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The director of the COY! collective and adland legend with 40+ years in the industry, Mark Denton attributes his success to an ability to retain a childlike fondness for “stupid stuff.” He tells Tim Cumming about the wisdom of being daft enough to set up his own shop and how he sees the future of advertising

“Funny adverts – that is why I wanted to be in the business,” says Mark Denton, who also wants to know why the fun went out of it. “I liked watching telly with my mum and watching her laughing at the PG Tips chimps. Whoever wrote, ‘You hum it, son, I’ll play it’ for The Piano Shifters, they’re my hero.”

Norman [Icke] was very funny, very talented. He’s my first hero and I still think about him now. It was the funniest time I spent in advertising, not just because I was pissed, but because he was hilarious, and it was a roller-coaster ride.

For more than 40 years now, Denton has cut a unique swathe through the advertising world. The director of multidisciplinary collective COY! Communications, he began as a visualiser at Leo Burnett in 1978, then landed a job as art director thanks to a lack of desk space, meaning he had to share with senior AD Norman Icke, the man behind the Milk Tray hero and those orally fixated Flake ads. “So I was in his room and he liked a drink so he’d take me down the pub at 11am. I had to keep him company. Before you knew it, I’d become art director, and it was thrilling. Norman was very funny, very talented. He’s my first hero and I still think about him now. It was the funniest time I spent in advertising, not just because I was pissed, but because he was hilarious, and it was a roller-coaster ride.”

Where ignorance is bliss, ’tis folly to be wise 

In fact, he joined Lowe, staying for two years before answering that call to set up on his own. Which is where his own most heroic act comes in. “Heroes, what are they?” he asks. “They’re brave. So you’ve got a coin with ‘brave’ on one side of it and on the other side is ‘stupid’. So when I announced I was leaving, Lowe wanted to double my salary and give me a flash car, but I opted to go with these partners I had never heard of before, for half my salary.” He pauses. “Was that a brave or stupid thing to do?”

On the one hand, he did get fired from said agency, but since then he’s gone on to direct award-winning work through the likes of Blink and Therapy films, while his own COY! Communications marks its 10th anniversary this year. As he enters his fifth decade in the industry, where does he see the heroes of the future? “Advertising is changing completely, so it is hard to know even if agencies are going exist in the next few years. There may not be anyone who is in it at the moment who will be a hero of the future. But if someone can embrace the change and be part of what happens next, they’ll be the hero.”

I think we’re just about to enter a new creative age. It’s gonna be more exciting and that’s where the future heroes will come from.

As for the villains, that’s simple: “Anyone selling big data versus big ideas”. And on top of that, the decline in status of great creatives. “When I was growing up in advertising, there were creative stars. They’re not allowed to be stars any more. That is really significant. And that doesn’t feel healthy.” 

He does, however, see a bright future for independent creatives working directly with clients via the freelance prod-co model. “You get a job in, a film crew in, and once it’s over they all go away again. So while the accountants might have fucked the agencies up, it hasn’t fucked the opportunities for creatives. I think we’re just about to enter a new creative age. It’s gonna be more exciting and that’s where the future heroes will come from.”

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