No Data at the Bake Sale? Government Says Crumbs Shouldn't Sell Lists


Crumbs Bake Shop Inc., the cupcake chain that shut down and filed for bankruptcy last month, shouldn’t be able to auction off customer lists without oversight, according to the U.S. Trustee, who said such a sale would violate the company’s privacy policy.

The Justice Department’s bankruptcy watchdog asked the court to appoint a “consumer privacy ombudsman” to ensure that personally identifiable customer information, such as names, addresses and phone numbers, is protected in the sale, according to court papers filed July 30.

The contract for the proposed sale of the business to so- called stalking horse Lemonis Fischer Acquisition Company, a joint venture of pre-bankruptcy lender Fischer Enterprises and Marcus Lemonis, provides for the purchase of the company’s intellectual property, including customer lists, according to court papers.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Cãezinhos abandonados ganham perfis no Tinder para arranjar um lar

Em meio às seleções de pares que agradam ou não no Tinder, os residentes de Nova Iorque encontraram, nos últimos dias, alguns perfis caninos, que eram parte de uma interessante campanha da organização Social Tees, que ajuda a encontrar lares para cachorrinhos abandonados.

Vilma, por exemplo, era descrita como tendo 26 anos, já que essa ‘mentirinha’ faria com que ela aparecesse nos filtros de idade de quem estivesse procurando uma jovem nova-iorquina, ainda que essa fofinha tenha apenas 9 semanas de vida.

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Hackear o Tinder para mostrar cãezinhos abandonados que possam ‘combinar’ com o perfil de quem está em busca de um novo amor é uma boa estratégia, mas que não foi entendida por todos os usuários. No Twitter, muita gente aparece reclamando de ter visto cachorros serem sugeridos como ‘par ideal’ dentro da plataforma.

Isso pode quase ser visto como um efeito colateral da ação, que até o momento teve um resultado bem surpreendente – em apenas 24 horas, mais de 1.500 perfis de cãezinhos foram marcados como ‘match’, sendo que um deles já encontrou um novo lar.

A ação foi criada pelos trainees do programa The Barn da BBH.

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iPhone 5s – You’re more powerful than you think

Mais um comercial da Apple para seu produto líder de vendas: o iPhone.

Mais uma vez, ao invés de focar no design e na potência do hardware – critério que às vezes deixa o aparelho em maus lençóis quando comparado com seus concorrentes – o filme de nome “Dreams” foca em todas as possibilidades que os aplicativos desenvolvidos para smartphone tornam realidade. A trilha “When I Grow Up“, de Jennifer O’Connor deixa a mensagem completa.

Não é um comercial que se diga “nossa, que puxa, que inovador, não quero nem saber de um Android!”. Mas é bonito e é inteligente ao se apoiar no ponto forte do iPhone que até então não foi batido: a maioria dos apps é desenvolvida pra ele e adaptada pros outros sistemas operacionais.

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Best Of Pantone on Fubiz

Pour ce premier best-of du mois d’Aout, Fubiz vous a réunis les plus belles compositions et créations Pantone. Les différents artistes de ce best-of nous présentent les coloris Pantone re-visitées à l’aide de différents points de vue, tel que l’art culinaire, la décoration, la nature, le graphisme ou encore la mode.

Pantone Food by David Schwen.

Pantone Food by Alison Anselot.

Tiny Objects Pantone by Inka Mathew.

The Pantone Project by Paul Octavious.

Pantone Tarts by Emilie Guelpa.

Pantone Ads Colors with Famous Characters by Y&R Shanghai.

Human Pantone by Angelica Dass.

Pantone Christmas Balls by Seletti.

Monochrome for Fricote by Griottes.

Pantone Typeface by Post Typography.

Pantone Calendar 2011 by Derek Bowers.

Pantone Bags by Whitbread Wilkinson.

Pantone 2013 Calendar by Pentagram Design.

Pantonecans by Nico189.

Pantone Hotel by Michel Penneman & Olivier Hannaert.

Best Of Pantone on Fubiz
Tiny Objects Pantone
The Pantone Project
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Pantone Typeface
Pantone Tarts
Pantone Hotel
Pantone Food 2
Pantone Food 1
Pantone Christmas Balls
Pantone Calendar 2011
Pantone Bags
Pantone Ads Colors with Famous Characters
Pantone 2013 Calendar
Monochrome for Fricote
Human Pantone

Five Red BMWs Drift Together in Automaker's Latest High-Octane Stunt

If you like watching pretty cars dance with each other, check out this new stunt driving ad from BMW South Africa.

Five cherry red M235i coupes spin around each other in a tightly choreographed high-speed sequence on a closed traffic rotary. Titled “The Epic Driftmob,” it takes pains to emulate a human flash mob. That means showing a woman dressed as a cop blocking several cars (including a Honda) from entering, and cutting in some unconvincing footage of confused and excited spectators.

