How the Ranveer Singh rap film inspired United Breweries, India's largest beer maker, to change its two decade old iconic jingle, the iconic 'Oo La La La Le O'
It was the third Sunday in February. Shekhar Ramamurthy, managing director at United Breweries (UBL), managed to squeeze some time out of his fiercely hectic calendar to hit a theatre. The movie that grabbed the attention of the top honcho at India’s largest beer maker was Gully Boy, the Ranveer Singh- blockbuster. “I knew that he [Ramamurthy] was moved by the film,” recalls Gurpreet Singh, divisional vice president of marketing at UBL.
In fact, Singh was influenced by movie too. What he found most striking, though, was the way that its most famous rap song caught the fancy of the nation. Apna time aayega [my time will come] had, by default, become a youth anthem—one for both rebellion and inspiration. The movie, Singh recounts, brought rap into the mainstream. The massive popularity of the song, and the film, prodded him to think of the implausible: Overhauling the iconic Oo La La La Le O jingle of Kingfisher, which has been the identity of the brand since 1996.
The job, though, was easier said than done. Singh’s team was already halfway through making a new campaign for the Indian Premier League (IPL). Changing things at the last moment would have risked the entire campaign. Singh, however, took his chances. What encouraged him to take a leap of faith was one seminal realisation: All he needed was his boss’s approval. “At the end of the day, I just had one person to convince: The managing director,” he thought to himself.
Luckily for Singh, ‘his time’ came when Ramamurthy called him on Monday, a day after the latter had watched the blockbuster. After normal business conversation, the managing director started talking about the movie. Interestingly, the two big boys at UBL discussed Gully Boy for a good 15 to 20 minutes. Singh was convinced that his boss would be receptive to his idea.
“I wanted to strike while the iron was hot,” Singh said to himself. The very next day, he presented Ramamurthy the idea. “It got approved,” he smiles. Oo La La La Le O, the iconic jingle composed in 1996, made way for a racy rap avatar in 2019. “The response has been amazing. The brand has struck a chord with the youth,” says Singh.