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In [[1965]], IBM commissioned a series of industrial films from [[Jim Henson]], who worked alongside IBM's film and television head, [[David Lazer]]. The films were a mixture of motivators and sales reels (spotlighting IBM's typewriters, early word processors, and other products) and comedic break shorts, intended as icebreakers during long meetings. A notable example of the latter is "[[Coffee Break Machine]]," in which a prototyped [[Cookie Monster]] consumes an exaggerated talking computer. These shorts in effect were the first [[Muppet Meeting Films]], which would be made available to any corporate client; some of these later entries were direct remakes of the IBM shorts.
 
In [[1965]], IBM commissioned a series of industrial films from [[Jim Henson]], who worked alongside IBM's film and television head, [[David Lazer]]. The films were a mixture of motivators and sales reels (spotlighting IBM's typewriters, early word processors, and other products) and comedic break shorts, intended as icebreakers during long meetings. A notable example of the latter is "[[Coffee Break Machine]]," in which a prototyped [[Cookie Monster]] consumes an exaggerated talking computer. These shorts in effect were the first [[Muppet Meeting Films]], which would be made available to any corporate client; some of these later entries were direct remakes of the IBM shorts.
βˆ’  
[[File:IBM Watson on Sesame Street|thumb|300px|2016 IBM ad featuring Watson on Sesame Street.]]
 
In [[2016]], IBM and [[Sesame Workshop]] announced a partnership to develop personalized educational platforms for preschoolers employing IBM's [[Watson (computer)|Watson]] computer.<ref>[http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/49585.wss "Sesame Workshop and IBM Watson Team Up to Advance Early Childhood Education," IBM News Room, April 27, 2016]</ref> In September, IBM released a commercial featuring Watson on [[Sesame Street (location)|Sesame Street]] conversing with [[Elmo]], [[Cookie Monster]], [[Abby Cadabby]], [[Grover]], [[Big Bird]] and several [[The Kids|kids]].
 
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__TOC__
 
   
 
==Films==
 
==Films==
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A more elaborate film, divided into three parts with a conclusion, has Rowlf joining IBM as a salescanine, to the surprise of the Office Products Division sales head ("What do you mean we hired a dog?") Rowlf recounts his business adventures in a letter to [[Tilly|his mother]], as typed on a succession of IBM typewriters. Rowlf struggles to make a sale (his ethics causing him to actively flee a customer who admitted to looking at another typewriter in a store window) but he remains optimistic and dogged. A series of commercial spoofs to sell IBM follow, directed by Rowlf himself, spoofing the campaigns of Doublemint, Timex, and Avon. Finally, Rowlf succeeds in meeting 100 percent quota and enjoys a trip to the 100 Percent Club gathering.
 
A more elaborate film, divided into three parts with a conclusion, has Rowlf joining IBM as a salescanine, to the surprise of the Office Products Division sales head ("What do you mean we hired a dog?") Rowlf recounts his business adventures in a letter to [[Tilly|his mother]], as typed on a succession of IBM typewriters. Rowlf struggles to make a sale (his ethics causing him to actively flee a customer who admitted to looking at another typewriter in a store window) but he remains optimistic and dogged. A series of commercial spoofs to sell IBM follow, directed by Rowlf himself, spoofing the campaigns of Doublemint, Timex, and Avon. Finally, Rowlf succeeds in meeting 100 percent quota and enjoys a trip to the 100 Percent Club gathering.
   
βˆ’
In another film, Rowlf writes to the head of his department, having devised a way to pep up their meetings (which he had fallen asleep during). He envisions himself starring in an IBM variety show, where he plays the joke-telling emcee, a soft-shoe duo (The Rowlf Twins) and a singer who performs a big closing number (backed up by four [[Muppet puppets (Ideal Toys)|of the Ideal Rowlf puppets]]). At the end, it is shown Rowlf is writing the letter as a way of passing the time while locked in the meeting room.<ref>Shown as part of "Henson in High Definition: The Early Years" at [[Museum of the Moving Image]] on May 22, 2015</ref>
+
In another film, Rowlf writes to the head of his department, having devised a way to pep up their annual summer review of the company rules (which he had fallen asleep during). He envisions himself starring in an IBM ''revue'', where he plays the joke-telling emcee, a soft-shoe duo (The Brothers Rowlf) and a singer who performs the big closing number (backed up by four [[Muppet puppets (Ideal Toys)|of the Ideal Rowlf puppets]]). At the end, it is shown Rowlf is writing the letter as a way of passing the time while locked in the meeting room.<ref>Shown as part of "Henson in High Definition: The Early Years" at [[Museum of the Moving Image]] on May 22, 2015</ref>
   
