VTR Mobile: Woman

There’s nothing more important than arriving.

Advertising Agency: Porta, Santiago de Chile, Chile
Creative Directors: Gonzalo Baeza, Mariano Pérez
Art Directors: Fernando Muñoz, Francisco Pérez
Copywriter: Michelle Guichard
Illustrator / Photographer: Josefina Pro

VTR Mobile: Man

There’s nothing more important than arriving.

Advertising Agency: Porta, Santiago de Chile, Chile
Creative Directors: Gonzalo Baeza, Mariano Pérez
Art Directors: Fernando Muñoz, Francisco Pérez
Copywriter: Michelle Guichard
Illustrator / Photographer: Josefina Pro

Canadian Film Festival: Canadian Sin

Advertising Agency: JWT, Toronto, Canada
Chief Creative and Integration Officer: Brent Choi
Art Director / Associate Creative Director: Jim Wortley
Copywriter / Associate Creative Director: Colin Winn
Designers / Art Directors: Paul Dike, Craig Markou
Agency Producer: Shelby Spigelman
Creative Chairman: Martin Shewchuk
Production House: Industry
Directors: Jonathan Bensimon
Producers: David Cranor
DOP: Jonathan Bensimon
Editing Houses: Married to Giants
Editor: Graham Chisholm
Post Production: Alter Ego
Executive Producer: Greg Edgar
Transfer: Trisha Hagoriles
Flame Artist: Darren Achim
Casting: Mann Casting
Music / Sound design: Tom Westin, Dave Sorbara, Grayson Matthews

Iconographic Toy Clusters – Rondle Royce Uses Figurines in His Plastic Sculpture Series (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Mashing up the iconography of different cultural references, artist Rondle Royce creates his plastic sculpture series using a multitude of toys and figurines.

Symbolically referencing pop culture,…

Tigo: School Bus

It would be cool to have an extra minute to talk. Text 222 and we’ll give it to you.

Advertising Agency: Biedermann McCann, Asunción, Paraguay
Creative Director: Leonardo Matylski
Art Directors: Alejandro Rebull, Arturo Avalos
Copywriter: Santiago Morello
Illustrator: Buena Mano realizaciones
Photographer: Estudio Wallace
Additional credits: Juje Rodriguez, Eduardo Wallace, Diego Chillano
Published: April 2013

Tigo: Big Boss

It would be cool to have an extra minute to talk. Text 222 and we’ll give it to you.

Advertising Agency: Biedermann McCann, Asunción, Paraguay
Creative Director: Leonardo Matylski
Art Directors: Alejandro Rebull, Arturo Avalos
Copywriter: Santiago Morello
Illustrator: Buena Mano realizaciones
Photographer: Estudio Wallace
Additional credits: Juje Rodriguez, Eduardo Wallace, Diego Chillano
Published: April 2013

Tigo: First Date

It would be cool to have an extra minute to talk. Text 222 and we’ll give it to you.

Advertising Agency: Biedermann McCann, Asunción, Paraguay
Creative Director: Leonardo Matylski
Art Directors: Alejandro Rebull, Arturo Avalos
Copywriter: Santiago Morello
Illustrator: Buena Mano realizaciones
Photographer: Estudio Wallace
Additional credits: Juje Rodriguez, Eduardo Wallace, Diego Chillano
Published: April 2013

Guarana Antarctica: Pop poster, 2

SabMiller needed to spread the word about its soft drink made from guarana, the only one of its kind in the Peruvian market. The graphic art transmits all of the things that go through a young person’s head, that are part of him or her, and that make him or her unique. Our inspiration came from the beautiful masks used in the Candelaria festival in Puno, in the southern Peruvian Andes.

Advertising Agency: Mayo DraftFCB, Lima, Peru
Producto: Guaraná Backus
Chief Creative Officer: Humberto Polar
Creative Directors: Joao Jackel, Monica Abad
Art Directors: Joao Jackel, Martín Asato
Copywriter: Monica Abad
Illustration: Martin Asato

Guarana Antarctica: Pop poster, 1

SabMiller needed to spread the word about its soft drink made from guarana, the only one of its kind in the Peruvian market. The graphic art transmits all of the things that go through a young person’s head, that are part of him or her, and that make him or her unique. Our inspiration came from the beautiful masks used in the Candelaria festival in Puno, in the southern Peruvian Andes.

Advertising Agency: Mayo DraftFCB, Lima, Peru
Producto: Guaraná Backus
Chief Creative Officer: Humberto Polar
Creative Directors: Joao Jackel, Monica Abad
Art Directors: Joao Jackel, Martín Asato
Copywriter: Monica Abad
Illustration: Martin Asato

Campanha The History Channel une passado e presente de lugares históricos em fotografias

Know Where You Stand, campanha impressa para o The History Channel, que já vem sendo veiculado há um tempo, une passado e presente da história mundial em fotografias.

