Braincast 112 – Marvel vs. DC nas telas

Um dos embates que sempre vem à tona nos Braincast’s é a comparação entre os filmes da Marvel e DC Comics. Para tirar a prova dos 9 de quem vence essa boa guerra para os fãs de quadrinhos e cinema, discutimos a cronologia de produções de ambas as editoras/estúdios.

Carlos Merigo, Cris Dias, Alexandre Maron e Fábio Yabu debatem seus filmes preferidos, os que fizeram história, os que falharam miseravelmente e os que ainda virão.

Faça o download ou dê o play abaixo:

> 01m10 Comentando os Comentários?
> 13m33 Pauta principal
> 1h58m00 Qual é a Boa? – qualeaboadobraincast.tumblr.com

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Críticas, elogios, sugestões para braincast@brainstorm9.com.br ou no facebook.com/brainstorm9.
Feed: feeds.feedburner.com/braincastmp3 / Adicione no iTunes

Quer ouvir no seu smartphone via stream? Baixe o app do Soundcloud.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Minimal Paper Movie Posters – Minke's Minimal Movie Posters Convey the Essence of Classic Films (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) As part of a promotional series for graphic services provider Minke, design studio Atipo developed a set of 14 minimal movie posters made from paper. 

Stories like Frankenstein, Dracula,…

22 Unusual Yoga Experiences – From Feline-Integrated Exercises to Street Yoga Parties (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) Yoga has been embraced so thoroughly by Western cultures that it has spawned unusual yoga experiences to better target specific groups and interests. Since Americans especially thrive off of…

McDonald's: GOL!

Advertising Agency: DDB, Chicago, USA
Chief Creative Officer: John Maxham
Executive Creative Director: Tony Malcolm
Creative Directors / Copywriters: Alistair Robertson, Geoff McCartney
Creative Director / Art Director: Alex Braxton
Executive Producer / Digital: Jon Ellis
Production: Smuggler
Director: Henry Alex Rubin
Editorial: Whitehouse Post
Editor: Matthew Wood
Assistant Editor: Caleb Hepler
Executive Producer: Dan Bryant
Producer: Dawn Guzowski

Coca-Cola retrata a paixão pelo futebol com sinais inesperados

Se você ainda não está empolgado com a Copa do Mundo, os comerciais de banco não vão lhe ajudar. Em vez disso, se inspire com as peças da Coca-Cola. Na semana passada rolou essa que emocionou os argentinos, e agora temos uma criação brasileira.

Ainda que não seja focado em nossa Seleção, exemplifica bem a paixão pelo futebol, com torcedores em busca de sinais em situações cotidianas que podem indicar uma vitória, um gol ou uma defesa.

O comercial assina com “We All Believe”, e será veiculado em mais de 46 países entre América Latina, Europa e África.

A criação é da Wieden+Kennedy de São Paulo, com produção da Stink.

Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Dois guias clean e mobile para acompanhar a Copa do Mundo

Criado por dois designers de Minneapolis, o Tap In é um guia rápido para a Copa do Mundo no Brasil, porém, com muita informação por trás da interface simples e elegante.

Tem o calendário dos jogos, com comentários e previsões de cada um, ficha técnica das equipes e principais jogadores.

Copa
Copa

Já o Brazil Fourteen é um calendariozão em página única, que pode ser adicionado ao seu Google Calendar e escolha de cores dependendo da seleção que você torce.

Em ambos, é possível alterar o fuso horário, e o Tap In será atualizado em tempo real conforme os resultados das partidas. Já fiz download de alguns aplicativos, principalmente pela função de simulação de placares, mas nenhum tão legal. Indicações?

Copa

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Illuminated Abode Lighting – ThePaperMoonFactory's Paper Mache Light is Shaped Like a Circular Home (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Netherlands’ ‘ThePaperMoonFactory’ is an Etsy shop that sells a variety of paper mâché light systems in unusual shapes. One of these fun designs is the Custom Paper Pulp Lamp…

TV Sports: In Stanley Cup Finals, Big Markets Don’t Mean Big Viewership

As the Rangers and the Kings, teams from the nation’s two largest markets, meet in the Stanley Cup finals, television viewership is not expected to set a record.



Brazil-Themed Lingerie Lookbooks – Ana Beatriz Barros Stars in the Intimissimi World Cup Ad Campaign (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Intimissimi World Cup lingerie collection ad campaign is sultry and feminine, and it stars the stunning Victoria’s Secret Angel Ana Beatriz Barros.

The Brazilian bombshell strips down…

Mountain Dew explains its philosophy.

“To get to easy you have to go through hard.” Fair enough.

I like the sentiment, but I’m not sure what it has to do with Mountain Dew.

Country: 

Commercials: 

Ad type: 

Advertising: A ‘Docu-Ad’ Looks at Hardship of Those Without Bank Access

The nearly 40-minute commercial resembles an investigative nonfiction film and reveals the high costs of living outside the traditional financial system.



William Hill kicks off new positioning ahead of World Cup

William Hill, the bookmaker, has unveiled a marketing campaign ahead of the World Cup.

Digital Growth to Prop Up Magazine Revenue Amid Print Losses, PwC Forecasts


The halcyon days of print-based media are not returning in the near future, a new report said, as flat or declining revenues are expected at magazines and newspapers over the next five years. But digital growth will help hold the line, at least at magazines.

Consumer magazine revenue will be essentially flat this year at $24.6 billion compared with 2013, according to the annual Global Entertainment and Media Outlook from PricewaterhouseCoopers, which was released on Tuesday. It will remain at approximately $24.6 billion through 2018, PricewaterhouseCoopers predicted.

