|
A fictional brand is a non-existing brand used in artistic or entertainment productions — paintings, books, comics, movies, TV serials, etc.. The fictional brand may be designed to imitate a real corporate brand, satirize a real corporate brand, or differentiate itself from real corporate brands.
Why create fictional brands
Works of fiction often mention or show specific brands to give more realism to the plot or scenery. Specific brands provide descriptive details that the author can use to craft a plot: a character may own a factory that manufactures a popular product, or may make a scene by demanding a particular brand; a detective may get clues from the brand of cigarettes smoked by a suspect; a film may include a commercial poster on the background, or show a package of cereal in close-up.
However, unauthorized use of real trademarks for such purposes could trigger legal action by their owners — especially if the brands are referenced in a way that could be seen to have negative marketing impact. In general, the use of a real brand requires prior written consent by the brand's owner, who will typically demand some control on the brand's use. These hassles are probably the main reason for the use of fictitious brands.
Real brands are often used, of course. Sometimes a specific brand is needed because of its prior associations; e.g. the Coca-Cola machine scene in Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove would not work with any other real or fictitious brand (except possibly Pepsi). Sometimes the author will use a common brand only to make the scene more natural or create a specific ambience. More commonly, such uses are instances of product placement — the insertion of "casual" (but actually paid and intentional) positive references to brands in movies, television programming, games, and books. However, this practice is so widespread in the entertainment industry that it gives authors another reason to avoid the use of real brands: any such reference would be suspected by the public of being paid advertising, and could diminish the artistic or intellectual merit of the work.
Another advantage to a fictional brand is that all its specifications can be invented. In this sense, an author can invent a model or brand of car, for which he can make up details. That way, he doesn't have to go look up specifications on a car, which would take time and effort- he could just make them up.
Yet another reason to use a fictional brand is that sometimes a product is itself a major "character" in the plot, and using a real brand would limit creativity as the author would be constrained by the actual attributes of that brand. A subset of this is comedic brands, the most famous being "Acme" for the maker of complicated gadgets that never quite work.
Finally, the use of a real brand may be excluded also when the plot is meant to develop in a time or place (e.g. in a distant future, or in a fictional universe) where the real brand would not have existed anyway.
Fictional brands
The following is a list of fictional brands, organized by product category.
Beverages
Alcoholic beverages
See also: List of fictional mixed drinks
Carbonated Beverages
- 6+ - The Man Who Sold the Moon
- bebop cola - Sealab 2021, Comes in a variety of flavors: Root Bird, Gilberto Grape, Artie Shawberry, Kiwi Holliday, Peachmo, John Cola-trane, Don Wild Cherry, Vince Guavaldi, Dave Bruberry, Cab Colaway, Dexterade, Nina Lemone, Mango Reinhardt, Getzberry, Fizzy Gillespie, Marian McPineapple, Or'ngette Coleman, Mingus Dew, Plain, and Diet Plain.
- Bouncy Bubble Beverage (aka B3). Also B1, B2 and B4. - Paranoia RPG
- Brotherhood's Sparkling Pomayde - Murder Must Advertise and Montague Egg stories (both by Dorothy L. Sayers)
- Bubbleshake - (actually an addictive appetite suppressant) Doctor Who
- Buzz Cola - (also Crystal Buzz Cola) The Simpsons
- Cactus Cola - The Flintstones
- Cadre Cola - The Running Man movie
- Carbie Cola - (The most carbonated soft drink ever), Fillmore
- Cowboy Cola - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Mirage Studios comics)
- Dopokoke - cocaine-spiked drink in For His Son, a 1912 D. W. Griffith short
- Ebola Cola ("The hemorrhage that refreshes") - Transmetropolitan comics
- Fizzade - Doctor Who
- Fukk Cola - Syrup
- Hip Pop - The Simpsons
- Jammin' Orange Blast - Futurama
- Jooky - 7-Up TV commercial
- Kreml cola - One, Two, Three
- Moka Cola - The Man Who Sold the Moon
- Mrs. Arbiter's Ginger Beer - Discworld
- Nozz-a-La - Dark Tower, an alternate version of Coca Cola.