Desenvolvida pelo fotógrafo Seth Taras, as artes são compostas por fotos famosas de momentos históricos fundidas à imagens que representam o cotidiano desses locais hoje. Foram retratados momentos como o desembarque nas prais da Normandia, o local do desastre de Hindenburg, visita de Hitler à Paris (terraço do Palais de Chaillot) e o Muro de Berlim.

A campanha é da agência Ground Zero (atual Wong, Doody, Crandall, Wiener), de Toronto, e visa motivar as pessoas a descobrirem as histórias que guardam os locais ao redor delas.

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Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Google: Scene

Advertising School: Miami Ad School, San Francisco, USA
Copywriter: Bryan Stokely
Art Directors: Martins Zelcs, Ece Ciftci

Nike: Hologram

Nike is using holographic 3-D advertising to promote their new “Free” running shoe. The first-of-their-kind ads, which are running in outdoor locations in Amsterdam, project a holographic image demonstrating the key feature of the shoe—its flexibility. Nike free shoes are specifically designed to let your feet move more naturally and freely than traditional athletic shoes. Over time, this helps make your feet stronger. The hologram shows the shoe bending forward and back to simulate its flexibility. The ads sit in a Holocube, which is transparent so people can see the shoe from all angles, and brightly lit to attract attention of passersby—day or night.

Oreo: Optical Illusion

In Vanilla & Choco Crème

Advertising Agency: Interface Communication, Mumbai, India
Creative Director: Robby Mathew
Art Director: Ashok Giri
Copywriter: Rakesh Menon

Vibrantly Geometric Illuminators – These Geometric Light Sculptures Features Mesmerizing Displays (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Art pieces should shine and express deeper meaning and significance, and that’s exactly what these stunning geometric light sculptures serve to do.

Designer Asaf Zakay has created a series of…

How Brands Can Go Mobile in 2013

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This guest post is written by Aquent Director of Global Marketing Katja Wald

Mobile devices have changed the way consumers interact with companies. Consumers are now accessing websites on the go, liking an organization’s Facebook page and clicking on ads that interest them in certain applications. With consumers adopting mobile technology at a rapid pace, companies are eager to capitalize on this mobile explosion.

In fact, based on survey results from the Google Analytics Blog, 87 percent of marketers are planning to increase their mobile efforts in 2013. Now the questions become: what are the major challenges marketers face with utilizing mobile for marketing campaigns and how do they tackle those obstacles to successfully growing mobile as part of the overall marketing program?

Proving the ROI

According to the recent Aquent and Forrester report, demonstrating the ROI of mobile marketing is one of the top challenges for marketers planning to grow their marketing programs. With mobile marketing still in its infancy for many organizations, marketers are struggling to prove the efficacy of the programs they create. They must also understand that mobile measurement is different than online measurement and even within mobile alone, measurement varies depending on the tactics being deployed. This is mostly due to a lack of understanding how to obtain the best data and analysis possible from each mobile marketing campaign and overall knowledge in how to quantify mobile ROI.

Having the Mobile Marketing Expertise

Another challenge faced by organizations is the lack of mobile-focused employees to execute on mobile marketing initiatives. Companies new to using mobile for marketing purposes have tried to assign mobile responsibilities to its traditional marketing team who are already accountable for other business-critical marketing projects. They lack employees with mobile marketing experience, who know how to translate marketing fundamentals to mobile. They need a mobile marketer whose primary responsibilities would be to develop the mobile marketing strategy, create the mobile marketing campaigns, and manage the data analysis coming out of the programs.

Struggling with New Technology

Mobile is a complex platform that can be utilized in a variety of ways for marketing. When dealing with this emerging platform, many marketers do not have an understanding of how mobile technology works from a programmer’s perspective. They lack staff that is well-versed in application design and development, mobile optimized website creation and mobile display advertising design. These marketers need a technically savvy developer that can spend the time to guide the brand through the options available for mobile websites and applications, and create the technology from soup to nuts.

For brands to solve these challenges and efficiently leverage this channel, they’ll need skilled mobile-centric marketers and mobile programmers to get the job done. The mobile marketing expert will help the marketing team strategize how to best use mobile, better demonstrate ROI and eventually integrate mobile with other marketing channels. The expert developer can effectively craft the mobile technology for specific campaigns and design the program from the ground up. These resources can come from a variety of places – organizations just need to know where to look.

Finding the Mobile Experts

Once the position that is need for a company’s marketing team is identified – whether it’s a mobile-focused marketer, experience mobile developer, or both – the company needs to understand their options of where to find the right person. There is always the option to post an open job position to the company’s career page, but in order to find a more immediate qualified hire, companies should look towards external resources like staffing firms, digital agencies and independent contractors.

Although contract workers with past experience in mobile can quickly be integrated with a team and hit the ground running with little ramp-up time, many marketers may be skeptical about bringing in a temporary employee to help with a long-term program. Therefore, it’s important to understand why and how these temporary workers are beneficial for the success of a mobile program.

