Today's email edition from the NY Times' Stuart Elliot contained an interesting aside about former employees of shuttered agencies getting together for reunions. I post this only because I myself am a onetime Bates person who keeps skipping these gatherings. Not that I don't want to see my former colleagues, or anything. I just prefer to do my drinking on the street, cardboard placard in hand.
Dear Readers: In this space last week, I answered a question from a reader who was seeking information about alumni organizations for two agencies for which he worked in the 1960's and 1970's, BBDO and Ted Bates. While BBDO provided information about its alumni newsletter, The Pink Sheet, I asked for information about Bates, most recently called Bates Worldwide, because it is no longer in business.
Here is what I learned in e-mail messages from several of you. One former employee of 141 Worldwide, a division of Bates Worldwide, says "there are ad hoc get-togethers at the 'Bates Bar,' which as recently as last month was still functioning at 498 Seventh Ave. in Midtown Manhattan," the former headquarters building of Bates Worldwide."
"I went to one in October," the reader writes, "and many former Bates and 141 people were in attendance."
Another reader writes about a "semi-regular convening of the 'Bates Irregulars,'" which took place last week at the Midtown restaurant Orso, "one of our more upscale haunts when Bates was at 1515 Broadway."
The group, which included employees from departments like account management, creative, media planning, human resources and strategic planning and research, "started to flesh out an action plan for a reunion," the reader writes, which is being planned for May 2005; the group is hoping to put up a Web site for alumni before then.
"Reunions, especially among employees of shuttered agencies, are bright spots in what has been a gloomy period for our industry," the reader writes. "They also put to the lie that agency folk are mostly shallow or opportunistic because there are connections spanning decades where the only 'payback' is the satisfaction of staying in touch or renewing contacts with those you respect and like. Plus, they are a blast!"
Readers, I will pass on any information about the reunion plans that I learn in the coming months.