βˆ’
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
+
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=300 spacing=small>
 
Image:Rowlf-guitar.jpg|Rowlf for IBM's hippie division
 
Image:Rowlf-guitar.jpg|Rowlf for IBM's hippie division
 
Image:Rowlf-IBMselectricball.jpg|Rowlf gazes in wonder at the IBM Selectric
 
Image:Rowlf-IBMselectricball.jpg|Rowlf gazes in wonder at the IBM Selectric
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
βˆ’
==="[[Coffee Break Machine]]"===
+
===[[Coffee Break Machine]]===
 
[[1967]] film called [[Coffee Break Machine]] featured an early version of [[Cookie Monster]].
 
[[1967]] film called [[Coffee Break Machine]] featured an early version of [[Cookie Monster]].
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
βˆ’
==="[[The Paperwork Explosion]]"===
+
===[[The Paperwork Explosion]]===
 
1967 film called [[The Paperwork Explosion]] directed by Jim Henson and featured no Muppets.
 
1967 film called [[The Paperwork Explosion]] directed by Jim Henson and featured no Muppets.
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
βˆ’
==="Explosion"===
+
===Explosion===
 
Early versions of [[Leo]] and [[Grump]] appear in this meeting film, which was later remade in the 1980s.
 
Early versions of [[Leo]] and [[Grump]] appear in this meeting film, which was later remade in the 1980s.
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
βˆ’
==="Kermit's Stepping Stones to Success"===
+
===Kermit's Stepping Stones to Success===
 
[[Kermit the Frog|Kermit]] and [[Beautiful Day Monster]] in an early version of "[[Muppet_Meeting_Films#Leo_and_the_Monster|Leo and the Monster]]."
 
[[Kermit the Frog|Kermit]] and [[Beautiful Day Monster]] in an early version of "[[Muppet_Meeting_Films#Leo_and_the_Monster|Leo and the Monster]]."
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
 
<gallery orientation=landscape widths=200 spacing=small>
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</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   
βˆ’
==="The Snow Job"===
+
===The Snow Job===
 
Leo gives a motivation speech about helping his fellow employees, claiming he's not "snowing" anybody. The conference thinks otherwise and soon, he finds himself deep in a blizzard.
 
Leo gives a motivation speech about helping his fellow employees, claiming he's not "snowing" anybody. The conference thinks otherwise and soon, he finds himself deep in a blizzard.
  +
<gallery orientation="landscape" widths="300" spacing="small">
  +
File:SnowBusiness.jpg
  +
snowjob-blizzard.jpg
  +
</gallery>
   
 
==Unfinished films==
 
==Unfinished films==
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According to a curated entry of the [[Jim Henson's Red Book]] blog:
 
According to a curated entry of the [[Jim Henson's Red Book]] blog:
 
{{quote|IBM was hosting in-house seminars at their Information Management Facilities (IMF) designed to broaden the minds of their executives and engineers (rather than be instructive on a particular topic). Producer Ted Mills, who had hired Jim [Henson] to provide comic relief for some of [[Bell Data Communications Seminar|AT&T]] training seminars back in 1963, was now working for IBM's IMF. He approached Jim in late 1968 to make two animated films (called ''Excluded Mean'' and ''The File Clerk'') and two live-action films (called ''The Crowd'' and ''Unpredictable'') for IMF. The abstract themes, differing from those meant to sell or provide a laugh, matched well with Jim’s mid-1960s film efforts to depict emotions, thought processes, and feelings through moving images and sounds. Footage of crowds in Baden Baden, [[Hamburg]] and [[Italy|Rome]] was ordered, and Jim created animation cels of abstract geometric shapes. [[Joe Raposo]] wrote a musical track, but it is unclear if any of these films were ever finished. After a first version of Unpredictable was previewed, Ted Mills said it was, "Feeling wrong," and that he wanted it to show the, "...profundity of man, [and be] a visual poem." Not the usual intent of a business training film β€” but the ambitions behind it must have appealed to Jim.<ref>Jim Henson's Red Book: [http://www.henson.com/jimsredbook/2014/01/29/127-291968/ 1/27-29/1968 – β€˜Filming in San Francisco with Fritz – for β€œUnpredictable” for IBM-IMF.’]</ref>}}
 