Temps Have the Specific Skills

Contractors and temp workers are no longer used for only administrative tasks. Organizations rely on them to execute on specific business programs – whether it’s revamping an IT database or redesigning an organizations’ Web presence. This trend follows suit with the explosion of mobile; talented temps can be relied upon to develop mobile apps, help deliver marketing strategy and create marketing campaigns for a variety of social media platforms. These highly-skilled temp employees enable companies to dive into marketing initiatives, and begin addressing the changing market needs quickly.

Additionally, contract employees are a great way to test out a few different aspects of the hiring process. First, hiring managers can evaluate individuals based on the work they produced during their contract. Depending on the employees’ contributions to the team, managers can determine if they would like to transition the worker to a full-time employee. Secondly, the organization can use a contractor as a means of testing out a new program, such as executing on mobile initiatives. Once the mobile program proves its ROI, the company can then assess what additional resources it should invest into the program.

Mobile has emerged as a new platform for marketers to explore – the challenge is understanding how best to utilize it. Knowing the challenges a marketing team faces with a mobile marketing program and determining the experienced employees that need to be brought onboard is key to growing a successful program. Considering to hire experienced contract workers is a promising avenue to take as marketers embark on the process of growing their mobile strategies, but it is one they must determine for themselves.

Hackers Reveal Witness Names in Hariri Murder Trial

Hackers plastered the names of the so-called secret witnesses in the murder trial in the death of the former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri on a major Lebanese news Web site.

    

O email que toca guitarra

Para tocar guitarra bem, é preciso muito tempo de dedicação. Com a vida moderna e a odisséia do trabalho, atividades como enviar emails e digitar no celular constantemente gastam momentos preciosos de prática.

Pensando nisso, o artista e músico David Neevel criou o projeto The Email Guitar, uma forma de traduzir notas de guitarra em teclas do computador implementando vários dispositivos e tecnologias. Assim, juntando todas as atividades, ele conseguiu economizar tempo e finalmente praticar.

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O projeto usa um pedal sintetizador Roland para enviar sinal MIDI para um isolador óptico. Esse componente que trabalha com circuitos eletrônicos reduz a frequência do sinal MIDI, permitindo que seja processado por um Arduino. Passando através de um simulador de painel de teclado, o sinal é então transferido para a placa de circuito. Com isso, a música é reproduzida no computador na forma de texto.

Para quem quiser reproduzir em casa, o artista compartilhou todos os passos e códigos usados no desenvolvimento.

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Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Buzzfeed Spreads Content Around Like Butter On Toast

Native advertising is a stupid name for a decent development in media circles. Regardless, sponsored content is on a lot of media and marketing minds today, because online advertising is a disaster from a brand building perspective.

Does Buzzfeed Know the Secret? -- New York Magazine

Native is definitely on the mind and the desktop of Jonah Peretti, MIT grad and co-founder of BuzzFeed and Huffington Post.

Andrew Rice, writing for New York Magazine, reports that “beneath BuzzFeed’s cheery gloss lies a data-driven apparatus designed to figure out what makes you click.”

Peretti doesn’t care whether a post is produced by a journalist or sponsored by a brand, so long as it travels. He’s a semiotic Darwinist: He believes in messages that reproduce.

“To me, advertising is fascinating, partly because it’s part of culture, and partly because it sucks,” he told me one evening in February. “There’s a bit of the geek mentality, which is that when you see something that’s broken, you try to fix it.”

Of course, Buzzfeed is also home to Mark Duffy, a.k.a. Copyranter. Duffy’s lastest offering: 18 Meat Ads. It’s not highbrow content, but it is network-friendly; therefore, it is money.

Let’s revisit the infamous words of A.J. Leibling, “Fortune lies not in the main stream of letters, but in the shallows where the suckers moon.”

I’m not making a judgement, merely an observation, and one I might learn from. Buzzfeed has millions of readers, AdPulp has thousands. If we were to take a page from the Buzzfeed book, we’d start posting tons of lightweight “contagious” material, which would then coexist with our thought pieces and original reporting.

Of course, doing so would also take us way off-brand, and remove us from our Reasons Why. The things we have to do to make money these days…

Previously on AdPulp: Can Journalism As A Civic Good And Native Advertising Live Side-by-Side?

The post Buzzfeed Spreads Content Around Like Butter On Toast appeared first on AdPulp.

Black&Decker: Woodpecker-Horse, Sawfish-Bull

Advertising Agency: KinCom, Santiago, Chile
Creative Director: Carlos Trujillo
Art Directors: Diego Rodriguez, Raiko Yuretic
Copywriters: Carlos Trujillo, Roberto Frings
Illustrator: Christián Muñoz
Additional credits: Claudio Seguel

Rainbow-Colored Runners – Nike’s Flyknit Racer and HTM Shoes are Vibrantly Knitted Fashion Styles (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Nike has made quite a name for itself by providing running enthusiasts with stylish and ergonomic apparel for a long time, but the latest Nike Flyknit Racer and HTM designs are seeing this legendary…