T-Mobile Insists That It Offers the 'Best Trade-In Value' for iPhone 6, 'Guaranteed'


Every weekday, we bring you the Ad Age/iSpot Hot Spots, new and trending TV commercials tracked by iSpot.tv, a company that catalogs, tags and measures activity around TV ads in real time. The New Releases here ran on TV for the first time yesterday. The Most Engaging ads are showing sustained social heat, ranked by SpotShare scores reflecting the percent of digital activity associated with each one over the past week. See the methodology here.

Among the new releases, T-Mobile insists that it offers the “best trade-in value, guaranteed” if you’re looking to upgrade to an iPhone 6, while coffee-creamer brand International Delight wants you to know that (of course) it’s gotten in on the whole pumpkin-spice thing too. (ICYMI: “Apparently the Pumpkin-Spice iPhone 6 Is Already Sold Out.”)

As always, you can find out more about the making of the best commercials on TV at Ad Age’s Creativity.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

J.P. WIser's Whisky "The Wiserfund' (2014) :40 (Canada)

J.P. Wiser’s Whisky is the whisky that encourages men to live an uncompromising life. Now they’ve come up with a fundraising site called http://.wwwWiserfund.ca which helps guys in need.

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Absurdly Grotesque Photography – Andi Galdi Vinko's Photographs are Weird and Wonderful (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Andi Galdi Vinko is not interested in beauty. In a culture where beauty is posited as the be-all, end-all, this might seem a little strange. One look at the Hungarian photographer’s work,…

[Refletor] Tudo errado

Todos sabemos da importância da BBC para a história da comunicação, para a Inglaterra e para a história da música gravada. Por isso quando a estatal britânica resolveu reunir todas suas vertentes musicais numa mesma plataforma chamada BBC Music, nos preparamos para o aplauso. Afinal, estamos falando da BBC.

O gesto é uma evidente tentativa de fazer sua grife manter-se atual, reunindo sua produção ao redor do tema “música” num mesmo canal, sejam playlists, programas de rádio, entrevistas ou shows em seus estúdios. A interface do site é voltada para dispositivos móveis e tenta reunir diferentes conteúdos em abas diversas – nomes de programas, gêneros musicais, nomes de artistas, notícias – e oferece um serviço chamado Playlister, que além de disponibilizar sequências de músicas assinadas pelos canais da emissora também permite ao ouvinte fazer suas próprias seleções e descobrir músicas novas. Resumindo, a emissora criou um Spotify próprio para reorganizar seu conteúdo online e assim tenta fazer valer seu nome no atual cenário global de música.

Assistimos, desde o início do século, a uma briga de logotipos de todas as áreas ao redor deste tema e é neste cenário que o novo BBC Music quer brigar, entre velhas gravadoras e novos aplicativos, fabricantes de aparelhos portáteis e empresas de telefonia móvel.

A BBC criou um Spotify próprio para reorganizar seu conteúdo online e assim tenta fazer valer seu nome no atual cenário global de música

A empresa gaba-se que seu novo projeto é “uma ambiciosa onda de novos programas, parcerias inovadoras e iniciativas pioneiras que afirmam o mais forte compromisso da BBC com a música em 30 anos”, reza o release. Um blablablá corporativo pesado, que parece mais disposto a equivaler-se a um cenário musical mutante do que a impor sua própria importância.

A nova plataforma chega ao mundo acompanhada de um clipe. Uma versão cheia de artistas conhecidos – de diferentes gêneros, épocas e países – para regravar o clássico dos Beach Boys “God Only Knows”. Ok, vamos ver…

O resultado é espetacularmente brega. Aliás, brega é pouco. Transcende os limites do brega. Brega é só o conceito de reunir vários artistas para cantar uma música conhecida por todos. O “We Are the World” era menos brega porque pelo menos lançou uma musica nova. Mas esse clipe, essa versão, esse conceito… Tudo errado.

O resultado é espetacularmente brega. Aliás, brega é pouco. Transcende os limites do brega. Brega é só o conceito de reunir vários artistas para cantar uma música conhecida por todos.

Não apenas pela escolha dos artistas, que funciona até a página três. Há clássicos de menos (Stevie Wonder, Elton John, Brian May e o próprio Brian Wilson) e pop contemporâneo de mais (Dave Grohl, Lorde, Pharrell, Chris Martin, Florence Welch, Sam Smith, Jake Bugg, Kylie Minogue e Jamie Cullum), um inevitável Jools Holland e um evitável One Direction, além de artistas eruditos (Eliza Carthy e Danielle de Niese) e “do resto do mundo” (Baaba Maal) para dar aquele molho de “pluralidade”, além da BBC Concert Orchestra e um coral com 80 vozes.