{{quote|IBM was hosting in-house seminars at their Information Management Facilities (IMF) designed to broaden the minds of their executives and engineers (rather than be instructive on a particular topic). Producer Ted Mills, who had hired Jim [Henson] to provide comic relief for some of [[Bell Data Communications Seminar|AT&T]] training seminars back in 1963, was now working for IBM's IMF. He approached Jim in late 1968 to make two animated films (called ''Excluded Mean'' and ''The File Clerk'') and two live-action films (called ''The Crowd'' and ''Unpredictable'') for IMF. The abstract themes, differing from those meant to sell or provide a laugh, matched well with Jim’s mid-1960s film efforts to depict emotions, thought processes, and feelings through moving images and sounds. Footage of crowds in Baden Baden, [[Hamburg]] and [[Italy|Rome]] was ordered, and Jim created animation cels of abstract geometric shapes. [[Joe Raposo]] wrote a musical track, but it is unclear if any of these films were ever finished. After a first version of Unpredictable was previewed, Ted Mills said it was, "Feeling wrong," and that he wanted it to show the, "...profundity of man, [and be] a visual poem." Not the usual intent of a business training film β€” but the ambitions behind it must have appealed to Jim.<ref>Jim Henson's Red Book: [http://www.henson.com/jimsredbook/2014/01/29/127-291968/ 1/27-29/1968 – β€˜Filming in San Francisco with Fritz – for β€œUnpredictable” for IBM-IMF.’]</ref>}}
  +
  +
==Watson==
 
[[File:IBM Watson on Sesame Street|thumb|300px]]
 
In [[2016]], IBM and [[Sesame Workshop]] announced a partnership to develop personalized educational platforms for preschoolers employing IBM's [[Watson (computer)|Watson]] computer.<ref>[http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/49585.wss "Sesame Workshop and IBM Watson Team Up to Advance Early Childhood Education," IBM News Room, April 27, 2016]</ref> In September, IBM released a commercial featuring Watson on [[Sesame Street (location)|Sesame Street]] conversing with [[Elmo]], [[Cookie Monster]], [[Abby Cadabby]], [[Grover]], [[Big Bird]] and several [[The Kids|kids]].
  +
  +
In January [[2018]], Big Bird and [[Oscar the Grouch|Oscar]] (voiced by [[Caroll Spinney]]), and [[Numerical Characters|the numbers 9 and 5]] (puppeteered by [[Ryan Dillon]]<ref name="dillon">[https://www.instagram.com/p/BWArU4eFZog/ Ryan Dillon on Instagram]</ref>), appeared in an IBM commercial set to the [[Dolly Parton]] song "[[9 to 5]]." Their cameo was filmed on July 1, 2017.<ref name="dillon"></ref>
  +
{{br}}
  +
<gallery widths="350">
  +
File:IBM9to5.jpg|
  +
</gallery>
   
 
==Sources==
 
==Sources==
Line 84: Line 93:
   
 
{{wikipedia}}
 
{{wikipedia}}
  +
  +
__NOWYSIWYG__
 
[[Category:Industrial Films|IBM]]
 
[[Category:Industrial Films|IBM]]

Revision as of 23:22, 8 November 2018

IBMlogo
Ibm proto cookie

"Coffee Break Machine"

One of the largest information technology companies in the world, International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) was founded in 1888 and continues producing computer technology.

In 1965, IBM commissioned a series of industrial films from Jim Henson, who worked alongside IBM's film and television head, David Lazer. The films were a mixture of motivators and sales reels (spotlighting IBM's typewriters, early word processors, and other products) and comedic break shorts, intended as icebreakers during long meetings. A notable example of the latter is "Coffee Break Machine," in which a prototyped Cookie Monster consumes an exaggerated talking computer. These shorts in effect were the first Muppet Meeting Films, which would be made available to any corporate client; some of these later entries were direct remakes of the IBM shorts.