During that time, overall ad sales are expected to climb at a combined annual growth rate of just a half percent; circulation is forecasted to inch up 0.1%.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

The Big Green Dream

Bringing “the environment” back down to Earth.

From Adbusters #113: Blueprint for a New World, Part 2: Eco


Project Wild Thing (2013), David Bond, Green Lions Film

President Obama just announced a new plan to combat climate change: carbon emissions must be cut by 30% before 2030. Many journalists are calling this move ambitious. Mother Jones sees this announcement as a “big deal,” climate groups are celebrating Obama’s new plan as a momentous development, but we here at Adbusters are unsure whether this is a victory for the planet, or, another indication that David Suzuki was right …

In 2012, David Suzuki came forward to say, “Environmentalism has failed.”

Greenies and lefties from all over shuddered at his words, miring themselves deeper in the very illusion that is at the heart of environmentalism’s inevitable defeat. Yes, environmentalism has failed. But the truth is, it was doomed from the start.

Ever since Rachel Carson wrote her tear-jerker Silent Spring in 1962, environmentalism has been for the kind of people who like to play nice: romantics and hippies on the one hand, green capitalists and NGO-negotiator-types on the other. Instead of “the classic that launched the environmental movement,” Silent Spring should be dubbed “the classic that launched the Western environmental NGO structure that has set us on the wrong track for 50 years.”

Environmentalism didn’t really begin in the 60s with Rachel Carson’s plaintive Silent Spring. It began in the 18th century, when the rise of industry and free markets urged Adam Smith to pen Wealth of Nations, a few years after a young Rousseau entered an essay competition which posed the question: “What is the origin of inequality among people?” Rousseau’s response was his famous romantic denouncement of society as the real enemy of human freedom. What appears as the “perfection of human reason” throughout history is actually, to Rousseau, the “deterioration of the species.”

Rousseau’s romantic lament is only possible within the context of Modernity itself—defined by Heidegger as the historical age where “world” became Object and man became Subject. The notion of “the environment” arose at the very moment that human civilization became separate from it. Environmentalism, as a phenomenon of and reaction to Modernity has participated in and reified the modernist concept of the world as Object to our human subjectivity. Maybe by now you’re thinking, “what’s the point, this just sounds like philosophy,” … but it is this philosophy that has perverted our minds and souls and led to extinctions and millions of deaths—human and not. Environmentalism so far is but a symptom of Modernity rather than a meaningful solution to the mega-crisis Modernity has created. Once we entered into that paradigm of “Nature” as “Other”… the planet became understood only as an object to be idealized (romanticism) or as a resource to be exploited (capitalism).

Well-meaning environmentalists—who aspire to “save the planet” through pedantic awareness campaigns—often fail to recognize that their most earnest efforts are complicit in an alienated relation to (a modern, Western concept of) Nature—where this very concept of Nature is at the root of the mess we’re in. As Timothy Morton says in Ecology without Nature: “Putting something called Nature on a pedestal and admiring it from afar does for ‘the environment’ what patriarchy does for the figure of Woman.”

We have to do away with the word “environment” itself, along with all the campaigny phrases—“reduce your footprint,” “care for the planet,” “live sustainably” and “go eco-friendly”—they’re all just a cheap ticket to a clear conscience. This language has convinced a whole generation that you can “buy into” saving the world, as if you can consume your way to sustainability.

And for those who do see through the green capitalist lie … many of them just get lost in another very seductive illusion. Many good-intentioned environmentalists are preoccupied with the idea that we can return to a perfect, primitive past. This “once upon a time” fantasy is merely, as Žižek says, a secular version of the Fall—full of the same guilt, punishment and useless misanthropy. The myth of a lost Eden is like a mental virus which has infected the environmental movement—from Rousseau and Thoreau to Rachel Carson and John Muir; from Arne Næss and Aldo Leopold to David Abrams and Derrick Jensen—and rendered it impotent.

The truth is that there is nothing to return to. The only possibility is the possibility that we haven’t yet had an environmental movement. Perhaps the whole notion of environmentalism is, as Nietzsche said of his Übermensch, “untimely.” Maybe we are all too embedded in the current paradigm to be able to understand what an ecological society would be … and what we would need to do to get there.

Source

Lethargic Boudoir Editorials – The 032c Summer 2014 Issue Features Model Lara Stone (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The 032c Summer 2014 issue starring blonde scarlet Lara Stone captures the elegance of vintage couture in the setting of an intimate boudoir.

The dapper culture magazine 032c is so luxurious, it…

Nar Mobile: Donor Cable

The Donor Cable bracelets were given away with Android smartphone purchases at Nar stores around the country, and mobile blood donation centers were parked nearby to catch phone buyers while the issue was on their mind.
The campaign increased the nation’s blood donation rate an astounding 335 percent, earning widespread attention and goodwill along the way.

Advertising Agency: Y&R, Moscow, Russia

Brother Games: Wife

Advertising Agency: Jbis Propaganda, Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Creative Director: Fred Bandeira
Creative Supervisors: Gustavo Passos, Charles Alvarenga
Art Director: Rodrigo Spotorno
Copywriter: João Marcelo Meira
Published: June 2014

Brother Games: Mom

Advertising Agency: Jbis Propaganda, Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Creative Director: Fred Bandeira
Creative Supervisors: Gustavo Passos, Charles Alvarenga
Art Director: Rodrigo Spotorno
Copywriter: João Marcelo Meira
Published: June 2014

Diario El Comercio: TwitterBird Stop

Don’t read our news and drive.

Advertising Agency: La Facultad, Quito, Ecuador
Published: April 2014

Diario El Comercio: TwitterBird Bike

Don’t read our news and drive.

Advertising Agency: La Facultad, Quito, Ecuador
Published: April 2014