Ultimately the stunt, orchestrated by Interone in Cape Town, feels more like it’s paying homage to Esther Williams than Improv Everywhere. Maybe that’s because it’s clearly too high-budget and well-planned to feel believable as a spontaneous event. Or maybe it’s because the fast edits and burning rubber can’t hide that there’s a sort of grace to the whole thing—especially if you watch the clip on mute, and spare yourself the obligatory but grating sounds of revving engines and screeching tires.

It also doesn’t look quite as dangerous as some of BMW’s other stunt commercials from recent years, which saw cars drifting through car-shaped holes in walls and around the edges of skyscraper helipads. But while less risky, at least we know the new spot is real (the brand says so on the YouTube page) and not CGI—unlike the recent aircraft carrier ad, which was almost certainly not real. (In the making-of video for the new spot, stunt driver Rich Rutherford points out the thin margin for error in coordinating the fast-moving cars, steered by pro drivers including drifting champions Rhys Millen and Samuel Hübinette).

And of course, the ad has a happy ending: The hot lady cop pulls off her hat and does a dramatic hair toss before climbing into one of the Beamers. Because the brand couldn’t resist suggesting its product will get you laid, too.



AKQA Opens in India, Puga Joins DM9DDB and More


AKQA has opened its first office in India, based in Gurgaon, which will also be the Adobe Marketing Cloud Technology Centre of Excellence for the agency. The team there will be led by chief technology officer Ben Jones and director of client services Anurag Bhatnagar. Bhatnagar previously led Havas Media’s Digital portfolio in India. Jones, who moves over from Europe, has AKQA’s CTO since 2012. The Gurgaon office is expected to employ around 50 staff by the end of the year.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

14 Tasty Dessert Pizzas – These Sweet Pizza Treats Swap Meat & Cheese for Fresh Fruits & Chocolate (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) If you prefer sweet over savory, these sweet pizza dishes are probably more to your taste. Although pizzas can easily be loaded up with vegetables, these pizzas take another route and trade veggies,…

Manhattan Boutique Hotel Stows Social Data Through WiFi System


Steps away from the horse-drawn carriages of Columbus Circle sits the Hudson Hotel, a fashionable Manhattan dwelling stylized with the requisite eclecticism: a massive chandelier, ivy-covered skylight, hand-carved wooden chairs and ’70s Memphis power pop piping through lobby speakers. This temporary home to tourists boasts another modern feature that’s less apparent to guests: Its WiFi access links the hotel to its visitors’ social data.

The eventual idea is for Morgans Hotel Group guests — whether residing in one of its properties or merely stopping by the bar to log into its WiFi system through a social account of their choice such as Facebook, Google Plus or Twitter. The hotel group currently is testing the WiFi logins at the Hudson Hotel only.

The system could help Morgans counteract the loss of customer data otherwise intercepted by room-booking middlemen such as Hotels.com and Priceline. Travel sites help hotels sell rooms they wouldn’t otherwise, but without the traditional direct transaction with guests, hotels lose out on customer information. That makes keeping in contact, making targeted offers and building loyalty a challenge.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Documentário destaca o declínio da qualidade do som

Todo mundo já se pegou, em algum momento, discutindo como a tecnologia afetou a forma como ouvimos música. Do vinil para o CD, do CD para o MP3 e o que muita gente concorda é que houve um declínio na qualidade do som. E esse é o foco do documentário The Distortion of Sound, produzido pela Bandito Brothers e KBS+ do Canadá para a marca de áudio profissioal Harman.

Com a participação de importantes nomes da música, entre eles Mike Shinoda, Slash, Quincy Jones, Snoop Dogg, Steve Aoki, Hans Zimmer, Andrew Scheps, Manny Marroquin, Dan the Automator, Lianne La Havas, Kate Nash, A.R. Rahman, Neil Strauss, Chris Ludwig, Greg Timbers e Dr. Sean Olive, o documentário é uma apaixonada declaração de amor por esta forma de arte, mas ao mesmo tempo um lamento pelos rumos que ela tomou com os avanços tecnológicos.

O DJ Steve Aoki, por exemplo, defende que não é possível ouvir a complexidade de uma música com arquivos comprimidos de MP3 – para se ter uma ideia, um arquivo comprimido elimina 90% da qualidade do áudio. Já Snoop Dogg declara que o ouvinte não sabe que o que ele ouve pode soar melhor, então ele simplesmente não liga.

Para quem curte a música como uma forma de arte e, assim como o Slash, não consegue imaginar a vida sem ela, vale o play. Em inglês, sem legendas.

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Media Week Awards 2014 shortlist

The shortlist for October’s Media Week Awards 2014 can now be revealed, and following more competition and entries than ever before, all the companies to have made the cut have reason to celebrate.

Art Takes Over 50,000 Outdoor Ad Spaces in the U.S., and Wow Is It Beautiful

The next Campbell’s Soup billboard you see might just be a masterpiece.

In fact, it could be Andy Warhol’s iconic “Campbell’s Soup Can” from 1964. Reproductions of that particular work, along with 57 others, will be popping up throughout the month of August on some 50,000 static and digital billboards, outdoor kiosks and transit signs in 170 American cities and towns in all 50 states—part of a project called Art Everywhere U.S.

