There have always been ads, and then there have been ads that have quietly slipped into our childhood, unpacked themselves, and stayed there like a stubborn, sour-sweet memory. The kind that hasn’t just been watched, but has been lived. The kind that has made you whistle at a shopkeeper in your head, or wonder, just for a fleeting second, what if machines could actually do magic?
Because somewhere between the hum of a photocopy machine and the tang of a raw mango, an entire generation has found its imagination tickled. And suddenly, the most boring object in a stationery shop hasn’t just been a machine anymore, it has been a portal. A possibility. A delicious little lie we’ve all been happy to believe.
That’s exactly where the brilliance of Parle’s “Ab Aur Bhi Chatakdaar” campaign has lived.
The campaign came out in 2009 and has been conceptualised by Everest Brand Solutions (now part of the Rediffusion Group), under the creative leadership of Rahul Jauhari as National Creative Director and Samir Chonkar as Executive Creative Director.
On the client side, Parle Products has steered the vision, with Shalin Desai overseeing the brand’s evolution.
What they haven’t just created is an ad, they have built a shift in perception. The messaging has moved from “mango-flavoured candy” to something far more evocative: this tastes exactly like a real raw mango. And instead of explaining that, they have shown it, through a metaphor so simple, it has felt like child’s play.
A young boy, played by Zain Khan, has walked into a small shop with his gang, carrying the kind of confidence only children (and fictional heroes) have possessed. He hasn’t asked for attention, he has whistled for it. “10 photocopy dena… nahin 15!” (Give me 10 photocopies… no, 15!)
Already, the world has tilted slightly. Because what he has placed on the counter hasn’t been paper. It has been a raw mango. The shopkeeper blinked, confused, muttering: “Kacche aam ka photocopy?” (A photocopy of a raw mango?)
And yet, this is where logic has politely stepped aside.
The button has been pressed. The machine has whirred. And instead of sheets of paper, candies have begun cascading out like a sugary monsoon.
What has followed is the payoff, pure, sensory delight. The boy has popped one into his mouth, and his face has performed that now-iconic “chatakdaar shiver”, eyes tightening, cheeks pulling in, a full-bodied reaction to tanginess that you can almost taste through the screen.
The Jingle That Has Echoed (and Shifted)
“Kacche aam ka Xerox, Kacche aam ka Xerox…”
The line has been sticky, playful, impossible to forget. But behind its simplicity, there has been a fascinating wrinkle.
The term “Xerox” has long been used in India as a stand-in for photocopying, a linguistic shortcut we’ve all taken. But the Xerox Corporation hasn’t been too fond of that casual appropriation. Known for fiercely protecting its trademark, the company reportedly intervened.
And so, the jingle has been altered. “Xerox” has been dubbed over with “copy.”
If you listen closely today, the audio hasn’t always perfectly matched the lip-sync, a tiny, almost invisible glitch in an otherwise seamless fantasy. But somehow, that imperfection has only added to the charm. Like a smudge on a photocopy, it has made it feel more real.
Why This Ad Has Worked (And Still Does)
Because it hasn’t tried too hard. The logic has been delightfully straightforward: Raw mango and machine results in Kaccha Mango Bite.
No heavy metaphors. No layered symbolism. Just a childlike leap of imagination that has made perfect sense because it hasn’t needed to.
It has also turned the product into the undeniable hero. The candy hasn’t been explained, it has been demonstrated, dramatised, experienced.
And then there’s casting. Zain Khan, with his natural mischief and post–Chain Kulii Ki Main Kulii familiarity, has brought just the right amount of cheek. His whistle hasn’t felt rude, it has felt aspirational. Like something you’d try once, just to see if life could imitate advertising.
Even as later campaigns have featured Amitabh Bachchan as a mischievous “mango thief,” this photocopy universe has remained unmatched. Because it has taken something mundane, a dull office machine, and has transformed it into a childhood fantasy generator.
Some ads have sold products. Some have built brands.
And then there are those rare few that have created tiny alternate realities, worlds where rules have bent, logic has softened, and joy has taken over.
This campaign belongs to that rare breed. Even today, if you stand near a humming photocopy machine, there’s a fleeting, almost ridiculous thought that might cross your mind: what if?
What if you slipped in a raw mango and out came a cascade of tangy, mischievous magic?
Because long after the machine has stopped whirring, and the candy has dissolved on your tongue, that imagination, that delicious, impossible possibility, has lingered.














