Discovery Sells HowStuffWorks at 82% Loss After Seven Years


Discovery Communications has sold off HowStuffWorks, a website that explains the science behind everything from magnets to Silly String, for $45 million, taking an 82% loss seven years after acquiring the asset.

The buyer was a company called Blucora, owner of the InfoSpace search business. It bought HowStuffWorks in an all-cash deal, according to a filing today. Discovery, whose cable channels include TLC and Animal Planet, will keep providing advertising services to the website it acquired for $250 million in 2007.

The site was the third in a trio of digital acquisitions for Discovery CEO David Zaslav, following Animal Planet’s acquisition of Petfinder.com in 2006 and Planet Green’s purchase of Treehugger.com in 2007. Discovery sold Petfinder to Nestle last year and formed a joint venture with Mother Nature Network in 2012 to share ownership of their environmental websites, including TreeHugger.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Mirrored Farm Building – The Invisible Barn by stpmj is Cleverly Cloaked in Mylar (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Invisible Barn may not be entirely imperceptible, but to the casual observer it might as well be. It has been almost completely covered in Mylar, the same material used for space blankets and…

Audi Pacific: The Walk

Advertising Agency: Forza Migliozzi, Hollywood, USA
Creative Director / Copywriter: Michael Migliozzi
Art Directors: Michael Migliozzi, Emily Denis
Director: Marcus Raboy
Published: April 2014

Audi Pacific: The Bay

Advertising Agency: Forza Migliozzi, Hollywood, USA
Creative Director / Copywriter: Michael Migliozzi
Art Directors: Michael Migliozzi, Emily Denis
Director: Marcus Raboy
Published: April 2014

Caviar Director Reconnects with Emma Stone for Vogue Short

Caviar director Ruben Fleischer joined forces with cover girl Emma Stone, who recently starred in his film Gangster Squad, for a new original short for Vogue.

The spot sees Fleischer and Stone playing themselves, discussing Stone’s latest role. Fleischer, who wrote and directed the short, plays the stright man. Stone, meanwhile, has some unusual ideas to prepare for her role as a nun, all of which involve magic. As you may have guessed, things get a little bit silly, but the humor never quite connects and the premise feels a bit forced — even if “Everyone loves magic, even nuns.”

Stick around for credits after the jump.  continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Caterpillar: Largest JENGA Game Played with Cat Excavators

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy, USA

Behind-the-scenes video: http://youtu.be/uLhOOiPGrq4

Fundacion Estas de Viva: Duck

Help us to keep them not only in the memory.
Soon we will launch the basis for the 4th National Photography Contest of Bolivian Endangered Species. Get ready!

Advertising Agency: Vintage VTG Publicidad, La Paz, Bolivia
Creative Director / Copywriter: Marcos Arandia
Art Director: Naber Condori
3D-Modeling: Andrés Guzmán
Account manager: Mónica Bakir
Published: February 2014

Why You Really Are An Idiot If You Wear Google Glass

first_bank_google_glass.jpg

No, this isn’t another item about Robert Scoble taking a showers while wearing Google Glass. But it’s most certainly the same idea taken to extremes. It’s bad enough we’re all glued to our phones when we could be interacting with those around us but check out what happens during dinner with this four-eyed family.

It’s all to tout mobile banking from First Bank. The ad, created by TDA_Boulder, illustrates the idiocy of dealing with Google Glass-like technology and signs off with, “The FirstBank Mobile App. Technology has never been so easy.”

Pom Wonderful vs. Coca-Cola Reaches the Supreme Court Today


The Supreme Court will begin hearing arguments today in a second case that could have a dramatic impact on marketers.

The court ruled last month that a company does not have to be direct competitor to sue another company under the decades-old Lanham Act, a federal law that bears on false ad claims.

Today’s case, Pom Wonderful vs. Coca-Cola, stems from a 2008 complaint by Pom Wonderful that Coca-Cola had misled consumers with a Minute Maid “pomegranate blueberry” product that contained 0.3% pomegranate juice and 0.2% blueberry juice.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Campaign Spotlight: Interpublic Group Joins Ranks of Publishers With Report in Magazine Form

A printed corporate citizenship report offers a look inside the advertising agency holding group.



Why That 12 Keys Anti-Drug Campaign With Babies Was So Awesome

Ads-on-Alcohol-Addiction-Alcoholic-Parents.jpg

It’s not every day that you see a baby drinking beer or attempting to do lines of cocaine. Do we have your attention yet? Good. It means 12 Keys Rehab’s latest ad campaign is working, and you haven’t even seen it yet.

