LG Electronics: So Real It’s Scary 2 #LGStageFright

The legend goes that a lot of men have issues in the men’s room when somebody is looking at them. LG Electronics and SuperHeroes Amsterdam present the new LG IPS 21:9 UltraWide monitor with a humorous online film – Stage Fright – So Real It’s Scary 2 – treating unsuspecting men to a very special challenge in the men’s room. Will they be able to fight their stage fright? The film was shot in candid camera setting in the World Fashion Centre in Amsterdam and involves the IPS 21:9 UltraWide monitors plus a set of beautiful girls. The psycho-physical experiment is demonstrating just how lifelike the image quality of the new monitors is. So lifelike, it even influences men’s physical abilities.

Advertising Agency: SuperHeroes, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Creative Directors: Rogier Vijverberg, Rene Klinkhamer
Art Director: Silje Lian
Copywriter: Gareth Broadbent
Creative Planner: Felipe Camera
Design: Nando Pawirodikromo
Agency producer: Severien Jansen
Video Production: Revolver
Video director / Camera / DOP: Tobias Pekelharing
Producer: Gerben Molenaar
Editor: Jelmar Hoekstra
Post-production: Fred Huergo, Fredrik Dejert
Sound: Sander Houtman

Memoir of Amanda Knox to Be Released

In “Waiting to Be Heard,” Amanda Knox acknowledges her own mistakes and says she was the victim of mistreatment by Italian authorities while imprisoned over the murder of her roommate.

    

Avis Taps Celebrities to Target ‘Professionals’ in Latest Ad Campaign


In the battle for a key segment, National Car Rentals has suggested that business travelers “Go Like a Pro.” Now Avis Car Rental is turning to its own “professionals” in its latest campaign.

Thecampaign by Leo Burnett Business, which broke Monday, stars four celebrities: champion beach volleyball star and model Gabrielle (Gabby) Reece; Nigel Barker, the international photographer and host of “The Face”; PGA Tour star Steve Stricker; and restaurateur Thomas Keller.

In one new TV spot, we see Ms. Reece moving from a business meeting to the oceanfront. She notes that Avis gives working women rentals with enough room to slip out of their business clothes — and into a “tight black number.” In her case, that’s not a cocktail dress but a workout outfit to lead a fitness class on the beach.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Tale of China’s Leader in a Taxicab Is Retracted

A Hong Kong newspaper admitted that a story that was almost too good to be true was, in fact, not.

    

A Coding Standard to Track Media Assets Is Proposed

An industry group says a new system for monitoring where, when and how digital videos are watched would be a boon to media companies and marketers.

    

Sarah Thompson Named CEO at Droga5, New York


Droga5 is making a wave of changes to its U.S. leadership team, as part of which Sarah Thompson has been named the agency’s new CEO.

She succeeds Andrew Essex, who had been CEO since the shop opened in New York in 2006. Mr. Essex is being moved up to vice chairman but will continue to oversee DE-DE, the agency’s digital product development studio. As CEO, Ms. Thompson will be responsible for overseeing all client business and making sure that Droga5 — which has been on Ad Age’s Agency A-List for the past several years — continues to grow and innovate.

Ms. Thompson joined Droga5 in 2008 as general manager from BBH New York, where she had served as head of account management and international accounts. In just two years, she was promoted to president. Before moving to New York she spent time in San Francisco and Boston at Omnicom Group’s Goodby Silverstein & Partners and Interpublic Group of Cos.’ Mullen.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Anúncio interativo da Audi utiliza função screenshot do iPad

Boas ideias geralmente surgem de coisas que sempre estiveram por aí, mas ninguém nunca tinha pensando em usar. A função de screenshot do iOS – botões “home” e “sleep” apertados simultaneamente – virou anúncio para a Audi no iPad.

Para comunicar a velocidade do novo R8, uma peça em revistas digitais pede para que o usuário tente “fotografar” o veículo utilizando o recurso de screenshot do tablet. Para ver o modelo, é preciso tentar capturar no momento certo.

Criação da AlmapBBDO, com produção da The Goodfellas.

Audi

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Across the Hudson, at Least the Lunatics Don’t Run the Asylum


It wasn’t an easy decision. Like most of the creative people at the agencies where I’ve worked, I had always arrogantly believed that going to New Jersey was akin to going to the minor leagues.