Se no quesito música o resultado é mediano, na parte visual é constrangedor. A direção de arte do clipe deixa tudo pior ao colocar asas negras na Lorde, Elton John coberto de borboletas azuis, um tigre pulando sobre o piano de Brian Wilson, Kylie Minogue flutuando em uma bolha, Stevie Wonder cercado de diamantes… Trata artistas não como personagens mais sensíveis que nós, mas como um circo de pessoas estranhas. É um delírio psicodélico careta, uma caricatura musicada da direção de arte de Tim Burton filtrada pelo filme “As Aventuras de Pi”.

O clipe coroa uma iniciativa que parece tirar a majestade da BBC. Ao descer de seu próprio pedestal, a emissora perde seu tom austero e tenta criar um universo particular clean e higienizado, mais próximo das campanhas publicitárias de marcas de celular ou de serviços de streaming do que de um padrão BBC de qualidade. Basta comparar essa versão com outra, feita pela emissora há dezessete anos, quando ela também reuniu veteranos e novatos para cantar uma música conhecida, no caso “Perfect Day”, de Lou Reed.

“God Only Knows” parece uma súplica para não perder ouvintes

Além do próprio Lou Reed (fazendo “air piano”), a versão de 1997 ainda tinha participações de Bono, David Bowie, Suzanne Vega, Elton John, Burning Spear, Emmylou Harris, Tammy Wynette, Shane MacGowan (dos Pogues), Robert Cray, Skye Edwards (do Morcheeba), Dr. John, Emmylou Harris, Brett Anderson (do Suede), Laurie Anderson e Tom Jones – tudo bem, também tiveram os meninos do Boyzone. Mas ao comparar a “Perfect Day” de 1997 e a “God Only Knows” de 2014, percebe-se que até o fim do século passado a BBC ainda mantinha alguma austeridade, mesmo que um filtro visual no clipe quisesse deixá-la com uma cara moderna.

E o lançamento da canção de 1997 não tinha nenhum intuito inovador – era apenas um comercial feito para a TV para reforçar que, com como dizia a mensagem ao final do anúncio, “não importa qual é seu gosto musical, ele é saciado pela BBC Rádio e Televisão. Isso só é possível graças à forma incomparável como a BBC é paga por você. BBC. Você faz o que ela é.” “Você vai colher o que plantar”, como cantava escancaradamente o refrão.

“God Only Knows”, por outro lado, parece uma súplica para não perder ouvintes – “Só Deus sabe o que eu seria sem você”, canta a canção perfeita de Brian Wilson mas também parece cantar a BBC, que perde seu rigor para exibir-se como mero zoológico de personagens exóticos, estes tais artistas que fazem música. Havia uma empolgação para aplaudir, uma antecipação otimista sobre como a emissora marcaria sua entrada no século digital e assistimos a uma campanha de marketing mediana cheia de celebridades e efeitos especiais. O oposto do que se esperaria da BBC.

Tudo errado.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Microsoft Poaches From Publicis for New U.S. Sales Chief


Microsoft finally has a U.S. sales boss, eight months after it ousted Keith Lorizio.

The tech giant has tapped former Publicis exec Bob Bejan to permanently fill the role, which has expanded its jurisdiction to all of North America.

As Microsoft’s VP-North American sales and marketing, Mr. Bejan will oversee sales for the continent, manage relationships with media buyers and develop new opportunities for advertisers in hopes of improving Microsoft’s market share. He said the role’s expansion to include all of North America will allow him to do things like experiment with new ad products in Canada, which he described as “a great test market with applicable parallels” to the U.S.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

CNN Gets Ratings Boost From New Prime-Time Show

“Somebody’s Gotta Do It” more than doubled the usual CNN audience at 9 p.m. among a younger demographic.



Grey NY, Ad Council Launch ‘Healthy Mouth’ PSAs

With Halloween and its accompanying sugary assault on young teeth just over three weeks away, Grey New York and the Ad Council have released a series of “Healthy Mouth” PSAs reminding parents to make sure their kids practice proper oral hygiene.

The PSAs are based on the insight that despite tooth decay being the “single most common chronic childhood disease” (yeah, we weren’t aware that it qualified as a “disease” either), a recent Ad Council survey found that 75 percent of parents admit that their kids sometimes forget to brush. So to show parents that just two minutes a day of making sure their kids take care of their teeth can make a lifetime impact, Grey New York crafted a series of PSAs about things you can’t teach your kids in two minutes. It’s a clever approach, and highlights just how little effort is needed on the part of parents to ensure proper oral hygiene. In one 30-second spot (featured above), a man gives his daughter a crash course on bike riding. In other spots a man spends 30 seconds teaching his child manners and a woman attempts to teach her son to cook. (more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

‘Workforce Reduction’ at Razorfish

razorfish

Razorfish will announce more cuts to its global staff today.

