By Michael Stodola Special to OnMilwaukee.com Published Feb 02, 2007 at 9:38 AM

Janet and I were eating at a local restaurant -- our Friday night date -- I won’t say where, but we had horrible service. So, when it came time to pay, I left a tip I thought equaled our experience (a bit pitiful and empty). Janet, a former waitress, thought it was a terrible thing to do.

“He’s just a poor college student,” she argued.

Whatever.

Isn’t that the point of the tip? Bad service, bad tip. Great service, great tip. It’s survival of the fittest. I figure this kid would, one: get bad tips, and then two: find a new line of work. That would be a win-win situation. He would be happier and so would the restaurant-going public.

That’s how we all should roll. Reward good stuff, and ignore, or penalize, bad stuff. I do that with advertising and design. Companies with good advertising or design get my business. Companies with bad advertising or design get nothing. It’s why I shop at Target (visually-arresting, fresh spots selling everyday products) and not K-Mart or Wal-Mart (whose brands are cheap and pedestrian). It’s why I eat at Cubanitas or Roots (thoughtful décor and style) and not Applebee’s (obnoxious, phony clutter). And it’s also why I’ll never buy a car at Rosen (I’m not sure what’s going on there) and stopped going to Cousins Subs. (Dan Patrick talking about his “ad agency.” I tend to lose my appetite.)

I vote with my wallet. Good design and advertising (good architecture, too) matter. It adds to our culture and should be rewarded. And just like the pitiful waiter (who’s hopefully a satisfied truck driver at this point), we should “convince” the business that muck-up our collective aesthetic to hit the bricks. Good riddance to bad brands.

Darwinistic consumerism, HO!

Michael Stodola Special to OnMilwaukee.com
Michael Stodola is the Creative Director at Boelter + Lincoln – a Milwaukee advertising agency. He loves his job, but not as much as he loves scuba diving, crab cakes or playing with his kids. His favorite thing is sneaking off for dates with his hottie wife. Born and raised in Nebraska, he’s been calling Milwaukee home for well over 10 years. After Michael’s impending death, he’d like to return to this world as your next American Idol®.