Burger King: Whopper apartment

In order to launch Burger King’s delivery service in Spain we created The Whopper Apartment.

Advertising Agency: La Despensa, Madrid, Spain
Creative General Managers: Javier Carrasco, Miguel Olivares
Creative Director: Luis Monroy
Account Team: Alfredo González, Tania Martínez
Art Director: Willy Roda
Copywriters: Carmen Ibáñez, Víctor Gómez
Film Producer: Reno Films
Director: Enrico Trippa
Producer Executive: Alex Martín
Published: December 2014

Societe de l'assurance automobile du Quebec: Coffin

Advertising Agency: Lg2, Quebec City, Canada
Creative Director / Copywriter: Luc Du Sault
Art Director: Anthony Verge
Account: Alexandra Laverdière, Isabelle Miville
Agency Producer: Julie Pichette
Directors: David Poulin, Maxime Valsan
Production House: Nova Film
Producer: Dominik Beaulieu
Engineer: Sébastien Bolduc

KIA GT: GT ride

Advertising Agency: LA RED, Hamburg, Germany
Production Agency: Artificial Rome
Creative Directors: Matthias Maurer, Margit Schroeder
Art Director: Christoph Mäder
Copywriter: Marco Gabriel
Illustrator: Dirk Hoffmann
Published: January 2014

Metro: Christmas surprise

Advertising Agency: Publicis, Montréal, Canada
Creative Directors / Designers: Nicolas Massey, Carl Robichaud
Strategy: Samuel Fontaine
Public Relations: Jean-Philippe Côté
Client Services: Thierry Gauthier, Stéphanie Dubreuil
Director, Electronic Production: Anne-Marie Piran
Production: 45 Degrees, Le Groupe Cirque du Soleil
Director, Marketing and Development: Carla Marques
Design and Artistic Direction: Benoit Lusignan
Technical Team and Production: Michel Deguire, Jocelyne Fortier
Client Services: Nicole Provencal
Filming: FH Studio / Fayçal Hajji
Director: Eric Yealland
Postproduction: Mikros Image Canada Inc.
Executive Producer: Sonia Marques
Production and Post-production Coordination: Élodie Pollet
Editor: Martin Pensa
Colourist: Jacky Lefresne
Sound Editing: La Majeure
Music, Original Score: Alexandra Strélisky
Media Strategy: BCP Média

Fruit of the Loom: Rules

Advertising Agency: CP+B, USA
Executive creative director: Tony Calcao
Chief creative officer: Ralph Watson
Creative directors: Dave Cook, Matt Fischvogt
Associate creative director: Mona Hasan
Senior art director: Edi Inderbitzin
Associate creative director: Nicholas Buckingham
Designer: Aaron Fisher
Integrated producer: Ramon Nuñez
Director of video production: Kate Hildebrant
Business affairs: Rebecca Williams
Managing director: Danielle Whalen
Account director: Joselyn Bickford
Content supervisor: Charissa Kinney
Content manager: Ben Song
Production company: Imperial Woodpecker, Santa Monica, CA
Director: Peter Martin
Managing partner: Doug Halbert
Executive producer: Charlie Cocuzza
Producer: Lawrence Lewis
Editorial company: NO6
Editor: Chan Hatcher
Online editor: Verdi Sevenhuysen
Editorial executive producer: Chrissy DeSimone
Editorial producer: Kendra Desai
End card production company: Optimus
Managing director: Lisa Masseur
Executive producer: Sarah Wien
Producer: Emma Jubinski
Post production: Optimus Design
Executive producer: Jon Desir
Executive creative director: Mike Ciacciarelli
Creative director: Donnie Bauer
Music company: KBV Records
Executive producer: Tony Verderosa
Composer: Alex Wurman
Audio finishing: LIME Studios
Engineer: Mark Meyuhas
Color finishing: CO3
Colorist: Siggy
Launched: December 2014

Facebook Brings Autoplay Video Ads to Mobile


Facebook is letting advertisers open some gifts a bit early this holiday season.

Advertisers can now run autoplay video ads within Facebook’s mobile apps, the company announced on Tuesday. That’s a big expansion for the social network’s eight-month-old video ad unit, considering that 703 million of the 864 million people who check Facebook every day do so on mobile. It’s unclear how many of those mobile visitors are using Facebook’s mobile site versus its mobile apps.

By bringing its pricey video ads to a much bigger chunk of its users, Facebook may expect to see an even bigger chunk of its revenue coming from mobile, assuming more advertisers buy autoplay video ads because of the expansion. In the third quarter 66% — or $1.95 billion — of Facebook’s revenue came from mobile.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Renaissance Portraits by Christian Tagliavini

Le photographe suisse et italien Christian Tagliavini a mis plus d’un an pour terminer cette série de portraits intitulée « 1503 » : une collection de portraits au parfum suranné puisqu’il a été puiser son inspiration dans les costumes et peintures de la Renaissance, des costumes qu’il a lui-même fabriqués. A découvrir.

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Japanese Right Attacks Newspaper on the Left, Emboldening War Revisionists

The Asahi Shimbun’s formal retraction of articles about “comfort women” in World War II has led to an assault on the newspaper and the view that Japan forced women into sexual slavery.



Colossal Beer Festivals – Toronto's Festival of Beer Includes Culinary Delights & Good Tunes (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Get excited because the Beer Store presents Toronto’s Festival of Beer 2015 tickets are now on sale. While it’s still several months away the popularity of the event means that you might…

Revealing Superhero Illustrations – The Secret Life of Heroes by Gregoire Guillemin is Shocking (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Comic book and cartoon heroes might be put on pedestals for good reason, but this art series titled ‘The Secret Life of Heroes’ exposes some of their dirty little secrets. At least,…

Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett Ham It Up For H&M (See Last Night's New Ads)


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, Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett doo-wop away, backed by a swing band and sweater models, for H&M’s holiday offerings (Creativity made it an editors’ pick yesterday). Walmart and Hyundai are also beating the holiday drum. As is McDonald’s, which is promoting a new gift card with American Express. A deadbeat dad is swapped out — and introduced to a Samsung smartwatch — in Verizon’s latest Christmas spot, “The Good More.”

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

Chanel – Reincarnation by Karl Lagerfeld

Dans le cadre de la nouvelle collection Chanel Paris-Salzburg 2014/15 Métiers d’art présentée le 2 décembre à Salzburg, Karl Largarfeld nous livre un court-métrage intitulé Réincarnation. Une belle opportunité pour le réalisateur de collaborer avec Pharrell Williams, compositeur de la musique du film et également l’un des rôles principaux en compagnie de Géraldine Chaplin et Cara Delevingne, l’égérie de cette nouvelle campagne.

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3 Simple Reasons Why 60 Million Employees Advocate for Their Companies

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Employees are talking about your brand on social media – in fact, 50% of employees share about their company without any prompting. According to Statista, there are nearly 120 million full-time employees in the U.S. alone, meaning 60 million employees choose to talk about their employer online.

The good news is that their message is overwhelmingly positive; the bad news is that all this employee advocacy is happening beyond your awareness. Employees share about your company on social media without training or any guidance on brand safe content.

According Proskauer Rose LLP’s Social Media in the Workplace: Around the World 3.0 survey, 90% of companies now use social media for business purposes – up from 60% a year ago. However, many business leaders are uneasy about asking employees to help attract new employees and new customers on social media. Businesses are stuck in this contradiction because they fear what employees will tell the world.

When huge brands like Dell, IBM, Adobe, Pepsi and MasterCard have thousands of employees who have been trained to share brand-safe content, clearly this cognitive dissonance can be resolved. The key is to understand why employees would advocate for the company. What’s in it for them? How do you make it feel natural for them to advocate? How can you motivate them to do it well?

First, help employees understand what the company stands for. All people and particularly Millennials, who will make up 50% of your workforce in 5 years and 75% in 10 years, want to find fulfillment in their work and want their contributions make a difference in the world.

However, the average American worker knows shockingly little about the companies he or she works for. According to Gallup’s 2013 State of the Global Workplace, just 41% of U.S. employees know what their company stands for and what makes its brand different from competitors’ brands.

A sense of fulfillment is unattainable if you don’t understand your company’s own mission and why your work matters.

When employees in the dark are finally empowered to talk about their company on social media, they build that understanding. When employees view great content, think about it and then share it, it fulfills this intrinsic desire for understanding and purpose in work. This sets the stage for you to tap into three motivators that can make advocacy central to your culture:

1. Pride

Employee advocacy develops an understanding of the brand, and in turn, this produces a sense of pride in sharing. According to Gallup, Americans spend an average 47 hours of their week working – they want friends and family to know what they work so hard at and why it matters.

This is why employees especially enjoy sharing corporate social responsibility initiatives like sustainable environmental practices, volunteering and donation programs. Even videos of employees working on the latest initiative, or a testimonial about a company that is using your product, can stoke feelings of dignity and gratification.

Your employees want to share what makes them proud to work because it is core to their identity and sense of meaning in life.

2. Recognition

When social content recognizes individual employees and teams, they and their colleagues want to share. It’s like giving a friend a big digital high-five.

The social relationships within your company matter to people, and this is why recognition matters. Besides an appearance in social content, recognition can take many forms including acknowledgement from managers and executives.

When executives re-tweet an employee’s comments, shout out over Facebook or post a story about how one department just invented the next big thing, employees remember it and feel appreciated. Recognition helps employees remember that they are the voice of their company.

3. Advancement

If an employee helps to drive awareness, leads, purchases, new hires and key partnerships through social media activity, is that not a sign of an innovative, future leader? Why not look at social media as a proving ground for leadership potential?

Social media is simply a communication medium, and when employees show command in its arena, they are really showing potential to lead others. The companies that see social media as a training ground for professional development will motivate employee advocates to their full potential.

Acknowledging people with training opportunities, inviting them to lunches with executives, gathering high performers together and promoting leaders all demonstrate that employee advocacy is valued. Likewise, referral bonuses for employees who successfully share job opportunities on social media send the same message. Rewarding people for being outstanding connectors and ambassadors for a company just makes good business sense.

Everyone in your organization knows that social media is important. It continues to be a frontier where the opportunities for employees to create value are largely untapped.

When you train your employees, provide them with great content to share, help them cultivate understanding and pride, and then recognize their advocacy publicly and with advancement, they become an even more powerful asset.

When you link social media to advancement, I promise you, employees will want to be trained and given tools to succeed. Social media is the arena where individuals can, through the power of their own voice, stand out on an enormous scale. An as an employer, what could be a better way to identify leaders who can really represent your brand to customers, partners, job candidates and the press? Empower advocates – help them discover deeper meaning and opportunity in their work – and they will power your brand.

This guest article was written by SocialChorus VP of Marketing Dave Hawley

adam&eveDDB Introduces ‘Could I Be Any Clearer?’ Christmas Cards for Harvey Nichols

Last year, adam&eveDDB’s “Sorry, I Spent It On Myself” holiday campaign for English department store Harvey Nichols turned heads with its ode to utter selfishness, eventually winning four Grand Prix awards at Cannes.

This year, adam&eveDDB is back with a spiritual successor entitled “Could I Be Any Clearer?” In the spot, a woman talks about her beloved Auntie Val and how, while good-intentioned, she always gives disappointing gifts. So, without any worry at all about Val’s feelings, she gives her a card describing exactly what she wants — Charlotte Olympia silver Octavia sandals from Harvey Nichols — and lets her know that seasons greetings will be “very awkward” if she doesn’t get what she wants. Auntie Val, predictably enough, looks pretty annoyed by the card. Like last year, the campaign extends beyond the broadcast spots, with real life “Could I Be Any Clearer?” cards available to purchase at Harvey Nichols. You can even create your customizable version online.

The ad doesn’t have the same impact as its predecessor, and, because of that ad, its reveal moment is entirely expected. Still, we imagine that Harvey Nichols will sell its share of “Could I Be Any Clearer?” cards — hopefully to those looking for a cheeky gag to play on friends, rather than entitled jerks. (more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

71 Gifts for Star Trek Fans – From Vulcan Desk Decorations to Sci-Fi Cuddle Cushions (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) The Trekkie community and resulting culture is still going strong, thanks in large part to revitalized movie franchise under J.J. Abrams direction; so it is only natural that people will be looking…

Brits Embrace Cyber Monday With Online Sales Up 50% to $1.1 B


Shoppers don’t need a Thanksgiving holiday to celebrate Cyber Monday and Black Friday.

In the U.K., where the shopping frenzy has taken off with wild abandon despite the absence of Thanksgiving as a starting point, Cyber Monday online sales were up 50% over last year to $1.1 billion, according to figures from IMRG and Experian.

Earlier, visits to shopping websites on Black Friday hit 181 million — 86% up on last year and 50% above IMRG’s forecast — while spend reached $1.3 billion. Sales via smartphones and tablets were up nearly 50% this year to more than a third of online purchases, and some retailers, including John Lewis, introduced virtual queues to cope with the overwhelming e-commerce demand.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Novotel: It's a lot better at Novotel, 3

Advertising Agency: TBWAPARIS, France
Creative Director: Jean François Goize
Art Director: Céline Laffray
Copywriter: Jean Denis Pallain
Photographer: Jason Hindley
3D: Antoine Magnien / Watch out
Art buyer: Julie Champin
Additional credits: Guillaume Pannaud, Marion Floch, Gaël D’Oliveira, Stéphanie Caude
Published: November 2014

Unilever scoops up premium gelato brand Talenti

Unilever has snapped up artisan brand Talenti Gelato & Sorbetto, as it looks to tap into the growing gelato market.

Motorola Lampoons the Luxury Watch World With Its Moto 360 Campaign


For its first smartwatch ads, Motorola is getting cheeky.

Ahead of the holidays, the handset manufacturer is launching a campaign for Moto 360, its computerized wristwatch, which began selling in September. The campaign parodies the solemn marketing of the luxury watch industry. “A Watch for Our Times,” is Motorola’s bid to showcase its entrance into the new category before it gets far more crowded — early next year, Apple is set to unleash its Apple Watch on the market.

It’s also a chance for the company to flaunt its new branding following a transitional year. After a brief tenure within Google, Motorola Mobility officially joined Lenovo in October. Both companies said Motorola’s marketing team and agenda would remain in place.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

This Insurance Company Will Drop Its Rates Like The Woman On This Bus Side Drops Her Shorts

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In another time and era, one could argue that this bus side ad from Florida-based Estrella Insurance was, you know, tongue and cheek funny. In some ways, it is. In others, it’s just another step back to the Stone Age.

Yes, some women drop their pants a lot. So do some men. Some women never do. Some men never do. Some women don’t even wear shorts. Some men don’t either.

But the woman on these side of this bus, spotted in Miami by Instagram user alvarezt8, seemingly has no problem dropping her pants to help the insurance company convey the notion it’s more than happy to drop their insurance rates.

The joke is about as old as a bunch of fourth grade boys telling a silly fart joke in the bathroom in 1972.

Now we have freedom of speech and all in this country but that shouldn’t encourage stupidity and insensitivity. Sadly, all too often, that’s exactly what it allows. And this is what we get. That or the guy who created this ad — and we’re quite sure it was a guy — is in 4th grade.