Spiderman Scuptural Love Letter

Chacun a son héros préféré. Celui de l’artiste britannique Hetain Patel est définitivement Spider Man. L’artiste vient de dévoiler sa dernière oeuvre sculpturale intitulée « Letter to Peter Parker », un véritable costume de Spider Man grandeur nature entièrement couvert d’un texte dessiné à la main et dans lequel l’artiste exprime toutes les raisons de sa gratitude. Le britannique a également réalisé une performance au cours de laquelle il porta la tenue dans l’exposition titré « American Boy ».

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Skol volta atrás e troca peças de campanha de Carnaval por opções que incentivam o respeito

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Quem disse que críticas não rendem bons resultados, não é mesmo? Depois da enorme repercussão da ação de Mila Alves e Pri Ferrari, que denunciaram a irresponsabilidade da Skol com a mensagem “deixei o não em casa”, a marca não só removeu os cartazes de circulação, como apostou em uma nova abordagem.

As novas peças, que devem chegar às ruas nos próximos dias, ressaltam o tom de respeito que é necessário durante as festas de Carnaval. Qualquer semelhança com a campanha da ONU não é apenas uma coincidência, mas provavelmente uma boa referência que a marca de cervejas utilizou.

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Os novos cartazes trazem mensagens como “quando um não quer, o outro vai dançar”, “tomou bota? Vai atrás do trio” e “não deu jogo? Tire o time de campo”, que reforçam o respeito a um possível não recebido durante as cantadas que acontecem em especial nessa época do ano.

Segundo a assessoria da marca, a crítica das mulheres foi o principal motivo para a mudança do tom da comunicação da Skol.

Por essas e outras que as mulheres precisam sim serem ouvidas. Ponto para o feminismo, que com uma crítica bem feita, fez a marca rever seus conceitos.

E aí, leitores do B9, acham que a nova comunicação valeu a pena?

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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SNL's 13 Best Fake Ads as Chosen by Real Ad Execs


Everyone has their favorite moments from “Saturday Night Live,” which celebrates its 40th anniversary this weekend. But arguably, nothing has consistently defined the show as much as its fake commercials.

“Secretly, we all covet the opportunity to create work that SNL will spoof,” says Adam Tucker, president of Ogilvy & Mather Advertising New York. It’s a compliment, sure. And there’s a powerful business reason why: “The social currency a campaign can get from an SNL parody is marketing gold,” says Pete VonDerLinn, executive creative director at Partners & Napier.

“Not exactly an ad but definitely a great advertising moment. Why? Irwin Mainway (Dan Aykroyd) knows his audience: “You know, the average kid, he picks up, you know, broken glass anywhere, you know? The beach, the street, garbage cans, parking lots, all over the place in any big city. We’re just packaging what the kids want!” He has a finely tuned marketing platform: ‘I mean, it’s a creative toy, you know?’ He delivers a vibrant expression of the brand promise: ‘If you hold this up, you know, you see colors, every color of the rainbow! I mean, it teaches him about light refraction, you know? Prisms and that stuff! You know what I mean?’ And he has great brand extensions: ‘I mean, we sell a lot of products in the Bag O’ line like Bag O’ Glass, Bag O’ Nails, Bag O’ Bugs, Bag O’ Vipers, Bag O’ Sulfuric Acid.'” –Steve Red, president and chief creative officer, Red Tettemer O’Connell & Partners

Continue reading at AdAge.com

m:united, Cortana Wish You a Happy Valentine’s Day for Microsoft

m:united launched a Valentine’s Day campaign for Microsoft, focusing on users’ relationships with virtual assistant Cortana.

“Breaking up is hard…but one day I just had enough,” begins the man in “Breaking Up.” As the camera pans out we see that his face is actually on a Lumia 635 screen and as he continues talking it becomes clear that the “breakup” he’s referring to is with the iPhone’s Siri, and the “someone new” he gushes about is Microsoft’s Cortana.

“New Love” takes a similar approach, with a woman talking about telling her parents how she isn’t like everyone else and “met someone who brings out the best in me.” (“Honey, we know you were never an iPhone girl,” her father responds.)