But after more than 30 years as an art director, copywriter, creative director and proud New York City advertising snob at such agencies as Della Femina Travisano & Partners, Messner Vetere Berger McNamee Schmetterer Euro RSCG, Ogilvy, and my own shop extrovertic, I was ready to try working west of the Hudson, closer to my home in Mendham, N.J.

I started researching agencies in my area. Most of the bigger ones were pharma, but I had spent the last four years as a pharma Executive Creative Director, and I wanted to get back to my roots of working across all categories and channels.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

McDonald’s Print Ad Shows Appropriate Time to Eat a Burger


A bun and napkin become a metaphor for the appropriate time to chow down on a burger, in this smart print ad for McDonald’s, out of DDB Stockholm.

The agency has previously done some pretty delightful work for the fast-feeder, including this cute print ad that showed how easy McDonald’s might make your crazy mornings.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Uma “Corrida Maluca” da Fiat em 1998

A “Corrida Maluca” da Peugeot ficou incrível e está fazendo sucesso. Uma ideia tão boa que muita gente se perguntou: “Como é que nunca tinham feito isso antes?”

Pois é, já tinham feito. O comercial acima do Siena, da Fiat, é de 2008 1998, misturando animação com cenas do carro.

Uma coincidência, claro, que nem se compara com a mega-produção da Peugeot feita em live-action. Ainda assim, prova de que criação de Hanna-Barbera já deve ter sido considerada algumas boas vezes pro segmento automotivo. Faltava fazer bem feito.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Hyperlapse incrível com Google Street View

Teehan+lax é uma agência canadense conhecida por muitos designers como “os caras que fazem o iPhone GUI”*. Esse é apenas um dos projetos do laboratório de idéias deles.

Essa semana eles lançaram um outro projeto chamado Google Street View Hyperlapse. (Hyperlapse é aquela técnica que combina timelapse com uma câmera que se movimenta durante a captura das imagens). Com a ferramenta você pode criar seu próprio vídeo a partir de um trajeto que escolher no Google Maps. Uma idéia simples e bacaninha.

Hyper

Mas muito mais legal do que simplesmente criar esse aplicativo, foi a edição de vídeo que eles fizeram com lindas paisagens que encontraram no Street View. Assista o vídeo abaixo e chore.

* O iPhone GUI é um PSD com toda a interface do iPhone desenhada em layers, que quebra um baita galho dos designers na hora de criar um aplicativo de iPhone.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Press Has to Seize Social Media’s ‘Gutenberg Moment,’ Kramer Says


Larry Kramer began his tenure as president and publisher of USA Today last year with a bold redesign of the paper and its website. Now his priority is the editorial itself — and making it appealing enough to share in an ecosystem where social media increasingly picks the winners and losers.

“We went to the staff and said, ‘You know, for 30 years you’ve been told to write the same way,'” Mr. Kramer said at the Ad Age Digital Conference in New York on Wednesday. “‘We really want you to have a unique stand on how you write.'”

Now the newspaper is urging reporters to not just write straight news, but to try to offer interesting points of view. And USA Today is planning to add even more personality to the paper in the coming months. (Last fall it hired Michael Wolff, the often-provocative media writer who wrote a column this month calling for NBC Universal CEO Steve Burke to be fired.)

Continue reading at AdAge.com

50 Lessons I’ve Learned as an Entrepreneur

Editor's note: Appsolute Genius founder and CEO Brian Cauble recently began posting a daily list on Facebook of five lessons he's learned since launching his Alabama-based mobile-app development studio in 2009. Although the list was intended for friends, family and colleagues, Cauble agreed to let Adweek publish the full list of 50 lessons that have shaped his personal and professional life.

1. Your significant other's support is hugely important. They can hold you up or pull you down.

2. Building a powerful business network is 100 percent essential. Much of your business will come from being known.

3. This job is really, really hard, and you just won't know the answers some days.

4. Being passionate about at least a few things is very important, but you don't have to be passionate about every aspect of running a business.

5. You aren't good at everything, no matter how smart you are.

6. People will help you … if you ask.

7. Partnerships can seem like a good idea, but they take a long time to really pan out, and differences between companies can still cause them to fail.

8. Caring about your business partner and your employees can really help your company.

9. Sales is so important. If you don't figure out your sales, you will fail.

10. Picking a growing, flourishing market is just as important as your product and talent. If your market is good, it improves your margin for error quite a bit.

11. Being an entrepreneur can make you feel bipolar. You will have good days, bad days, good afternoons, bad mornings and vice versa.

