Mander was born in the Bronx, New York City, and raised in Yonkers,[3] one of two children of Harry Mander, a garment worker who later started a company manufacturing clothing linings, and his wife Eva. Both of his parents were Jewish immigrants who had left Poland and Romania, respectively, to escape persecution.[1][2][4]
After working for a short time in public relations for Worthington Corporation in Newark, New Jersey, in 1960 Mander moved to San Francisco, where he was hired as a publicist for the San Francisco International Film Festival.[2] He also co-promoted the psychedelic Trips Festival in 1966; worked for the modern dancer Anna Halprin, accompanying her on a European tour as her manager; and with Ernest Callenbach, founded the first art-house cinema in San Francisco.[7] In 1966, he joined Howard Gossage's advertising agency, which became Freeman, Mander & Gossage after Mander became a partner. Clients included the comedy troupes the Committee, for whom Mander ran a full-page ad in the San Francisco Chronicle announcing a competition to donate war toys to be air-dropped on the Pentagon,[2][7] and Firesign Theater. After Gossage's death in 1969, the firm broke up and Mander became independent.[1] He co-founded Public Interest Communications to assist individuals and nonprofits, then joined the Public Media Center, where he remained for 20 years as a senior fellow.[1][2]
In 1966, while at Freeman & Gossage, Mander created an ad campaign for the Sierra Club that is largely credited with stopping a U.S. Government plan to dam the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon in order to raise the level of the river and to generate hydropower. Mander's newspaper ads, with headlines like "Should We Also Flood the Sistine Chapel So Tourists Can Get Nearer the Ceiling?"[1][8] and "Now Only You Can Save Grand Canyon From Being Flooded ... For Profit", included coupons for readers to clip and mail to the President and the Secretary of the Interior.[2] The Sierra Club remained a client; another was Planned Parenthood, for whom he created a 1985 abortion rights campaign that also included coupons for readers to mail to officials, in addition to photos of two women with their accounts of obtaining illegal abortions,and of a firebombed abortion clinic.[2] His last major campaign, the Turning Point Project for the Foundation for Deep Ecology, encompassed 25 weekly full-page ads in the New York Times on a range of ecological topics.[1] The Wall Street Journal called him "the Ralph Nader of advertising.[8]
Mander published eight non-fiction books, the best known being Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television in 1978,[8] in which he argued that television paves the way for autocracy by isolating viewers and dulling their minds.[2] In 2022 he published a memoir through the prism of his advertising work for transformative causes, 70 Ads to Save the World.[1][2][8]
Personal life and death
In 1965, Mander married feminist author Anica Vesel. They had two sons, Kai and Yari. They divorced in 1982; she died in 2002.[10] He remarried in 1987 to Elizabeth Garsonnin, a filmmaker and colleague at the Public Media Center, from whom he was also divorced, and in 2009 to Koohan Paik, also a filmmaker. They split their time between his longtime home in Bolinas, California and her home in Hawaii.[1]
Mander died at home in Kukuihaele, Hawaii, on April 11, 2023, at the age of 86. According to family, the cause was prostate cancer.[1][2]
The Superferry Chronicles: Hawaii’s Uprising Against Militarism, Commercialism, and the Desecration of the Earth, with Koohan Paik, Koa Books (2008) ISBN978-0-9773338-8-2
The Capitalism Papers: Fatal Flaws of an Obsolete System (2012) ISBN978-1582437170
70 Ads to Change the World: An Illustrated Memoir of Social Change (2022) ISBN978-0907791812
^Jerry Mander (1978). Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television. New York: HarperCollins. p. 14. ISBN978-0-688-08274-1. My parents carried the immigrants' fears. Security was their primary value: all else was secondary. Both of them had escaped pogroms in Eastern Europe. My father's career had followed the path familiar to so many New York immigrants. Lower East Side. Scant schooling. Street hustling. Hard work at anything to keep life together. Early marriage. Struggling out of poverty. ... [My father] founded what later became Harry Mander and Company, a small service business to the garment industry, manufacturing pipings, waistbands, pocketing and collar canvas.