Document details

Money Mouse

THE Queen of England’s refusal to leave  a  film  performance  before  the Mickey  Mouse  comedy  came  on,  even though her ladies-in-waiting insisted that she’d be late for tea at the palace (Queen Mary said she didn’t care about tea; she wanted to see Mickey Mouse), hasn’t any obvious  connection  with  dollar  watches or  cheese  or  boys’  pants.  But  the connection  is  there.  For  if  the  Queen would  rather  miss  tea  than  miss  Mickey Mouse, then there is very good reason to believe  that  inexpensive  watches  with  a Mickey  Mouse  dial  will  sell  very  well. They  do,  and  Mickey’s  creator,  Walt Disney, reaps his reward. He is still rather surprised.

When Mickey first began his rise to his present  position  as  the  world’s  most famous  contemporary  mouse,  a  few astute merchandisers wrote in and asked if Mr. Disney had any objections to their using  Mickey  as  a  part  of  their  trade- mark.  If  Mr.  Disney  wasn’t  too  busy  he would  tell  them  to  go  right  ahead.  If  he was  busy  he’d  throw  the  request  in  the wastebasket. But Mickey got around and Mr. Disney wasn’t at all interested until a mail-order house executive told him that he was losing a lot of profit by not selling the right to have a picture of Mickey on a watch  or  an  ice-cream  cone.  So  Mr. Disney,  still  only  mildly  interested,  got hold of a Mr. Kay Kamen, who now takes care of Mickey Mouse in business.

LAST  year  mickey  mouse  was  on $1,000,000  worth  of  merchandise.  This year  he  sells  at  the  rate  of  about $5,000,000 a year, which means at least $250,000  for  the  Disneys.  There  are more  than  a  hundred  companies  using the  Mouse  trademark—National  Dairy Products,  International  Silver,  Ingersoll- Waterbury  (watches),  Dennison  (paper), Hicock  (belts),  Seneca  (textiles).  A recent issue of a boys’ outfitting magazine had twenty-two pages out of seventy-four devoted to stories and proud advertising displays  of  pants  and  sweaters  and  caps decorated  with  Mickey  Mouse. McCall’s Magazine   uses  him  and  his  Minnie  for patterns.  National  Dairy,  which  uses  the trademark on ice cream and cheese and such, ordered 30,000,000 Mickey Mouse ice-cream cones this year and an affiliate company  in  the  South  sold  6,000,000 Mickey  Mouse  ice-creams-in-a-cup  in the first six weeks of sales.

NOT  anyone  may  use  the  trademark. Users  must  have  an  A-1  rating,  must promise  not  to  allow  Mickey  Mouse merchandise to be sold at marked-down or cut-rate prices, and must submit their products and advertising to Mr. Kamen. If he doesn’t like the drawing—Mr. Disney doesn’t  draw  all  the  Mickey  Mouses  but he  gets  mad  at  a  poor  imitation—the user has to try over again. If Mr. Kamen doesn’t  approve  of  the  company  the company  gets  along  without  Mickey Mouse.  No  maker  of  laxatives,  beer,  or cigarettes may use Mickey Mouse. It’s too undignified  or  unwholesome  for  the children.  Nor  may  Mickey  make  radio appearances.  Disney  thinks  the  voice would  be  disillusioning.  As  a  side  line, Mr.  Kamen  edits  the Mickey  Mouse Magazine,  a simple little monthly full of good  sentiments  and  bad  puns.  It  is distributed  through  department  stores and had a circulation in June of 300,000 copies. Now it’s about double that.

Now that Mickey is tied up with things like  ice  cream  and  cheese,  his  mousey- ness  is  soft-pedaled  to  make  the connection a bit more proper. Anyway, a current survey shows that children don’t think of Mickey as a mouse. A good many of  them  were  asked  whether  Mickey Mouse is a dog or a cat. Almost half of the tots answered brightly: “A cat.”

MICKEY, THE INTERNATIONAL MOUSE ...
is as much at home in Le Printemps in Paris as in Macy's in Manhattan. The French placard is one of the many you may find in the Paris department store. The French like to put Mickey and Minnie together in loving poses. Macy's, less romantic, makes a window display of the Ingersoll-Mickey Mouse watches and clocks — with Mickey chasing Minnie around the face. Mickey had a great triumph in Worcester, Massachusetts, as king of last spring's Prosperity Festival, A Mickey Mouse Mall was set up in front of the City Hall. School children, the Mayor, and the City Council paid homage, restaurants had Mickey Mouse on their tablecloth, clerks had Mickey Mouse on their smocks, and the Boston Herald began its lead editorial: "They are making history today in Worcester," They also made money.

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Source

Title
Source type Magazine
Volume 8.4
Published
Language en
Document type Feature
Media type text
Page count 2
Pages pp. 14,20

Metadata

Id 3819
Availability Free
Inserted 2018-11-04