There happens to be a long history of babies and young children being used in advertisements; it’s a practice that dates back to the 1800’s, though it would be quite some time after that until actual photographs of babies became fodder for ad campaigns.

One particularly memorable advertisement from the 1950s featured a baby being served a soft drink – an image that most of us would find reprehensible today, given recent findings that have found similarities in dental damage between soda drinkers and hard drug users.

Is it that much of a stretch, then, that 12 Keys has leveraged babies in their anti-drug campaign? To be sure: unlike that soda ad from decades ago, their message is meant as a deterrent – not as encouragement for the behavior pictured.

They’re Just Like Us

The title of the 12 Keys ad campaign is “They Are More Like You Than You Know” – a fitting title, given the fact that it’s sometimes hard for us to remember that we all were babies once, and looking at a baby is to look at the future.

Of course, the pictures themselves are mere window dressing for the real message: each photograph is accompanied by an alcohol or drug statistic, some of them as startling as the images themselves. Some examples include: “7 million children under 18 in the U.S. have alcoholic parents” and “If you’re addicted to alcohol during pregnancy, they will be too.”

He Has Your Eyes (And Habits)

While these advertisements are obviously meant to shock, it’s not difficult to remember that there’s nothing but good intentions behind the imagery. It’s a reminder that nothing parents do happens in a vacuum, which is to say that even our unborn young can potentially experience the impact of our bad decisions for their entire lives.

You’re familiar by now with the words “the children are our future,” but 12 Keys has reminded us that this truth comes in many forms. Their goal is to shed some light on a trend that still seems to be inexplicably rife with confusion, misconceptions, or simple ignorance.

Investing in the Future

12 Keys is a rehab facility, which means they spend a great deal of their time treating adults for alcohol and substance abuse and addiction. Their mission statement is a great deal broader than that, however; to borrow their own wording, “drugs aren’t only an adult problem.” They’ve reminded us that adult decisions don’t confine themselves to the adult world.

At the end of the day, these pictures can resonate with us because they remind us of a simple truth: addiction fuels addiction. In a society ruled in part by narcissism, it’s refreshing to see our collective awareness growing when it comes to the toll we take on future generations.

This guest post was written by Shane Jones, a content expert who’s specialty is with online advertising campaigns. His real passions however, lie in print media. Follow his opinions on Google+ and keep up-to-date on his latest ad projects, The Happiness Theory.

Ads%20on%20Addiction%20Cocaine%20Developmental%20Problems.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20Fetal%20Alcohol%20Syndrome.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20Exposure.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20FAS.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20During%20Pregnancy.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20Drinking%20Problem.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20Alcoholic%20Parents.jpg

Ads%20on%20Alcohol%20Addiction%20Alcohol%20Dependence.jpg

Ads%20on%20Addiction%20Withdrawal%20Symptoms.jpg

Ads%20on%20Addiction%20Heroine.jpg

Minimalist Wooden Homes – Naturehumaine Architects Engage Your Minimalist Sensibilities (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Naturehumaine Architects know the power of two becoming one. The design studio converted a two-storey duplex into a single unit with a little elbow grease and a 430 sq ft extension in the rear….

Seeing Opportunity With Data-Haunted Marketers, Evidon Changes Name to Ghostery


With some major marketers and data companies stung by recent data breaches and others worried they might be next, companies are realizing the need to keep a closer watch over their partners. Evidon sees an opportunity on that front. So the privacy tech company today is changing its name to Ghostery, the moniker for its successful consumer-targeted browser app, and launching a platform for managing website vendor technologies that is fueled by data from the Ghostery app.

Prior to today, Ghostery was a privacy app that showed users a list of companies whose tracking tags are present on web pages as they traverse the Internet. The panel of people using the tool has grown to 15 million, and around 200,000 use the mobile version. It got a shout-out at this year’s South by Southwest conference from NSA surveillance-program leaker Edward Snowden. Now the firm behind the tool has taken the massive pool of data from its growing panel of Ghostery users and is serving it up to companies including Target and Equifax.

Ghostery’s Marketing Cloud Management platform promises to help business clients keep an eye on the activities of ad-tech vendors operating on their websites.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

DNA Partners with Hilly Reps for Midwest Representation

Sonia_Hillary11Production house DNA has partnered with full service TV commercial representation company Hilly Reps for midwest representation.

“Working with Hilly Reps offers a huge advantage for our sales team,” explains DNA executive producer Patricia Judice. “We’re excited to work with people who not only understand our needs, but who also have a solid understanding of what happens on the content creation and direction side.”