The tongue-in-cheek approach, while a bit on the obvious side, finds an appropriately jokey tone for Valenine’s Day (at Siri’s expense). While these ads won’t make anyone laugh out loud, they do play on audience expectation, and the way they gradually pan out to show that the entire ad takes place on the Lumia 635 is a clever way to integrate the product. We just wonder how Siri is taking all of this.

Credits:

Client: Microsoft

Agency: m:united

Co-Chief Creative Officers: Andy Azula John Mescall

Executive Creative Director: Yo Umeda

Senior Copy Writer: Thom Woodley

Senior Art Director: Trinh Pham

Director of Creative Technology: David Cliff

Head of Integrated Production: Aaron Kovan

Executive Producer: Carolyn Johnson

Junior Producer: Monique Fitzpatrick

Managing Director: Kevin Nelson

EVP Group Account Director: Tina Galley

SVP Group Account Directors: Darla Price, Jason Kolinsky

Account Director: Melissa Trought

Account Supervisor: Greg Masiakos

Assistant Account Executive: Emily Glaser

Project Managment: Stella Warkman

Production & Post-Production: CRAFT

Director of Photography: Larry Kapit

Editors: Nate Troester Carlos Hernandez

Music: “Big Top Polka” Erin Gemsa

Media Agency: EMT

5 Ways Brands and Agencies Can Use Virtual Reality

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This is a guest post by Craig Dalton, CEO and co-founder of DODOCase.

It’s been a mere six months since Google announced Cardboard—their playful, smartphone-based VR platform that takes an inexpensive cardboard constructed viewer and transforms your everyday phone into a brand new immersive experience. The reaction was magical and immediate. And as a result, Google has expanded its platform and hired even more virtual reality makers to join their team.

Brands and agencies have taken note of Cardboard too, because they recognize it as an entrée into the next generation of storytelling mediums. The passion for connecting with users in unique, innovative ways has given rise to new marketing and experiential activations that take advantage of smartphone-based virtual reality.

We asked digital agency of the year, R/GA, top VR shops Jaunt VR, Tactic, and Framestore, and Elle magazine about how they became “trailblazers” in smartphone virtual reality.

Here’s what they had to say:

  • Be True To The Medium
  • Mike Woods, Global Executive Creative Director and Head of Framestore’s VR studio, advises, “The first step is not to shoehorn any kind of existing thoughts or content into VR. VR is a very natural thing. It’s not a camera, it’s a person. So here’s your opportunity to put customers inside your brand.”

    Scott Broock, Vice President of VR Content at Jaunt adds, “In terms of an experience that can transport someone in a completely unique new way, there is nothing like this.” Last month, Jaunt VR partnered with Elle magazine to bring readers onto the set of a photo shoot with Jacquie Lee, the acclaimed singer from NBC’s The Voice. Kevin O’Malley, Senior Vice President and Publisher of Elle Magazine, added, “It’s really all about the story you are looking to tell—all about the content. Yes, it will be more immersive, but how do you tell a story with VR in a way that makes it most compelling to your users? That starts with a strong creative concept and comprehensive storyboarding to make sure you are maximizing the impact.”

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    To supplement the print article in the November issue, Elle and Jaunt used 3-D cameras to capture what it was like to be on set at the photo shoot. O’Malley said, “With our first VR experience for Elle, we wanted it to relate to our print piece, but use the material in a totally new way. For example, on Elle.com we created a flipbook of images that enhanced the static article in a more traditional way; with VR, it’s a 360?, completely immersive experience. There is no photograph in Elle magazine of Max Vadukul shooting Jacquie Lee, but with VR, our readers can be on set with a renowned fashion photographer. The user gets to experience everything that comes with that, the kinds of things they’d never get to see otherwise.”

    And, he continued, “We can highlight that the leather jacket is available from this brand, the shoes are from that designer, and so on. So not only are we are serving up more information to the consumer, but we are also delivering great service plugs and drives to retail for our advertisers.”