Following March’s dismissal of 20-30 North American employees and another round of cuts in July that involved what tipsters told us was a total of approximately 100 individuals, an agency spokesperson confirmed that more staffers have been let go today. The internal announcement, according to a reader, will happen right around the time this post goes live. Here’s the official statement:

In an effort to shape our organization to align with our clients’ progressing needs, we have made a workforce reduction. The adjustment impacts less than 2% of our global headcount and will reinforce Razorfish’s ability to enable business transformation, which has been a primary source of our growth. Razorfish brings intelligence together with technology, media and creative to drive our clients’ business forward. We remain focused on delivering best-in-class work for our clients and are looking forward to playing a major role in the recently announced Razorfish Global Network.

Neither PR nor readers gave us more details on the cuts, and based on the agency’s own Wikipedia page (which is apparently “written like an advertisement“), that 2 percent amounts to approximately 40 staffers at locations not specified in the quote above.

As a reminder, news from the Razorfish team hasn’t all been negative. The agency hired Michael Chamberlain, formerly of BBDO, to run its San Francisco office less than a month ago, and recent employee reviews note its “really positive working atmosphere.

No updates on clients, campaigns, or the reason for this adjustment.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Ashton Kutcher's Other Baby: Lenovo Tablet


If Steve Jobs’ creation — the device that built the tablet market — can’t revive it, maybe the actor who played him can.

On Thursday, a week before Apple is expected to release its latest iPad, Lenovo unveiled its own new tablet in London, along with a bendable laptop. They are the first devices designed with input from Ashton Kutcher, the actor and tech investor who was appointed “product engineer” for the Chinese electronics manufacturer last year. In 2013, Mr. Kutcher also starred in a biopic as the late Apple founder.

“Apple wasn’t stepping up going, ‘Hey, let’s build a product together,'” Mr. Kutcher told Ad Age, when asked why he chose Lenovo over more recognizable brands. “I didn’t want to go out and be the face of a tech company. I wanted to actually build something.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Nissan Juke "Chase The Thrill" (2014) 1:20 (France)

To promote the Nissan Juke during the Paris Motorshow, D2NA/DigitasLBi France and UNIT9’s VR Studio created an Oculus Rift experience for event goers.

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Samsung Galaxy ALPHA "Pick It Up' (2014) :46 (Sweden)

With so many phones out there, it’s hard to break through the competition. But DDB Stockholm figured out a nifty way to sidestep the issue, with its launch of the Samsung Galaxy Alpha.

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Travel Ontario-Pan Am Games "Invade" (2014) 1:00 (Canada)

The Pan Am Games are coming to Toronto in 2015. It will be the biggest sporting event in Toronto’s history. So you’d better get ready to celebrate the invasion.
This might be the first time anyone’s ever wanted to invade Canada. I keed!

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Ikea cria móveis que não precisam de ferramenta para serem montados

Quando saí da casa dos meus pais, eu já tinha montado uma boa caixa de ferramentas, com instrumentos básicos para mudanças, como martelos, chaves de fenda, alicates, entre outros. Os anos de república me ensinaram que sem um kit desses fica difícil de montar uma cama, ou de colocar um armário no lugar.

Mas se depender da Ikea, talvez a minha caixa de ferramenta se torne desnecessaura – desnecessária e jurássica ao mesmo tempo. Essa, contudo, pode ser uma obsolescência interessante, que torna mais fácil, rápida e confiável a montagem dos móveis.

Isso é possível com um pequeno ajuste no design das peças, que ao invés de se encaixarem em 90°, se unem em ângulos de 45° e possuem pinos que travam as peças no lugar.

Como se não precisar de ferramentas não fosse interessante o suficiente, a Ikea ainda garante que dá para colocar tudo de pé em apenas 5 minutos. A novidade está disponível na linha Regissör, que conta com uma estante, uma mesinha de café e quatro armários, com preços a partir de 140 dólares.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Havas Worldwide Imagines Reverse Orphanage for Fragile Childhood

Havas Worldwide, Helsinki crafted an emotional alcohol awareness PSA for Finnish charity Fragile Childhood, in collaboration with production companies Sauna International and Studio Arkadena, entitled “Orphanage.”

