This
one's about the little color that could.
Ezra
Cornell was a Quaker farm-kid who grew up to be a successful engineer. He was a telegraph pioneer and a founding
member of Western Union, and as a result became fabulously rich. Eager to provide opportunities for other young
strivers, he created a land-grant college in Ithaca, NY and hired Andrew
Dickson White as its first president. At
its opening in 1868, the school busted out its new colors: Cornelian Red for its
founder, and White for its president. Presto,
the Big Red.
30 years later, Cornell's
football team rolled into Philadelphia to play Penn. Sitting in the stands that day was Herberton
Williams, an executive from the Joseph Campbell Preserve Company across the
river in Camden, who took one look at Cornell's uniforms and thought, "my, don't
those boys look sharp in PMS Red 187." He
shared his thoughts with John Dorrance, a chemist at the company who was working
on a new idea called "condensed soup." Shortly
thereafter, Dorrance's product, clad in Ezra Cornell's team colors, won a gold
medal at the Paris Exhibition of 1900. Shazam,
Campbell's Tomato Soup!
30 years later, at the
other end of Pennsylvania, Andrew Warhola was born to a Slovakian immigrant
family. Sickly and a hypochondriac,
young Andy could not join his father and brothers in the coal mines, so he was
shipped off to study art at Carnegie-Mellon. There, legend has it, he developed a love for
movie stars, money, Coca-Cola, and Campbell's Tomato Soup, which he claimed he
ate every day for years. In 1962, he unleashed
an idea called "Campbell's Soup Cans" which was nothing more than silk-screened paintings
of 32 Campbell's Soup cans lined up like a grocery shelf. Most art critics dismissed it as tripe, but
the public loved it. Kapow, Pop-Art!!
Dennis Hopper bought one
of those first canvasses for the bargain price of $100. In 1970, "Vegetable Beef" sold for $60M,
setting the record auction price for a painting by a living American artist. In 2006, "Pepper Pot" sold at auction for
almost $12MM, and ironically proved the critics right: Pepper Pot's distinctive ingredient IS tripe,
AKA stomach lining. Today, the rest of Warhol's work in PMS 187 hang in the Museum of Modern Art. But that wasn't good enough for the
ivy-league brainiacs. Recently, some arrogant
idiot thought Cornell needed a "brighter" look for their uniforms, and redid
them all in PMS 186. The student body
howled. Ezra Cornell started spinning in
his grave. Instant PR meltdown!!!
Thankfully, they quickly
regained their senses, and brought back the classic, PMS 187. You go, Big Red.
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