    Scott Broock offered even more advice. “Elle and Hearst have been leading the way in publishing, and now we’re seeing more brands developing stories using VR. In terms of experiences you are developing, remember to focus on your demographic. First and foremost, you are taking them somewhere or telling a story that is going to be meaningful to them. Don’t lose sight of the fact that 99% of people have never experienced virtual reality. When they do, each of them is going to enjoy what you create and have this experience of ‘wow, this is amazing — I want more.’ Once you see how they react to it (smartphone VR), you’ll really begin to understand its impact.”

    For those who haven’t tried it — check out the free Google Play app from Elle and Jaunt VR. It’s so convincing that the next time someone asks if you’ve ever been on a fashion photo shoot, you are likely to answer yes.

  • Know The Players, Know Your Partners
  • As a brand or agency, you might know how you want to use VR to extend your strategy, but you may not know who can help bring your vision to life. You’ll need developers to design, capture, and code experiences—and hardware that allows users to consume your content. Here’s a short rundown of key players in VR development—if you know of any that we missed, please share it with us in the comments.

    VR Development Shops:

    Tactic: Specializing in immersive experiences across digital platforms and real world installations. Highlighted by an emphasis on gesture recognition, Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality. Tactic’s work includes mobile AR with Jose Cuervo and the “Throttle Up” holographic jet engine experience with GE & BBDO.

    Jaunt VR: Specializing in cinematic Virtual Reality, with a unique, comprehensive platform that enables creators to film, edit, and process live-action content for Virtual Reality viewers. Recent projects include concerts by Paul McCartney and Jack White, as well as a journey to Middle Earth to promote The Hobbit.

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    Framestore: A fully immersive, interactive, and experiential Virtual Reality content studio from the Oscar-winning shop that did the visual effects for Gravity. Framestore is known for conceiving, creating, and executing for some of the biggest brands in the world. Recent work includes a promotion for Marvel’s Avengers at CES, a virtual vacation with Marriott’s “Teleporter,” and a VR experience for Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar.

  • First To Market Matters: Don’t Wait On The Sidelines
  • VR is no longer a thing of the future. It’s happening right now. And if you think your competitors are already developing VR experiences for their next campaigns, you’re probably right. Jaunt VR has seen a swift rise in visibility since they released live concert experiences with Paul McCartney and Jack White for Cardboard VR, as well as their work with Elle, and a custom activation built for Warner Bros. The Hobbit.

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    Scott Broock works with brands every day and had this to say: “Put your stake in the ground right now. There are major brands, networks, studios, sport leagues, and travel companies all planning their first VR activations. What you are going to see in the next three months are the first movers going at it aggressively and making clear that they are going to play in this space. And what they will find is that the market and users will reward them for getting these experiences out there first.”

    Like the early movers on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook before them—being first to market in VR means you’ll gain the benefit of leading the pack, while simultaneously owning the unique space your experience will inhabit. Your marketing will benefit from the added PR, and you’ll receive attention for the mere fact that you are creating opportunities where none existed before. Mike Woods of Framestore VR agrees. “You are pretty much guaranteed to generate a few columns and media impressions just by being brave enough to throw yourself into virtual reality—there is even a story around that because it’s such early days.” A month, season, or year from now, innovation in VR will still be happening, but being first to market is a one-time opportunity—if you don’t act now, it’s going to pass you by.

  • Think Beyond Oculus, Get To The Masses
  • Oculus Rift is an important part of the future of VR, but it’s still just one piece of that future. Oculus (now owned by Facebook) has developed an incredible engine for virtual reality that specializes in long-format, highly interactive gaming VR—but it’s not for everyone. The fastest, most affordable way to get shorter-timed, accessible VR experiences to people everywhere is through smartphone-based, cardboard viewer VR. Mike Woods says, “As an entry level thing everyone carries around a smartphone in their pocket, so the idea that you can generate brand experiences and excitement around VR with just some cardboard and the computer you carry around in your pocket all day — it’s a no brainer.”

    Jay Zasa is the SVP, Executive Creative Director for campaigns at R/GA, and he recently led the development of a virtual reality test drive with Volvo. He had this to say: “The future is more like Google Cardboard than it is separate, expensive devices. I think that stuff [like Oculus Rift] will probably exist in some higher-end niche, but as a way for the masses to experience VR, it will have to be done in a way that uses existing devices like smartphones.”

