By virtue of his tenure, Charlie Hoag is the Star Tribune's unofficial in-house historian, especially when it comes to advertising.
The Minneapolis native began his career at the newspaper in 1961 as a sales intern during his junior year at the University of Minnesota. The kind of guy who seems to know everyone, Hoag worked his way up the ladder, eventually becoming the company's director of sales and vice president of advertising. Although he officially retired in 2006, Hoag has continued to consult for the newspaper.
"My long-retired friends ask me what I'm doing now," he said. "And I tell them that I'm teaching new dogs old tricks."
Q: Why was Taste created?
A: It was a collaborative project between news and advertising. Back in those days — and this is still true today — anytime you did a readership interest study, food was always high on the list. Over the years I've identified close to 30 fairly distinct silos — categories — of business that we deal with on a regular basis, and food has always been in our Top 5 to Top 10. Back then, we had large amounts of competitive retail grocery advertising, and we also carried a lot of national advertising, mostly introductions of new products and couponing.
Q: So the purpose was to gather that advertising into a single, user-friendly section, right? I take it that there weren't a lot of preprinted circulars being inserted into the paper back then.
A: I checked with the plant, and anyone old enough to remember thought that we'd started distributing preprinted sections sometime in the 1960s, for national retailers like Sears, Wards and J.C. Penney. Most of the grocery stores were local. They didn't have those economies of scale. They could still run their ads in the paper and that was enough to drive people into their stores.
Q: Which explains why, during the 1970s and 1980s, Taste was packed with page after page of supermarket ads. They're fascinating to read. In an average 16-page section in the 1970s, at least 12 of those pages would be devoted to supermarket ads. Why did that slow to a trickle in the early 1990s?