It is rare
that a day passes on which I am not asked by a member of the marketing
fraternity to write an advertisement for one or other of our esteemed local
tourist organisations. Of course I turn
down most such demands – one can spread one’s talents too thinly after all –
but occasionally a plea catches my eye, pulls at my heart-strings and I accede
to the request.
Such was
the case when I was asked by the Cornish Tourist Bureau to boost visitor
numbers with a few well-chosen words.
Having spent many a happy holiday in our most southerly county, I agreed
and repaired at once to my local hostelry in order to undertake the necessary
research for this project.
Research
is, in my view, the key to all successful advertisement writing, and in this
regard my fellow imbibers did not fail me.
Opinion in the Toppled Bollard was clear:
According
to my colleagues these two characteristics of the local populace often combine and
it is not uncommon for Penzantine chefs to be stabbed in the kitchen for making
a small error of judgement over a local recipe.
This seemed a good starting point for an advert, the sort of local
colour that today’s intrepid explorers love, and I noted it with glee.
Talk then
moved on to the issue of the Cornish vendetta.
These normally start as simple local disputes, as for example in
February this year when the favoured ox of Prince Gwennap – a local ruler –
disappeared one dark and stormy night. Five
weeks later the death toll was 1,900, Helston and
I was also
told that the men involved in such disputations refuse to shave until honour is
re-established while the women nail up the blood stained shirts of their
victims on the outer walls of their homes as trophies. With such local colour I felt the advert
worked well.
Tony
Attwood
PS: For some reason one or two local folk have
since expressed disquiet about my campaign, claiming I have confused