custom ad
August 29, 2004

ATLANTA -- Talking meatballs and bumbling sea explorers may have made the Cartoon Network's late-night cartoon lineup a monster hit among the young and hip. But some of its popularity is owed to a trendy corps of college students enlisted to market the network's "Adult Swim" cartoons on campuses nationwide...

By Kristen Wyatt, The Associated Press

ATLANTA -- Talking meatballs and bumbling sea explorers may have made the Cartoon Network's late-night cartoon lineup a monster hit among the young and hip. But some of its popularity is owed to a trendy corps of college students enlisted to market the network's "Adult Swim" cartoons on campuses nationwide.

They come from 30 campuses to the network's Atlanta headquarters each August for some cartoon-marketing training before the start of their fall-semester classes. Their job: Making cartoons cool for peers who likely had ignored them since elementary school and probably associated Cartoon Network with baby-sitting, not TV nights at the frat house.

Now, three years after they started, "Adult Swim" cartoons are often ranked No. 1 in their basic cable time period among both adults aged 18-to-34 and men aged 18-to-24. Shows such as "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" -- about a talking meatball, milkshake and box of fries -- regularly beat network late-night comedy shows in the ratings among young people.

Cartoon Network executives say the college marketing program, mostly made up of sponsored drinking parties at hot college bars, had a significant hand in creating buzz for the quirky, sometimes hilariously absurd, block of cartoons.

From colleges to everywhereGreg Heanue, a Cartoon Network executive in charge of marketing "Adult Swim," explained the tactic as he weaved around 60 college students pouring into the network's colorful Atlanta offices where many of the cartoons are written.

"College towns aren't the biggest markets, but if you get kids talking about something there, you eventually get everybody," Heanue said. "You seed the college towns, you get the whole state."

"It is sooooo much fun," said Barrett Darnell, a 20-year-old Washington State University student who's starting his second year as an "Adult Swim" marketer. Last year he threw viewing parties and got some cartoon T-shirts thrown from the stage at a campus Cypress Hill concert. This year's plans include a pub crawl and poster giveaways. "We give out so much free stuff. Everyone loves it."

Another returning marketer, University of Kentucky senior Shreenah Willis, went from trying to draw crowds to her Cartoon Network parties to fending off advances for more "Adult Swim" giveaways.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

Guerrilla marketing"Everyone on campus knows I'm the 'Adult Swim' girl. It makes you pretty instantly popular," Willis said.

Guerrilla marketing at campuses isn't new, but it's worked especially well for Cartoon Network, said Sean Sheridan, a marketing expert for Philadelphia-based Campus Party Inc.

"I'm not surprised they've done so well. Letterman and Leno, they're funny, but come on, they're old men," he said. "Those shows, they're sort of formulaic, reminiscent of the old Johnny Carson show."

Beyond working to spread buzz about "Adult Swim," the college marketers have helped the network's ad salesmen, who are used to selling TV spots for toys and breakfast cereals, not products geared toward young adults.

More young people started watching, and the night cartoon block is now the darling of the network.

"We're sort of cresting right now," said Dave Willis, a co-creator of "Aqua Teen Hunger Force." "Two years from now, they might be totally over us, we'll be stupid. But right now, it's a good time."

The students nodded.

"I'm more and more shocked how many people know about 'Adult Swim,"' said Jack Nelson, a University of Georgia senior studying economics who is in his second year as a Cartoon Network marketer. "At first it was a cult thing. Now it's everyone on campus."

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!