeline."
There's still time to get your vote in here.

P.S. Added "fewer law suits" & "increased pipeline" to pharma's XMAS wish list. What's ur favorite(s)? http://bit.ly/dMcr5M