The Hilly Reps team is led by Hillary Herbst, who launched the firm in 1981, and Sonia Blum, a former agency account director at both FCB and Euro RSCG, and former director of business development for a local production company. Together, Herbst and Blum hope to lead their team to drive DNA’s sales “by pairing the studio’s all-star list of directors with a wide range of top-tier creative projects.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

How to Organize An Event That Doesn’t Suck

event_planning_infographic_crop.jpg

Are you planning an event? Are you a marketing event planner? Did your boss just ask you to organize a one day conference and the closest thing you’ve ever planned was a trip to the grocery store? Fear not. Formstack, a company that does just what it sounds like it does, is out with an infographic (hey, they’re easy to digest) entitled The Anatomy of A Perfect Event that will give you a few basic pointers.

The basics? Use email. Use hashtags. But don’t use more than one hashtag. Start promoting 3-10 weeks in advance of the event. Have a live stream of the event. Use Foursquare to promote the event. Use Twitter to expand the reach of your event. Use Facebook to promote your event. 78% of planners use it. Follow up with email after the event. Do a post-event survey.

event_planning_infographic

Sweet Swine Photography – Pigs and Papa by Toshiteru Yamaji Captures a Man’s Love for His Pets (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Pigs and Papa photo series will give the movie ‘Babe’ a run for its money. It captures the loving fatherly relationship between a pig farmer named Otchan and his 1,200 pigs. As…

KFC and FCB Dare You to Double Down Again

Fast food’s fattest conversation-starter is back for another round as this FCB spot kicks off the return of KFC’s breadless Double Down sandwich.

Unsurprisingly, the project relies even more heavily on social media for both concept and promotion than the 2010 original. KFC comms director David Menis told AdAge that the dialogue “mimics the way people talk about the product online.”

And yes, there will be a user-generated content contest calling on fans to submit related selfies and dances as the campaign competes to attract more attention than the brand’s recent “chicken corsage” stunt.

Note that KFC did not go with the vaguely nationalistic themes of this 2003 Double Down predecessor:

continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Socialbakers Appoints Mike Ainslie CFO

Mike AinslieLeading social media analytics and optimization company Socialbakers has announced the appointment of Mike Ainslie as chief financial officer. Ainslie joins the company from PE Investment, where he served as CEO and took the company from $25m to $90m in four years.

Ainslie joins Socialbakers with over 26 years of experience, including stints as chief financial officer at World Check, president and managing director at NGH Inc. Nationwide and CEO of the London branch of Bank One.

Socialbakers’ founder and CEO Jan Rezab said, “Mike has extensive experience building high growth international businesses, he will be instrumental in driving the business to the next level and we are excited to have him on board.”

Ainslie was excited about his new position, stating, “Socialbakers is truly an international business and I am joining it at a particularly exciting time, following its rapid growth leading to a new funding round of $26m. Opportunities like this rarely arise, and I am excited to be working with such a dynamic team to drive international growth.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

‘Mad Men’ Recap: Chewed Up and Spit Out


How do you create a villain that makes Don Draper look good?

It requires a character so distasteful that he makes you overlook all Don’s lying, philandering and manipulating, whose lack of charm reminds you of Don’s strengths in that department. You need Lou Avery. Or he’ll do, at least.

Thus far, Lou’s been something of an enigma, and not in the way that Bob Benson was an enigma. I can’t say I’ve really cared much about the crotchety old creative director. Til now, he’s felt a bit like a stand-in until whatever plot machinations wind up returning Don to the agency. He still feels a bit like that, but two episodes into the latest season, his cretinous behavior is making a mark on the agency. We already cringed at his coldness to Peggy in the season premiere. Now, in episode two, he comes out as a ham-fisted racist, sparking a return of the topic of race to the show.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Aker Brygge Identity by Bleed

L’agence Bleed a créée l’identité de Aker Brygge, le développement du concept, la direction artistique et le design graphique sont regroupés dans des visuels extrêmement esthétiques. Des mises en situation, des photos produits, et des prints sont présentés pour cette marque masculine.

Aker Brygge Communication 2
Aker Brygge Communication 3
Aker Brygge Communication 6
Aker Brygge Communication 7
Aker Brygge Communication 8
Aker Brygge Communication 4
Aker Brygge Communication 5
Aker Brygge Communication 9
Aker Brygge Communication 10
Aker Brygge Communication 11
Aker Brygge Communication 12
Aker Brygge Communication 13
Aker Brygge Communication 1