12. Building a strong team is critical. A strong team isn't just smart people; it's a group of people who complement each other's strengths and weaknesses.

13. Admitting and understanding your strengths and weaknesses is a must. Take every personality and strengths assessment you can find.

14. You have to learn to balance work, family and taking care of yourself. You will probably let one of them slip a bit, and it will suffer.

15. The best characteristic I've seen for success is pure determination.

16. The second best characteristic I've seen that predicts success is determination to learn and ask questions.

17. You will feel really stupid some days.

18. Each stage of a company's growth will bring different challenges.

19. You will truly understand what "busy" means. And then you will find that there is another level of busy that you didn't think was possible.

20. The purpose of your business, your passion and your support system will carry you through the bad times.

21. The best way to build a strong network is to really get to know a lot of people and help them however you can.

22. You will be burned by at least one person you help. Don't let your temptation to stop helping people take over.

23. You will feel very lonely at certain times because it will feel like no one really gets what you are going through.

24. Your salary will go way down before it goes up. The financial payoff of being an entrepreneur doesn't come for a long time for most (even really smart) people.

25. It is a tough balance to know when to change your strategy or be determined.

26. Generally understanding every area of your business is very important, but you don't have to have your hands on everything.

27. The word payroll takes on a new meaning.

28. Hiring is VERY hard. You will try your best but you will still make mistakes.

29. Firing is also VERY hard, but it is necessary. Once you know in your gut you've made a bad hire, just end it. It will be tempting to keep the person on, but don't do it.

30. Understanding what kinds of customers you can best help (industry, size of company, personality type, etc.) will really help you grow your company. If you haven't learned about niches and segmenting, learn about them now.

31. You will feel like a proud parent certain days, and you won't believe what you've accomplished.

32. Everything takes soooo much longer than you think it will.

33. Starting and running a company will be terrifying at times. That is OK!

34. The amount of mistakes you make will be humbling. However, just don't make catastrophic mistakes that cause you to go out of business.

35. Learn to manage your cash flow. If you don't know what a rolling cash flow forecast is, you'd better learn what it is.

36. Fire really bad customers. You will be worried about losing the revenue, but they aren't worth it. Finish the job you started if you can, but discontinue the relationship as soon as you can.

37. Get a good CRM and use it. Seeing the deals you get and don't get will tell you a lot about your business.

38. Offering a product and offering a service are very different. It will be tempting to do both, but it is difficult, and you should be wary.

39. Be focused on doing one thing great. Every opportunity you look at will dilute your focus.

40. Your business can do different things like not having standard hours or having work-at-home employees. You don't have to do it the same as everyone else.

41. You will truly hate at least one thing about running a business. (For me, that's doing taxes.) Find someone else to do most of this for you.

42. Having a business partner feels a lot like being married. You will spend a ton of time with this person. It better be someone you genuinely care about and trust. But you don't have to like each other all the time.

43. It really helps if you and your business partner are good at different things.

44. You will not be able to be there for all of your family and friends as much as you like, and they will have a hard time understanding.

45. Selling your products and services becomes easier as you show a track record of being successful.

46. Good employees make your life easier. Bad employees make your life harder. There is no middle ground.

47. You will think about your business a lot. You will probably even dream about it.

48. Paying yourself a smaller (but regular paycheck) is better. You can always give yourself bonuses and raises when you have a surplus of money.

49. Having a master plan is important, but the details will change often.

50. It is all so worth it. Even if your business fails, you will be better for it.

—Brian Cauble is co-founder and CEO of Birmingham, Ala.-based mobile app studio Appsolute Genius. Since launching in 2009, his seven-person firm has developed more than 100 apps.

    

Elastic Reality

80k

The participating artists not only play with distortions of the “real”, but also pioneer new ways to interact with their work. The formal exploration of new interfaces is as much part of their preoccupation, as is the content of their work, and the kind of commentary on the current state of reality we live in continue

Macklemore & Ryan Lewis – Can’t Hold Us

Après Thrift Shop, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis change de registre pour proposer un magnifique clip illustrant le morceau « Can’t Hold Us ». Réalisée par Ryan Lewis, Jason Koenig et Jon Jon Augustavo, cette vidéo jongle avec talent entre différents univers et met en avant le drapeau « The Heist », titre de l’album.

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Two Contrarian Views on Dove’s “Real Beauty Sketches”

Every now and then, an idea captivates the advertising world and beyond. This week, that honor goes to Dove’s “Real Beauty Sketches.”

