Stephen J. Mraz
STAFF EDITOR
Every once in a while, a series of
television commercials comes
along that is more interesting and
compelling than the programs it
is sponsoring. Case in point: the
recent spots touting the Tundra
pickup truck from Toyota. Each
commercial lets has truck demonstrating
its prowess on a piece of
oversized playground equipment.
Many viewers think the ads are
doctored, with perhaps a touch
of computer-aided chicanery, but
companies responsible for the
commercials and the truck insist
that what you see really happened.
Here’s a peek behind the scenes.
THE TEMPLATE
The creative team at Saatchi &
Saatchi LA, a major advertising
firm, had a simple task: convince
American TV viewers that Toyota’s
Tundra is a tough, rugged truck
that can handle anything the average
pickup driver might throw at it.
So they talked to truck owners and
drivers and asked them what characteristics
are most important for
a truck. The answers weren’t too
surprising; power, braking, acceleration,
stability, and towing were
among the most popular,
“We knew what we wanted to
highlight, the attributes real truckers
are interested in,” says Erich
Funke, creative director at Saatchi
& Saatchi LA. “So we decided to do a series of commercials that would
do just that.”
Because Toyota was planning a
series of three or more commercials,
the advertising agency wanted
them all to have a similar look and
feel, so they developed a template,
a list of common features. “The
ads would have to be authentic,
real demonstrations that proved a
point about the truck,” says Funke.
“They also had to be filmed in a location
that was rugged and rough,
a place where the living was hard.
At first, we wanted to shoot the ads
at locations all across America. But
the budget only allowed us to do so
much, and the farther you travel,
the more it costs. We ended up
with locations mostly in the West.
We also wanted to base the ads in part on the seven simple machines,
the inclined plane, wheel and axle,
lever, pulley, wedge, and screw.”
SEESAW
The first concept the ad team
came up with was to have a truck
tow a heavy load up an inclined
ramp. The ramp would lead up and
onto a seesaw, and when the truck
drove over the fulcrum, its weight
would push the seesaw down onto
another ramp. Finally, the truck
and loaded trailer would come to a
halt while still on the ramp.
After getting internal approval
at Saatchi & Saatchi, the ad team
double-checked with some engineers
to make sure the plan was
doable. With a thumbs-up from
the engineers, the team presented it to Toyota, who fully bought into
the plan. Next, they hired a production
house to film the commercials,
who went on to engage
an engineering-consulting group.
Together, the expanded team
worked out the details, such as how
high the fulcrum would be, what
angle for the ramps, and how big
a load the truck should pull. These
answers had to be checked with
Toyota engineers to make sure the
Tundra could handle the task. (It
could.)
The team constructed a computer
model of the proposed contraption
and simulated the event.
They also built a scaled-down
physical model so Toyota managers
could see what they were getting
into.
The next step was building the
giant seesaw in the lonely locale
they had chosen: Lone Pine, Calif.,
at the base of the highest mountain
in the Lower 48 states.
“The length of the two ramps
and seesaw was 540 ft, with the seesaw
making up 240 of those feet,”
says Bruce McCloskey, a freelance
production designer involved with
the ads. “The fulcrum was about
60-ft tall, a number chosen by director
Andrew Douglas because he
thought it would look impressive.”
The roadway slanted up (and
down) at a 27.5° angle. “A testing
facility determined the Tundra
could climb such an incline, but it
was by no means the uppermost
limit,” says McCloskey.
The final structure used over 350,000 lb of steel 165,000 lb
in just the seesaw portion. At the
fulcrum, the seesaw rested on an
8-in.-diameter steel tube. There
were no bearings, only gravity held
the moving portion in place, and
only the weight of the truck, along
with the 10,000-lb load it was towing,
would move the seesaw into
the down position. There were
decelerators, however. A series of
12-in. rubber dampers cushioned
the shock as the seesaw came down
on the far ramp. The final structure,
a four-week construction job,
could be seen from 4 miles away.
Shooting the 30-sec commercial
took three days and a crew of
about a hundred. A safety crew
did deploy some proprietary (and
secret) precautionary devices, but
they were never used, according to
Funke. And the driver was always
in radio communication with the
film crew and the rest of his safety
team.
After the shoot, the structure
was taken down and as much of it
as possible reused in the next spot.
“That gave us a common look between
all the commercials,” says
Funke. “But both Toyota and our
company are very green-minded
and we don’t like the idea of waste.”
The crew also removed every piece
of trash they had brought with
them, leaving locations just as barren
and lonely as when they found
them.
RAMP
For the second ad in the series, a
Tundra accelerates along an 800-ftlong
ramp cantilevered off the
edge of a cliff, going 0 to 60 mph
before the driver hits the brakes, bringing it safely to stop about
4 in. from the edge. To add more
excitement, a pair of sliding steel
doors positioned across the roadway
begins closing as soon as the
Tundra trips a photoelectric eye.