Films

Rowlf the Dog films

Several of the 1966-1967 IBM industrial films, for internal use, featured Rowlf the Dog. One had Rowlf singing "My Way," as an early example of Rowlf playing the piano. Another featured Rowlf introducing IBM's new Hippie Products Division (HPD), including a complicated IBM electric guitar.

A more elaborate film, divided into three parts with a conclusion, has Rowlf joining IBM as a salescanine, to the surprise of the Office Products Division sales head ("What do you mean we hired a dog?") Rowlf recounts his business adventures in a letter to his mother, as typed on a succession of IBM typewriters. Rowlf struggles to make a sale (his ethics causing him to actively flee a customer who admitted to looking at another typewriter in a store window) but he remains optimistic and dogged. A series of commercial spoofs to sell IBM follow, directed by Rowlf himself, spoofing the campaigns of Doublemint, Timex, and Avon. Finally, Rowlf succeeds in meeting 100 percent quota and enjoys a trip to the 100 Percent Club gathering.

In another film, Rowlf writes to the head of his department, having devised a way to pep up their annual summer review of the company rules (which he had fallen asleep during). He envisions himself starring in an IBM revue, where he plays the joke-telling emcee, a soft-shoe duo (The Brothers Rowlf) and a singer who performs the big closing number (backed up by four of the Ideal Rowlf puppets). At the end, it is shown Rowlf is writing the letter as a way of passing the time while locked in the meeting room.[1]

Coffee Break Machine

1967 film called Coffee Break Machine featured an early version of Cookie Monster.

The Paperwork Explosion

1967 film called The Paperwork Explosion directed by Jim Henson and featured no Muppets.

Explosion

Early versions of Leo and Grump appear in this meeting film, which was later remade in the 1980s.

Kermit's Stepping Stones to Success

Kermit and Beautiful Day Monster in an early version of "Leo and the Monster."

The Snow Job

Leo gives a motivation speech about helping his fellow employees, claiming he's not "snowing" anybody. The conference thinks otherwise and soon, he finds himself deep in a blizzard.

Unfinished films

According to The Jim Henson Company Archives, Henson started production on four additional films for IBM in the late 1960s. These films were entitled Excluded Mean, The File Clerk, The Crowd and Unpredictable; it is unknown if any of these films were ever completed.

According to a curated entry of the Jim Henson's Red Book blog:

β€œIBM was hosting in-house seminars at their Information Management Facilities (IMF) designed to broaden the minds of their executives and engineers (rather than be instructive on a particular topic). Producer Ted Mills, who had hired Jim [Henson] to provide comic relief for some of AT&T training seminars back in 1963, was now working for IBM's IMF. He approached Jim in late 1968 to make two animated films (called Excluded Mean and The File Clerk) and two live-action films (called The Crowd and Unpredictable) for IMF. The abstract themes, differing from those meant to sell or provide a laugh, matched well with Jim’s mid-1960s film efforts to depict emotions, thought processes, and feelings through moving images and sounds. Footage of crowds in Baden Baden, Hamburg and Rome was ordered, and Jim created animation cels of abstract geometric shapes. Joe Raposo wrote a musical track, but it is unclear if any of these films were ever finished. After a first version of Unpredictable was previewed, Ted Mills said it was, "Feeling wrong," and that he wanted it to show the, "...profundity of man, [and be] a visual poem." Not the usual intent of a business training film β€” but the ambitions behind it must have appealed to Jim.[2]”

Watson

IBM_Watson_on_Sesame_Street

IBM Watson on Sesame Street

In 2016, IBM and Sesame Workshop announced a partnership to develop personalized educational platforms for preschoolers employing IBM's Watson computer.[3] In September, IBM released a commercial featuring Watson on Sesame Street conversing with Elmo, Cookie Monster, Abby Cadabby, Grover, Big Bird and several kids.

In January 2018, Big Bird and Oscar (voiced by Caroll Spinney), and the numbers 9 and 5 (puppeteered by Ryan Dillon[4]), appeared in an IBM commercial set to the Dolly Parton song "9 to 5." Their cameo was filmed on July 1, 2017.[4]

Sources

External links

Wikipedia has an article related to: