Softcard: Tap to Pay – Rowdy

Advertising Agency: Camp + King, San Francisco, USA
Chief Creative Officer: Roger Camp
Creative Directors: Rikesh Lal, Paul Sincoff
Art Director: Eric Lowery
Copywriter: Avery Stokes Harrison
Director of Content Production: David Verhoef
Production Company: Green Dot Films
Director: Luc Schurgers
Partners/Executive Producers: Rich Pring, Darren Foldes
Producer: JP Mandarino
Director of Photography: Sean Stiegemeier
Editorial Company: Misfit
Editor: Doug Cox
Assistant Editor: Stu Barnes
Executive Producers: Kelly Koppen, Jim Vaughan
Music Company: JSM
Executive Producer: Joel Simon
Composers/Arrangers: Joel Simon, Koki Saito
Visual Effects: Arsenal FX
Sr. Compositer, Visual Effects: Matt Motal, Jeff Aquino, Sean Starkweather, Mike Johnson, Josh Studebaker, Ed Anderson
Executive Producer: Ashley Hydrick
Producers: Sabrina Elizondo, Jessica Ambrose
Account Director: Audrey Santamarta
Business Affairs: Tricia Krasneski
Planner: Anne Tway
Published: November 2014

Foot Locker: Week of Greatness – Manny Pacquiao

Advertising Agency: BBDO New York, USA
Chief Creative Officers: David Lubars, Greg Hahn
Executive Creative Directors: Chris Beresford-Hill, Dan Lucey
Executive Producers: Tricia Lentini, Tara Leinwohl, Angelo Ferrugia, Anthony Curti
Senior Copywriter: Mike Motch
Senior Art Director: Austin Mankey
Senior Account Director, Worldwide: Troy Tarwater
Account Director: Janelle Van Wonderen
Account Manager: Nick Robbins
Assistant Account Executive: Samuel Henderson
Production Company: O Positive Films
Director: Kenny Herzog
Executive Producer: Marc Grill
Head of Production: Fran Borden
Line Producers: Ami Krane, Grayson Bithell
Director of Photography: Marc Laliberte
Edit House: NO. 6
Editor: Chan Hatcher
Assistant Editor: Nick Schneider
Editor: Jason MacDonald
Assistant Editor: Ryan Bukowski
Visual Effects House: NO. 6
Sound Mixer: Tommy Juacarone / Sound Lounge

Foot Locker: Week of Greatness – John Cena

Advertising Agency: BBDO New York, USA
Chief Creative Officers: David Lubars, Greg Hahn
Executive Creative Directors: Chris Beresford-Hill, Dan Lucey
Executive Producers: Tricia Lentini, Tara Leinwohl, Angelo Ferrugia, Anthony Curti
Senior Copywriter: Mike Motch
Senior Art Director: Austin Mankey
Senior Account Director, Worldwide: Troy Tarwater
Account Director: Janelle Van Wonderen
Account Manager: Nick Robbins
Assistant Account Executive: Samuel Henderson
Production Company: O Positive Films
Director: Kenny Herzog
Executive Producer: Marc Grill
Head of Production: Fran Borden
Line Producers: Ami Krane, Grayson Bithell
Director of Photography: Marc Laliberte
Edit House: NO. 6
Editor: Chan Hatcher
Assistant Editor: Nick Schneider
Editor: Jason MacDonald
Assistant Editor: Ryan Bukowski
Visual Effects House: NO. 6
Sound Mixer: Tommy Juacarone / Sound Lounge

Foot Locker: Week of Greatness – James Harden

Advertising Agency: BBDO New York, USA
Chief Creative Officers: David Lubars, Greg Hahn
Executive Creative Directors: Chris Beresford-Hill, Dan Lucey
Executive Producers: Tricia Lentini, Tara Leinwohl, Angelo Ferrugia, Anthony Curti
Senior Copywriter: Mike Motch
Senior Art Director: Austin Mankey
Senior Account Director, Worldwide: Troy Tarwater
Account Director: Janelle Van Wonderen
Account Manager: Nick Robbins
Assistant Account Executive: Samuel Henderson
Production Company: O Positive Films
Director: Kenny Herzog
Executive Producer: Marc Grill
Head of Production: Fran Borden
Line Producers: Ami Krane, Grayson Bithell
Director of Photography: Marc Laliberte
Edit House: NO. 6
Editor: Chan Hatcher
Assistant Editor: Nick Schneider
Editor: Jason MacDonald
Assistant Editor: Ryan Bukowski
Visual Effects House: NO. 6
Sound Mixer: Tommy Juacarone / Sound Lounge

Foot Locker: Week of Greatness – Derrick Rose and Tim Duncan

Advertising Agency: BBDO New York, USA
Chief Creative Officers: David Lubars, Greg Hahn
Executive Creative Directors: Chris Beresford-Hill, Dan Lucey
Executive Producers: Tricia Lentini, Tara Leinwohl, Angelo Ferrugia, Anthony Curti
Senior Copywriter: Mike Motch
Senior Art Director: Austin Mankey
Senior Account Director, Worldwide: Troy Tarwater
Account Director: Janelle Van Wonderen
Account Manager: Nick Robbins
Assistant Account Executive: Samuel Henderson
Production Company: O Positive Films
Director: Kenny Herzog
Executive Producer: Marc Grill
Head of Production: Fran Borden
Line Producers: Ami Krane, Grayson Bithell
Director of Photography: Marc Laliberte
Edit House: NO. 6
Editor: Chan Hatcher
Assistant Editor: Nick Schneider
Editor: Jason MacDonald
Assistant Editor: Ryan Bukowski
Visual Effects House: NO. 6
Sound Mixer: Tommy Juacarone / Sound Lounge

Agency A-List: One Week Left Until Entry Deadline


The Nov. 26 deadline for Agency A-List entries is fast approaching, and the early-bird rate ends at 11:59 p.m. ET today, Nov. 19.

You still have plenty of time to enter using our new, easy online entry site, which asks you to tell us about your agency and upload examples of great campaigns you handled this year.

But don’t leave it until the last second. Finish your entry now — you can keep editing up until the deadline.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Why Washington Post Built Its Own Ad Server for Amazon Tablet App


The Washington Post’s new tablet app, which comes pre-loaded on certain Amazon Fire devices starting today, debuts with Lincoln Motor and Sprint Business as initial sponsors for an approach intended to make ad loading invisible to readers.

“Advertising was at the development table at the very beginning,” said Jeff Burkett, the Post’s senior director-sales operations and product strategy. “It was a first-class citizen.”

The introduction of the app marks the first time the Post and Amazon have formally worked together since Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos bought the newspaper in August 2013.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Hyperrealistic Paintings by Nate Frizzell

Diplômé de l’Otis College of Art and Design de Los Angeles, Nate Frizzel travaille principalement la peinture à travers des oeuvres très réalistes. Prochainement, il présentera toutes ses nouvelles créations au CHG Circa dans une exposition intitulé Dark Was The Night. Les nouvelles pièces continueront à figurer des portraits d’enfants avec des créatures sauvages. A découvrir.

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Huffington Post Is Said to Be in Talks to Host a Jill Abramson Journalism Start-Up

Ms. Abramson, a former New York Times editor, and the journalist Steven Brill are said to be in talks with Arianna Huffington.



ESPN: This is SportsCenter – Satellite

Advertising Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, New York, USA

TEDxAmsterdam: The Human Clock

Advertising Agency: We Are Pi, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Brothers: If the suit fits

Advertising Agency: Pool, Stockholm, Sweden
Art Director: Philip Arvidson
Copywriter: Ulf Rönnbäck
Additional credits: Kristin Sköldebäck, Victoria Michailov, Markus Wiklund Ferrer
Photo & film: Carl Kleiner
Published: July 2014

AntiCast 157 – Precisamos falar sobre Interestellar

ANTICAST_POST

Olá, antidesigners e brainstormers!
Neste programa, Ivan Mizanzuk, Rafael Ancara, Ricardo Cunha Lima, Leo Cunha Lima e Almir Mirabeau discutem sobre o última filme de Christopher Nolan, Interestelar. É bom? É ruim? Quais as semelhanças que ele possui com 2001? E com a Odisseia de Homero? Será um revival dos filmes clássicos de ficção científica? E principalmente: É BOM OU É RUIM? Spoilers, spoilers para todos os lados! Segurem-se!

>> 0h08min52seg Pauta principal
>> 2h04min08seg Leitura de comentários
>> 2h40min41seg Música de encerramento: “How do I Deal”, de Jennifer Love Hewitt

Links
COMPRE A PRIMEIRA CAMISETA DO ANTICAST: “PREFIRO BAUDRILLARD”
Masculina | Feminina

PRÉ-VENDA LIVRO “ATÉ O FIM DA QUEDA” (link em breve!)

WORKSHOPS IVAN
SÃO PAULO
17/01/15 História da Arte para Criativos
18/01/15 Arte e Morte

CURITIBA
24/01/15 História da Arte para Criativos
25/01/15 Arte e Morte

HANGOUT
31/01/15 Arte e Morte (Hangout)

Não Obstante #5 – Filosofia do Design – uma aposta pós-prometeica?

Pensar Infográfico
>> Quer o pensar infográfico na sua cidade?
>> Curta a nossa página no facebook e acompanhe novidades sobre nossos cursos e palestras, além de curiosidades sobre infográficos e visualização da informação.
>> Dúvidas, informações e etc. cursos@infograma.org

iTunes
Ouça o AntiCast no iTunes aqui ou então manualmente: Assine no seu iTunes da seguinte forma: Vá no Itunes, na guia Avançado > Assinar Podcast e insira: feed.anticast.com.br

Redes Sociais
Nos acompanhe no twitter @anticastdesign, na nossa fanpage no Facebook e no Youtube (/anticastdesign). Ou nos mande um email no contato@anticast.com.br Siga também o nosso irmão @filosofiadesign.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Cityscapes Made with Scalpels by Damien Hirst

On ne présente plus Damien Hirst, auteur du « For The Love Of God », crâne d’une valeur de 20 millions de dollars. Aujourd’hui, l’artiste présente une série beaucoup plus modeste de vues satellitaires de villes, conçue à partir de lames de rasoir, épingles, ou encore scalpels. A découvrir.

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SportsCenter Experiences Technical Difficulties in W+K’s Latest, Starring James Harden

Houston Rockets star James Harden takes center stage in W+K’s latest “This is SportsCenter” installation, entitled “Satellite,” which also features SportsCenter anchors Neil Everett, Kenny Mayne and Stan Verrett.

In the 30-second spot, which will run for six weeks, Harden fields a call from a mission control center as Everett and Verrett call with a technical problem on the set of SportsCenter. From here things take an unexpected turn, with a cameo by Houston Astros mascot Orbit. Without giving too much away, we can say that as far as “This is SportsCenter” spots go, this one is certainly on the stranger end. Harden, who also appeared in this memorable spot for Foot Locker a few months back, plays his part well, but we think this one will leave some people scratching their heads. (more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Foot Locker and BBDO Share Your Favorite Sports Jokes

The “Week of Greatness” is back via Foot Locker and BBDO New York.

The campaign debuted last night and scored coverage on ye old sports blogs; this spot starring Derrick Rose and the notoriously mild-mannered Tim Duncan already has a million and a half YouTube views.

Three more spots in the series after the jump; each one plays on a different, long-standing sports joke.

(more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Sonic Signs Kevin Durant in Brand’s First Sports Endorsement Deal

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Sonic has signed a multi-year endorsement deal with Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant, the brand’s first sports endorsement deal, Adweek reports.

As part of the deal, Durant will star alongside Sonic’s “Two Guys” in a national broadcast campaign expected this summer. The “Two Guys” in question, New York-based former The Colbert Report writer Peter Grosz and Chicago-based improv comedian T.J. Jagodowski, have been a staple of the brand’s advertising since being brought back by GSP+P in early 2012, two years after being phased out after their initial run with Kansas City-based agency Barkley. Durant will also be involved with Sonic educational charity Limeades for Learning and will help brainstorm new menu items.

Durant achieved instant-celebrity with his emotional acceptance speech for the NBA MVP award, which, coupled with his connection to Sonic’s hometown of Oklahoma City, attracted the attention of CMO Todd Smith. “What really happened was the MVP speech that he made last year really pushed him into a national presence more, but also, his likability is off the charts,” Smith told Adweek. “For us, we wanted someone who has a hometown feel with a national presence because that’s the type of brand we are.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The Ultimate Rebranding: How a Veteran Creative Shifted Genders Mid-Career

Despite all their turnover and relentless pursuit of revenue, ad agencies often end up feeling like big families. And announcing any sort of life change to your family, especially a family of 500 colleagues, can be daunting.

So, imagine telling this family that you’ll soon begin transitioning from female to male, and you’ll have the first inkling of the road Chris Edwards began traveling nearly 20 years ago.

Edwards, a longtime creative director for Boston-based Arnold Worldwide, announced his gender transition in 1995. Over the next 12 years, he underwent 28 medical procedures to complete the transformation. And throughout, he maintained his role as a writer and creative leader, working on major national and global accounts.

In his upcoming memoir, titled Balls, Edwards shares an array of stories about his gender switch, along with the more traditional reminscences about a life in the already unpredictable world of advertising.

This week is GLAAD’s National Transgender Awareness Week, and we asked Edwards to tell us a bit more about his story. Check out our conversation below.

AdFreak: So, what’s the status of your book?
Chris Edwards: My manuscript is currently in the hands of a bunch of editors at various New York publishing houses. I’m hoping one of them will make me an offer soon. This is still a subject that makes some people nervous, so if I haven’t found the right editor by January, I will likely publish it myself. Either way, interested readers can sign up to get an alert when the book is available at chrisedwardsballs.com.

Is it really going to be called Balls? Because that’s amazing.
Ha. Yes it is. When I announced at work that I was going to be transitioning, so many people came up to me and told me I had balls. I always laughed it off with, “Well, that’s a few surgeries down the road.” But I knew what they meant, and it’s true.