Inspired by a similar program last year in the U.K., the U.S. version is sponsored by the Outdoor Advertising Association of America in conjunction with the Art Institute of Chicago, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., and the Whitney Museum in New York. Those institutions hope to attract visitors, while the OAAA is showcasing the latest technology. (You can scan the artwork via smartphone to learn about the images, their creators and the museums.)

Art Everywhere U.S. hasn’t assessed the value of the donated ad space, but the signage used for the British effort last summer—which ran for two weeks and had fewer than half as many installations—was worth almost $5 million.

Check out a map of the locations here.

The U.S. effort launches today in Times Square and will showcase 50 works selected by the public and eight chosen by the museums. Folks were asked to pick their favorites from among 100 possibilities; 170,000 votes were cast, and Edward Hopper’s “Nighthawks”—the oft-parodied, quintessentially American “lonely diner” scene from 1942—topped the poll.

The selections span 230 years of U.S. history, from 1778 to 2008, and it’s amazing how evocatively these works, viewed as a progression, capture the increasing complexity and ambiguity of the American experience. Gilbert Stuart’s portrait of George Washington shows our first president, who sat for the artist in 1793, in a suitably stately and assured pose. By the time we reach Grant Wood’s Iowa farm couple in “American Gothic” (1930), we see a society clinging to traditions but bedeviled by change (ouch, that pitchfork!). Later works informed by mass media, like Roy Lichtenstein’s Disney-fied “Look Mickey” (1961), and the aforementioned Warhol, show artists forging new forms amid sensory overload, striving to simplify and make sense of a world spinning out of control.

In the context of Art Everywhere, “Campbell’s Soup Can” really resonates. This hyper-realistic interpretation of a product that appeared in countless ads will now replace the advertising it skewered, bringing Warhol’s trenchant comment on our commoditized existence full circle.

It seems fitting that in our fickle, media-centric society, Andy Warhol’s 15 minutes of fame keep running into overtime.

Photos via: 1 2 3 4



15 Treats for Anime Enthusiasts – From Cosmic Hero Cupcakes to Anime Monster Pancakes (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) If you’re a big fan of classic cartoons like Pokemon and Sailor moon, then these creative treats are a fantastic way for anime enthusiasts to showcase their undeniable appreciation.

While…

Urban Cage Product

Le designer Yi-Ting Chen a conçu un objet design pour poser les iPhone et iPad chez soi : la Urban Cage. Avec la forme d’une cage d’oiseaux, le designer a créé différents modèles sur pieds ou qui peuvent se suspendre comme un cintre. Les photos sont signées Chang Chieh et les vêtements ont été créés par le styliste Roy Chang.

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Lexus partners Will.i.am for NX SUV launch

Lexus Europe has partnered with the musician and entrepreneur Will.i.am, as part of its campaign to launch the Lexus NX car.

Publisher says 'f*ck the begrudgers' as Vogue hits all-time high in September

Condé Nast’s September 2014 issue of Vogue is the monthly magazine’s biggest-ever fashion issue, carrying more than £4.5 million-worth of ads.

Ethereally Surreal Artwork (UPDATE) – This Surreal Oil Painting Series Will Surprise and Delight You (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Depicting wild realism using a realistic approach, Joel Rea’s surreal oil painting series beautifully mediate these two opposing styles to create stunning artwork that highlights the greatest…

Dreamy Vintage Editorials – Isaac Lindsay Stars in Wylde Magazine’s Whimsical Fashion Shoot (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) In this whimsical fashion shoot, we see a mix of styles that do a beautiful job fusing into one another to give a final look that is utterly ethereal and dreamlike. For those who have a thing for…

Under Armour mostra como transformar adversidade em motivação

Quantas vezes você ouviu um não que, a princípio, soou como uma resposta definitiva, mas nem por isso desistiu do seu objetivo? Em sua nova campanha, I Will What I Want, a marca de roupas esportivas Under Armour mira no público feminino e mostra como algumas personalidades esportivas superaram todas as negativas para realizarem seus sonhos, como por exemplo a bailarina Misty Copeland, protagonista do filme criado pela Droga5 e dirigido por Johnny Green.

Enquanto as imagens mostram Misty executando uma delicada coreografia, ouvimos sua voz em off lendo uma carta em que ela é rejeitada por uma academia de balé, que diz que ela não tem o corpo apropriado e que, aos 13 anos, estaria velha demais. Tudo isso para descobrirmos, ao final, que a garota é a bailarina solista do American Ballet Theatre.

A narrativa soa extremamente cruel e, apesar de não ser uma carta verdadeira – conforme afirmou David Droga a Adweek , reúne em um único texto muito do que Misty Copeland ouviu no início de sua carreira. De qualquer maneira, o resultado é no mínimo inspirador.

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BBC iPlayer usage up 9% as TV on demand increases

A shocking BBC Three drama, David Beckham, ‘EastEnders’ and the World Cup helped the BBC iPlayer report 260 million requests in June, up 9% on the same month last year.

Cristiano Ronaldo launches semi-clad ad campaign

Cristiano Ronaldo has launched a semi-clad ad campaign to promote his new underwear range.