- Patrola Cola - window cleaner with soy beans from Robert Downey Sr.'s "Putney Swope"
- Pepsi Perfect - Back to the Future Part II
- Purple Flurp - Jimmy Neutron
- Rocka Cola - The Flintstones
- sHades - ("sHades - The soda from Hell") - The Long Dark Teatime of the Soul
- Slug-o-Cola - Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- Slurm - Futurama
- Soder Cola - DC Comics, esp. Superman titles
- Soylent Cola ("The Taste Varies from Person to Person") - Futurama
- Zesti Cola - DC Comics, esp. Batman titles; Soder's great rival.
Other beverages
Food and grocery products
Breakfast Cereals
Confections and candy products
Nutritional supplements
Medicine and drugs
See the Fictional medicine and drugs section of Fictional chemical substance
Clothing lines/brands
Tobacco products
Cigarettes
Cigars
Other tobacco products
Household products
Hair, hygiene, and beauty products
Petroleum Products
Stores, retailers, and fast-food outlets
See List of fictional companies#Retailers
Vehicles
- 6000 SUX - car from film Robocop
- Beta Romeo - flying car, Futurama
- The Betsy - Harold Robbins novel (and movie) The Betsy
- Bormann 6 - car from the US film Putney Swope
- Canyonero - a parody of typical SUVs, The Simpsons.
- Durango 95 - sports car, from the film A Clockwork Orange
- General Products - Spaceship hulls, Known Space
- Heron sedan car - Nero Wolfe
- The Homer - car designed by Homer Simpson, The Simpsons
- IT - codename for a superfast gyroscopic unicycle designed by Mr. Garrison to combat airlines, South Park
- The Jupiter 8 - a Roman car on an episode of the original Star Trek series
- Melmoth - Humbert Humbert's car in Lolita
- Ford Thundercougarfalconbird - flying car, Futurama
- Plymouth V'ger - flying car, Futurama
- Scooty-Puff Jr. - short-range single-person spacecraft for children, Futurama
- Scooty-Puff Sr. - short-range single-person spacecraft for adults, Futurama
- Trovare - expensive but unreliable sports car from 'Europa', from the 1988 US movie It Takes Two
- Wagon Queen Family Truckster (in Metallic Pea with optional Rallye Fun-Pack) - National Lampoon's Vacation
- Wasabi - a badly designed Japanese car driven by Newton Pulsifer in Good Omens
Other products
- Various ACME products - Wile E. Coyote and other Looney Tunes animated cartoons
- Arachno Spores - "The fatal spore with the funny name!" - Futurama
- Akina iconographs - imp-powered "cameras" in Discworld
- Baby Smokes-A-Lot - doll, Family Guy
- Bag-O-Glass - Saturday Night Live
- Bamboo Boogie Boots - Futurama
- Bioalchemic Products - imp-powered personal organisers in Discworld
- Dr. Flimflam's Miracle Cream - Futurama
- Lexcorp, Lexoil, Lexair, Lex-Mart etc. - Various brands owned by Lex Luthor in DC Comics
- Li'l Bastard - line of mischief-making kits for young children, often used by Bart Simpson in The Simpsons
- Loose Blood - mysterious product advertised on Firesign Theater
- Magnavolt car security system - Robocop 2 film
- Molten Boron - Futurama
- Nishi - brand of electronics, The Big Hit
- Ortho-pure Procreation Pills - The Running Man film
- Poop (cola, chocolates, etc.) - Invader Zim
- Poopin Diggins - The Bob Show
- Shankman's Rubbing Compound - "When something needs rubbing, think Shankman!" Futurama
- Slashco knives - The Simpsons
- Strong Force Krazy Glue - Futurama
- Super Adhesive Industrial Glue - Family Guy
- Thompson's Teeth - "The only teeth strong enough to eat other teeth!" Futurama
- Try-Hard 1-11 pacemaker battery - "Picks up where your heart left off." Saturday Night Live
- Ubik - From the Philip K. Dick novel of that name. "Safe when used as directed".
- Va-poo-rise - vaporizes dog poop, Envy
See also
External links
|