If all went according to plan, the
truck would have 8 in. of clearance
on the left and right when it passed
the closing doors. “And they were
not breakaway doors,” says McCloskey,
“They were all steel, in a steel
frame, and ran along a guide in the
roadway. They definitely would
have stopped the truck.”
To prepare the site, an abandoned
iron mine, the crew used
several earthmovers to remove boulders and level the ground.
They also decided to elevate the
roadway 3 ft on steel trusses rather
than put it flat on the ground. “If we
put it on the ground, we would’ve
had to do some digging and extra
engineering to get the road cantilevered
out over the drop,” says
McCloskey. “Putting it up on the
trusses made it look more like a
planned demonstration, and using
the same steel from the previous
event just helped make both ads
look similar.“
Despite the potential danger in
all the ads, Funke and McCloskey
insist the Tundra was a stock, off-the-showroom-floor model. “For each spot, three people from the
surrounding community, usually
a judge, film commissioner, and
an attorney, watched the entire
filming,” says McCloskey. “They
also signed affidavits attesting that
there was no trick photography
and that the truck really performed
just as we show in the ads. And
those affidavits are on file in our
L.A. offices.”
Pulley
To show the Tundra has real
pulling power, a third spot has
the truck on a roadway cantilevered
out over a 180-ft cliff in an
old rock quarry. A cable hooked to the truck’s towing hitch snakes
through some pulleys and clamps
and over the side of the cliff. A
standard metal shipping container
hangs suspended on the other end
of the cable. For the commercial,
a crewmen releases the clamp, letting
the 6,400-lb container fall a bit,
giving the truck a jolting backward
tug. The truck then pulls forward,
yanking the container up and over
the side of the drop-off.
““We talked about using large
pulleys, or block and tackle, which
gives the truck a mechanical advantage,”
says McCloskey. “But the
creatives at Saatchi & Saatchi decided
that anything that made it
easier for the Tundra to pull the
container up would be cheating. So
we went with a simple pulley that
would make it a one-for-one pull.”
The production team did run
into a problem with this spot: the
location wasn’t exactly what they
wanted. “We had spent two days
scouting locations for this spot,”
says McCloskey. “And after flying
from New Mexico, to Arizona, and
up and down California, we finally found the Sierra Rock Quarry,
which seemed to have the sheer
drop we needed. But once we got
on site and started construction, we
discovered the bottom wall of the
quarry stuck out farther than we
had anticipated. That meant we had
to increase the amount of roadway
sticking out over the cliff by 10 ft to
keep the container from hitting it.
The extra road also meant we had
to add more steel to the roadway to
counterbalance the container and
add more concrete to the ballast
that kept it all stable. And we had to
do all this in a week.”
Wrecking hammer
The fourth, and maybe the
most impressive spot so far, involves
two swinging pendulums,
each with a 9,000-lb I-beam at the
end. A pair of 93-ft towers held the
cross members on which the pendulums
swung. The production
team laid a 1,500-ft asphalt roadway
directly beneath and between
the supporting towers. This put
the road directly in the path of the
swinging steel beams when they were released from their holding
position 72-ft up. The truck would
roar down the roadway, hitting
50 mph. At some well-calculated
point, a clamp would open and the
first I-beam would begin swinging,
coming close to the moving truck,
Not much later, the second I-beam
would begin to swing free. There
were no brakes on the pendulums;
no way to slow or stop them.
The truck just barely misses being
struck by the first beam, comes
to an abrupt stop, then has less
than a second to accelerate out of
the away before the second I-beam
smashes into it. To make things
more difficult, the Tundra is towing
a trailer loaded with 10,300 lb.
There’s been some carping about
this ad and the seesaw spot by folks
on the Internet saying the truck really
wasn’t towing 10,000 lb, and
that the ads deliberately mislead
by including the 6,000-lb weight
of the truck in the overall 10,000-lb
figure. But Funke and McCloskey
are adamant; the trailers carried
10,000 lb or more, so the truck’s engine
is really moving over 16,000 lb. (And they have the affidavits to
back them up.)
There’s also been some complaints
that the trailer used in these
two spots is outfitted with electric
brakes, so the trailer’s providing
the stopping power, not the truck.
“But in keeping with safe driving,
you need electric brakes on trailers to drive legally on the streets,” says
Funke. “Had we not used them,
someone would say Toyota is implicitly
endorsing the idea of not
using trailer brakes. Besides, our
commercials had to be in keeping
with how real truckers use their
trucks.”
Make Contact
To see more of the commercials and
some images from the planning and
construction of them, go to Toyota’s
Web site at: http://www.toyota.com/vehicles/minisite/commercial/index.html.