The beautifully-shot spot imagines a kind of reverse orphanage, where children choose their parents. Two children look through glass displays at different parents who present typical moments in their lives, such as at the dinner table or in the back yard. “Orphanage” does a great job of drawing in the viewer and fleshing out its strange little world, as the children visit differnt pairs of parents. As the boy takes a fancy to a certain father, a woman takes him by the hand and leads the children to a drunken, quarreling couple — their parents. As they leave with the couple, the message “Children can’t choose their parents. What if they could?” appears, followed by an invitation for viewers to share their thoughts on alcohol abuse. It’s a sad ending, and while it’s not initially apparent what issue the ad is addressing, that should make the ending all the more of a shock to any parents struggling with alcoholism.

“It is still not widely understood how much harm drinking problems at home cause to children,” Fragile Childhood told Adweek. “For example, previous research has shown that every fourth Finnish child has suffered some harm because of parent’s alcohol usage. Research carried out among Finnish teenagers aged 12-18 years shows that children think their parents ought not to drink at home and that they are much nicer when sober.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Shell Celebrates 30 Years in Alberta by Selling Gas at 1984 Prices

It was the best of times, it was the … well, literally the best of times. Van Halen was the greatest band in the world. George Orwell was totally right about the future. And the Edmonton Oilers were the world champions of hockey.

It was 1984. And speaking of oil, that’s the year Shell started refining in Alberta. To celebrate, eight Shell stations in the area reduced their prices on Wednesday to match their 1984 levels—39 cents per liter.

With gas costing way more than that nowadays, Canadians were surely happy to fill their gas-guzzling vehicles without hurting their wallets, even if just for one day.

Via Global News Canada.



Hairy Digital Portraits

Pour ce projet, l’artiste turque Can Pekdemir semble réinterpréter l’image de l’épouvantail par une série de portraits entièrement recouverts de poils, de cheveux et de tentacules. Des sculptures digitales très réussies qui rendent compte de la technique de réalisation et du travail des détails. À découvrir dans la suite.

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Jimmy Dean: Slow-Roast Shuffle

Advertising Agency: TBWAChiatDay LA, USA
Producer: David Hoogenakker
Head of TV / Production: Brian O’Rourke
Executive creative director: Brent Anderson
Group creative director: Jerry Gentile
Creative director: James McKenna
Copywriter: Dominic Valdez
Art director: Sharon Park
Production company: Tool of NA
Director: Evan Silver
Executive producer: Robert Helphand
Managing director: Oliver Fuselier
Producer: Joshua Greenberg
Editors: Brooks Miller, Nick O’Neill, Paul Plew
Sound design: Rommel Molina / 740
VFX/Flame: Mike Dillinger

Jimmy Dean: Cheesehead Dreams

Advertising Agency: TBWAChiatDay LA, USA
Producer: David Hoogenakker
Head of TV / Production: Brian O’Rourke
Executive creative director: Brent Anderson
Group creative director: Jerry Gentile
Creative director: James McKenna
Copywriter: Dominic Valdez
Art director: Sharon Park
Production company: Tool of NA
Director: Evan Silver
Executive producer: Robert Helphand
Managing director: Oliver Fuselier
Producer: Joshua Greenberg
Editors: Brooks Miller, Nick O’Neill, Paul Plew
Sound design: Rommel Molina / 740
VFX/Flame: Mike Dillinger

Jimmy Dean: Baggage Claim

Jimmy Dean launches the “Sunniest Day of the Year,” a daylong activation designed to shine attention on the new Jimmy Dean lunch and dinner offerings. The iconic Jimmy Dean brand Sun character (“the Sun”) will embark on a one day journey across the U.S., where he will surprise and delight consumers along the way and document every step of his adventure across digital and social media.

Advertising Agency: TBWAChiatDay LA, USA
Producer: David Hoogenakker
Head of TV / Production: Brian O’Rourke
Executive creative director: Brent Anderson
Group creative director: Jerry Gentile
Creative director: James McKenna
Copywriter: Dominic Valdez
Art director: Sharon Park
Production company: Tool of NA
Director: Evan Silver
Executive producer: Robert Helphand
Managing director: Oliver Fuselier
Producer: Joshua Greenberg
Editors: Brooks Miller, Nick O’Neill, Paul Plew
Sound design: Rommel Molina / 740
VFX/Flame: Mike Dillinger

Leading Lights Awards: Gertie

Recognising those who have changed our roads for the better.

Advertising Agency: Irish International BBDO, Dublin, Ireland
Creative Director: Dylan Cotter
Art Director: Clayton Homer
Copywriter: Dillon Elliott
Illustrator: Jon Berkeley
Published: September 2014