Friday December 27th, 2024 1:03PM

Wendy's editing out Thomas in ads already filmed; future ads will carry on his tradition

By
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Future Wendy&#39;s commercials will carry on the homespun tradition that founder Dave Thomas used to help turn the hamburger chain into one of the world&#39;s top fast-food enterprises. <br> <br> Thomas, who began pitching his burgers and fries in television commercials in 1989 and went on to become a household face, died Tuesday of liver cancer at his home in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He was 69. He had been undergoing kidney dialysis for nearly a year and had quadruple heart bypass surgery in 1996. <br> <br> &#34;We have to carry on the tradition and the culture that Dave started,&#34; said Denny Lynch, vice president of communications for Wendy&#39;s International, based in suburban Dublin. &#34;It is still Dave&#39;s place and Wendy&#39;s still cares.&#34; <br> <br> Lynch said Thomas, who appeared in more than 800 of the humorous ads usually wearing a white short-sleeved shirt and red tie, will be edited out of the commercials made four months ago. Older commercials will not be rerun, he said. <br> <br> &#34;People told us what they like about Dave is that he is very believable, trusting and caring,&#34; Lynch said. &#34;And they didn&#39;t use those words lightly.&#34; <br> <br> Thomas&#39; participation in recent commercials had been more of a cameo role, Wendy&#39;s officials told industry analysts Wednesday. <br> <br> &#34;Dave always said he was the messenger, not the message,&#34; said Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jack Schuessler. <br> <br> Jim McKennan, executive vice president of Bates Worldwide, the New York-based advertising company that helped create the ads, said the company had planned for making commercials without Thomas. <br> <br> &#34;We have had several other campaigns. So, although we were dreading this moment, we were prepared for it,&#34; he said. &#34;We designed something that basically had the message and the flavor of Dave ... but without him.&#34; <br> <br> Customers connected with Thomas through his folksy, sometimes self-effacing humor. Five years ago, the company staged a lookalike contest that attracted 1,600 entrants vying for the grand prize: a chance to appear in a commercial with Thomas. <br> <br> People were endeared to the smiling, bespectacled Thomas, in part because of his rags-to-riches background. Thomas was 12 when he got his first restaurant job, as a counterman in Knoxville, Tenn. <br> <br> In 1962, Thomas came to Columbus to take over four failing Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants. He sold them back to the founder Col. Harland Sanders in 1968 for $1.5 million, making Thomas a millionaire at 35. <br> <br> He opened his first Wendy&#39;s Old Fashioned Hamburgers in Columbus a year later. He named the restaurant after his 8-year-old daughter Melinda Lou, nicknamed Wendy by her siblings. <br> <br> The chain now has 6,000 restaurants worldwide. In 1996, Wendy&#39;s acquired Canadian-based Tim Hortons, a coffee and baked goods chain with more than 2,000 stores. They have combined sales of more than $8 billion. <br> <br> On Wednesday, the company said December sales rose 6.3 percent at its Wendy&#39;s restaurants in the United States, versus 2.6 percent a year ago. Sales were up 13.6 percent for the month at Tim Hortons restaurants in the United States compared with 11.3 percent a year ago.<br>
  • Associated Categories: Business News
© Copyright 2024 AccessWDUN.com
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.