It’s a very simple idea rooted in a universal truth: We don’t see ourselves the way the world sees us. And to dramatize that through the lens of a criminal sketch artist — a world not many of us see up close — brings the idea to life.

But the very personal nature of this idea, and the product, always rubs some people the wrong way. And it’s good to hear those voices even if we don’t agree.

A Tumblr called Jazzy Little Drops speaks to some of the basic executional issues with the video as well as the larger picture:

It almost seems to remind us how vital it is to know that we fit society’s standard of attractiveness. At the end of the experiment, one of the featured participants shares what I find to be the most disturbing quote in the video and what Dove seems to think is the moral of the story as she reflects upon what she’s learned, and how problematic it is that she hasn’t been acknowledging her physical beauty: “It’s troubling,” she says as uplifting music swells in the background. “I should be more grateful of my natural beauty. It impacts the choices and the friends we make, the jobs we go out for, they way we treat our children, it impacts everything. It couldn’t be more critical to your happiness.”

And over at Salon, Erin Keane argues that the ad isn’t one feminists should embrace:

It’s never okay for a woman to admit that she knows she’s kind of average-looking and she’s okay with that. In the radical world of Dove, nothing matters more than being perceived as beautiful — not being a kind and generous friend, not being a smart and talented professional, not even being decent to kids.

Of course, most brand managers would, in theory, love to have any type of idea that caused this much buzz and analysis. Advertising people love both the execution of the idea, and its seemingly feel-good message. When other folks view it, the criticism gets more personal. It’s a good reminder that advertising can still be powerful, and polarizing at the same time.

The post Two Contrarian Views on Dove’s “Real Beauty Sketches” appeared first on AdPulp.

Endangered Wildlife Trust: Fishing Boats

In the last 50 years we have devastated approximately 90% of large fish stocks in the world’s oceans. We have a small window of opportunity to save the last 10% before they are pushed to extinction. Halt the plunder of our seas – visit www.ewt.org.za

Advertising Agency: Lowe, Cape Town, South Africa
Creative Director: Kirk Gainsford
Art Director: Dane Alexander
Intern Art Directors: Natasha Dobbs, Tammy Hart
Intern Copywriters: Lauren Rimmer, Phillip Black
Illustrator: Chris Eloff
Published: April 2013

New Twitter Service Hopes to Capture Musical Trends

Twitter’s idea is to recommend songs based on personal contacts as well as on what is popular among the 200 million Twitter audience.

    

Guia Academica: Drunk

“It´s better to be hit with an empty bottle of beer, than a full one”
Said by:
– Fidel, the town´s boozer.
– Stephan Bolliger, Steffen Ross, Lars Oesterhelweg, Michael Thali y Beat Kneubuehl; Forensic Doctors of the University of Berna, Switzerland.
Saying something without knowing the reason why, or to say something because you know
Academic Guide. To know what and where you should study

Advertising Agency: Sancho BBDO, Bogotá, Colombia
Chief Creative Officers: Hugo Corredor, Giovanni Martínez
Executive Creative Directors: Oscar Muñoz, Diego Forero
Creative Directors: Alejandro Camelo, Freddy Mendez
Copywriters: César Castano, Alejandro Camelo
Art Directors: Juan David Rodríguez, Oscar Muñoz
Production Company: Good Mood
Photographer: Ale Burset
Producer: Martin Hillcoat
Account Supervisor: Mónica Nieto
Account Manager: Alejandra Hernández

Guia Academica: Farmer

“Cows with a name, produce more milk than cows with no name”
Said by :
Candido; a farmer with 20 cows.
– Catherine Douglas and Peter Rowlinson; Ph. D in veterinary school from Newcastle University, United Kingdom.
Saying something without knowing the reason why, or to say something because you know
Academic Guide. To know what and where you should study

Advertising Agency: Sancho BBDO, Bogotá, Colombia
Chief Creative Officers: Hugo Corredor, Giovanni Martínez
Executive Creative Directors: Oscar Muñoz, Diego Forero
Creative Directors: Alejandro Camelo, Freddy Mendez
Copywriters: César Castano, Alejandro Camelo
Art Directors: Juan David Rodríguez, Oscar Muñoz
Production Company: Good Mood
Photographer: Ale Burset
Producer: Martin Hillcoat
Account Supervisor: Mónica Nieto
Account Manager: Alejandra Hernández