It takes a lot of courage to change your gender to begin with. But to stay at the same job and do it openly in front of 500 co-workers and clients, yeah, you’ve gotta have quite the set of cojones. I was telling this “balls” story to my former boss, Pete Favat, over a few too many vodka sodas, and he was like, “Dude, that should be the title!” And we both cracked up.

The next day I thought, do I really have the balls to call my book Balls? Looks like the answer turned out to be yes. I’ve been told I’ll probably need a subtitle, though. I’m thinking “It takes some to get some,” but that might be pushing it.

I’m guessing your target audience is a lot bigger than just those considering a gender switch. Who else do you think would enjoy this book, and what do you hope they’ll get out of it?
Well, all you ad peeps will enjoy the book because agency life is the backdrop, and I name names, so you may read about someone you know. You’ll laugh a lot, too. My sense of humor helped get me through 28 surgeries and innumerable awkward moments, so it was critical that the tone of the book reflect that.

Yes, this book will surely appeal to a transgender audience, but really it’s for anyone who’s ever felt uncomfortable in their own skin—for whatever reason. It’s about having the courage to be true to yourself and realizing that, instead of fearing what other people will think, you can actually control it. I was able to use what I learned working in advertising to rebrand myself and market the “new me” to friends, family and co-workers with great success. I hope people read my story and come away empowered, inspired and more accepting of others who are transitioning.

At risk of one big spoiler here, how would you describe the way your colleagues and clients at Arnold handled your transition?
Ah, total spoiler! But without giving too much away … It was 1995. Transgender wasn’t even really a word yet. The only frame of reference people had was Silence of the Lambs, The Crying Game and guests on Jerry Springer.

I knew I had my work cut out for me when it came to changing perceptions, so I took it upon myself to be the educator. Arnold was very much like a family back then, so it felt like everyone was on this journey with me, and we all learned as we went. Some people had issues. And there were definitely some awkward moments, especially around me using the men’s room. But overall the response was incredibly positive. I’d like to think it was solely because of the way I handled the situation, but it probably didn’t hurt that Ed Eskandarian, the agency’s owner and CEO at the time, was also my father.

You were the creative director on McDonald’s “Singing Fish” spot, one of my personal favorites. What other work are you most proud of?
Ah, yes, “Frankie the Fish” will always have a special place in my heart. You know, we made a toy replica that plays the original jingle and club re-mix. I think there are still a few left on Amazon if you’re interested. Anyway, another McDonald’s spot I’m proud of is “McNuggets Guys.” I saw this YouTube video of two guys rapping about how much they love McNuggets (one of the rappers is now the star of the HBO series Silicon Valley) and turned it into a 30-second TV spot that went viral. I believe it was one of the first if not the first TV spot to use YouTube footage.

I’m also extremely proud of the early work I did for [the anti-tobacco campaign] Truth. Of all the spots I worked on, the most memorable one was probably “Project SCUM,” which is the name of the actual marketing plan Big Tobacco used to target gays and homeless people. Insane, right? While the facts we dug up were disturbing, it was so satisfying to get to do creative work that actually made a difference. Since the inception of the Truth campaign, teen smoking has gone down from 23 percent to 9 percent. Feels great to know I had a little something to do with that.

What advice would you give to someone who’s thinking about publicly changing genders but is worried it could create a difficult situation among friends, family and co-workers?
It’s pretty much the same advice I’d give anyone about to undergo a major life change of any kind: Take the lead and develop a game plan in advance. Script out and rehearse what you’re going to say. Make a list of who you want to tell personally and in what order. Educate and be patient—you may have been living with it in your head for a while, but it’s still new news to everyone else. Be open and encourage questions. Use your sense of humor to put people at ease. Oh, and read my book. 🙂

Chris Edwards is a veteran creative director and copywriter based in Boston. To sign up for updates about the status of his memoir, BALLS, visit his website.



TUI antibacterial gel: Bacteria tracker

Advertising Agency: Y&R, Bogota, Colombia
Chief Creative Officer: Mauricio Rocha
Executive Creative Officers: Tito Chamorro, Juan Pablo Alvarado
Creative Directors: Ricardo Uribe, Julián Núñez, Juan Carlos Sosa
Art Directors: Irene Cruz, Daniel Saenz
Copywriters: Juan Pablo Maldonado, Jorge Pinto
Editor: Daniel Saenz
Producer: Loto Films
Digital Producer: Wunderman Colombia

Techo: Drawing a roof

Advertising Agency: Y&R, Bogota, Colombia
Chief Creative Officer: Mauricio Rocha
Executive Creative Officers: Tito Chamorro, Juan Pablo Alvarado
Creative Directors: Ricardo, Uribe, Julián Núñez, Juan Carlos Sosa
Art Directors: Marcela Zapata, Andres Bolivar
Copywriters: Andrés Luque, Sebastián Cuevas
Producer: Loto Films