Todd Millenacker didn't get the message that the jingle is dead.
Companies have turned away from catchy, old-fashioned ditties created by ad agencies urging you see the U.S.A. in a Chevrolet or informing you that their bologna has a first name and a second name.
Instead, advertisers who need to sell cars or credit cards or tennis shoes just pay to repurpose a hit by Prince or the Beatles or Lady Gaga.
Even if a big company wanted an original jingle, it wouldn't consider an unsolicited tune tossed over the electronic transom by a guy from Savage who has a day job as a freight broker.
Which is why Millenacker's lawyer told him he'd caught lightning in a bottle when he got a contract to sell a song to Little Caesars for use in a national TV ad campaign.
Millenacker isn't just a one-hit wonder in the lost art of jingle writing.
He sold a second song to Little Caesars, which was used for radio commercials. Now he's creating a rap video internet commercial to hawk a back hair shaver for men, and he's tossing around lyric ideas with another potential client.
"It kind of opened up Pandora's box," said Millenacker. "Wow. People pay for jingles. I kind of fell into it."