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The Truth About Allstate's Mayhem Commercial Guy - YouTube
Channel: Looper
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Allstate's series of "Mayhem" commercials
is one of the most successful ad campaigns
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in recent memory.
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It's easy to understand why they've caught
on.
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"I'm your phone, stuck down here between your
seat and you console.
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Playin' a little hide and seek.
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Cold.
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Bzz."
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If you've watched these spots and felt like
the guy playing Mayhem seems familiar, you're
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right he's popped up in a number of shows
and films over the last couple of decades.
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Here are some surprising facts you didn't
know about Allstate's Mayhem man, Dean Winters.
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A guy walks into a bar…
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Winters landed his first movie role in the
1997 Mel Gibson and Julia Roberts thriller
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Conspiracy Theory.
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But that wasn't Winters' first screen acting
gig overall.
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In the 1995 TV season, he had a recurring
role as Tom Marans on NBC's acclaimed police
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drama Homicide: Life on the Street.
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He got that part via [vee-ah] his connection
with Homicide creator and producer Tom Fontana.
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Up to that point, Winters had primarily paid
the bills with a bartending job in New York
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City.
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Fontana walked into Winters' Upper East Side
bar at about 2 A.M. one night and the two
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struck up a friendship.
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Fontana offered to write a role into the show
for Winters, and eventually he accepted.
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It turned into a good decision for the young
actor - when Fontana moved on to create the
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prison drama Oz for HBO, he wrote the role
of Ryan O'Reily specifically for Winters.
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30 Rock runaway
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For viewers of the Tina Fey sitcom 30 Rock,
Winters will always be Dennis Duffy, Liz Lemon's
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sleazy, on-again-off-again boyfriend.
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"It's a fancy briefcase.
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Cuz you're classy and important, like a dude."
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"Thank you Dennis."
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Duffy's many quirks made him a fan favorite,
but he almost didn't get the gig.
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Winters later said:
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"I went to the audition for 30 Rock - I walked
in, and there was, like, 30 guys up there
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reading for my role, and [...] they were the
funniest guys in New York City."
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Faced with that level of talented competition,
Winters bolted.
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When his talent agency found out about it,
they issued an ultimatum: Go back to the audition,
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or they'd drop him as a client.
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Needless to say, Winters went back - and got
the gig.
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"Dennis what are you doing?"
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"I'm gonna mount a TV on your wall, I just,
I can't find a stud."
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He actually died
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One morning in June 2009, Winters awoke with
a fever and stayed in bed all day.
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The next morning he went to his doctor's office,
and that's where he collapsed.
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He later told Page Six:
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"I was turning black, and my whole head was
swelling up."
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An ambulance raced Winters to the hospital,
but on the way, his heart stopped… for two
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and a half minutes.
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Paramedics revived him, and he wound up spending
three weeks in intensive care to recover from
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a bacterial infection.
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Winters was too sick to work for a year.
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Right before his brush with mortality, he'd
filmed a pilot for an ABC show called Happy
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Town, and when it was picked up, producers
replaced him.
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However, exactly one year and a day after
he collapsed, his best-known work hit screens
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when Allstate launched its "Mr. Mayhem" campaign.
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"Mommy!
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Mommy mommy!"
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Avoiding Mayhem
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Winters almost didn't live to make those Mayhem
ads - and in fact, he almost didn't appear
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in them at all.
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After his medical nightmare, he had to re-learn
how to walk.
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He explained:
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"I was feeling sorry for myself - I had lost
toes and half a thumb and the tip of my nose
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fell off - and this nurse took me to the children's
burn unit.
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I saw these eight kids with prosthetic legs
playing soccer and I thought, 'That's it.'
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That's the moment when I turned everything
around and decided to learn how to walk again."
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When Allstate Insurance sought him out to
play the Mayhem guy in its huge commercial
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campaign, Winters turned them down at first.
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He told HuffPost Live:
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"When they offered me the commercial, I said
no.
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My smartass remark was that I became an actor
so I wouldn't have to put on a suit and sell
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insurance.
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And then my agent slapped me around and said,
'Come on, get real.'"
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Active career
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Shooting a string of 30-second TV commercials
is Dean Winters' most widely known gig, but
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it leaves him enough time to do lots of acting
in movies and on TV shows, where he often
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plays street-smart tough guys and cops.
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Since the Mayhem campaign began in 2010, Winters
has surfaced on sitcoms like Brooklyn Nine-Nine
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and Divorce.
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In addition to his recurring roles on 30 Rock,
Rescue Me, and Law & Order: SVU, Winters also
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starred on Battle Creek, a short-lived CBS
crime dramedy co-created by Breaking Bad's
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Vince Gilligan.
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Winters has also appeared in films like John
Wick.
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Horror shoot
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As a young man, Dean Winters wrote himself
an acting "bucket list" of all the different
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kinds of projects he aimed to perform in someday.
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He later recalled:
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"I was, like, 'I want to be in a horror film,
I want to be in a Western, I want to be in
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this, I want to be in that."
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One item Winters can cross off that list is
a horror movie.
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Winters played a sleazy businessman mourning
his wife and dealing with amnesia in the 2002
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direct-to-video release Hellraiser: Hellseeker,
the sixth film in the series featuring the
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spiky-headed Pinhead.
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It wasn't necessarily a dream come true, however.
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In fact, Winters didn't have the best time
shooting the movie.
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He explained:
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"I took that movie at the last minute, I got
to Vancouver, and if there were 120 scenes
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in the movie, I think I was in 116.
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And I got sick, like, at the end of the first
read-through."
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Winters wound up being extremely ill for three
weeks out of the four-week shoot, and it didn't
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help that the film was shot in a real psychiatric
facility.
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He added:
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"I was having nightmares and seeing visions
in the hospital.
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It was just bananas."
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The hands of Mayhem
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The Leo Burnett advertising agency conceived
the Mayhem ads, and in 2011, Burnett executive
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vice president Nina Abnee unequivocally told
Ad Age that one of the inspirations behind
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Mayhem was simple, saying:
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"We wanted to kick Flo's ass."
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She's speaking, of course, about Allstate
rival Progressive's extremely popular advertising
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mascot.
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Thanks in part to the Flo ad onslaught, Allstate's
market share dropped for two straight years.
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The Mayhem campaign reversed Allstate's fortunes
with Winters' character and an emphasis on
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value over price.
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