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    One of our founders, Patrick Buckley had this to add: “Cardboard VR is a new, fundamentally different way to tell stories that are more immersive than any other digital experience people have known. It’s more immersive than an IMAX film, and it’s in your pocket already. As a brand, it’s an amazing new marketing opportunity to have something so affordable that you can hand it out to your fans at events and they can immediately have an ‘IMAX on steroids’ experience with whatever story you want to put them in. It’s really exciting—and we are seeing brands and agencies opening their eyes to these opportunities on a daily basis.”

  • Realize VR is Here To Stay
  • In the past, inaccessibility to revolutionary devices has been a major obstacle in widespread adoption—but with Cardboard VR for smartphones, that obstacle has been removed. Patrick Buckley says, “radio took 38 years to reach 50M users, television took 14 years, and the Internet took 4 years. As current technology news indicates, VR is on a much quicker trajectory. Given the existing technology infrastructure, within one and a half years we’re likely to see 50M VR users in the world. It’s a huge opportunity.”

    Just as with social media, mobile, and video before this—understanding the capabilities of VR technology will help you reach users in new and compelling ways. “Virtual reality can do so many things,” added Mike Woods. “Marketers can use this technology to drive attention, make a splash, show customers a side of the brand they haven’t seen before, or even in retail positioning. VR [as we know it] is only about a year and a half in, and it’s already quite an adaptable form.”

    Peter Oberdorfer, the President at Tactic, a new agency that is already making waves with augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality built for smartphones, agrees. One of their most recent projects was with McCann NY, where they created an AR mobile app experience for Jose Cuervo Tequila’s “History in a Bottle” TV campaign. He had this to say about VR as the new ‘what’s next’ platform in storytelling: “In a way, it represents the convergence of mobile, gaming, and traditional Hollywood spectacle—but people are still trying to discover how to author it. Some people take a more filmic approach, while others are designing game interactions—but it isn’t directly analogous to either medium. It’s a hybridization of the two, and that’s really mind-blowing. As people experiment, the storytelling will only evolve…and it’s going to impact everything.”

    The Future Is Already In Our Pockets

    In order to start experiencing VR, educating your teams, and building innovative stories for your brands, you need only to reach into your pocket, open your app store, and dig in.

    Colorful Aluminium Art Installation

    À la demande de The Edmonton Arts Council, Marc Fornes a réalisé « Vaulted Willow », une installation d’extérieure au Borden Park d’Edmonton situé au Canada. En signant cette oeuvre, Marc Fornes marque de nouveau les esprits en proposant une experience immersive. À la différence de sa précédente installation, celle-ci est composée de plusieurs plaques d’aluminium joliment colorées mais garde cependant cette forme organique et incurvée propre au style de l’artiste. À découvrir en images.

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    Postgame Video: Loctite and Fallon Assess Their Super Bowl Debut


    If you haven’t watched our behind-the-scenes videos with Loctite as it prepared for its first Super Bowl Bowl appearance, go see “Super Bowl Virgin” and “Touchdown for Loctite?” here. Now, the after-report:

    Minutes after Loctite Glue’s $4.5 million gamble aired late in the fourth quarter of Super Bowl XLIX, a wave of relief swept over Frdric Chupin and Pierre Tannoux, the duo in charge of marketing for Loctite.

    The ad, featuring a group of loveable losers dancing to the joy of super glue, was not only the first Super Bowl ad for Loctite, but for its parent company, Germany-based Henkel AG & Co., which generated almost $20 billion in revenue last year.

    Continue reading at AdAge.com

    CCTV, China’s Propaganda Tool, Finds Itself at Center of Antigraft Drive

    An inquiry into corruption at CCTV has shaken up the nation’s most influential news organization, with reports involving a seamy mix of celebrities, sex and bribery.

    The Saturday Profile: Russian TV Insider Says Putin Is Running the Show in Ukraine

    Peter Pomerantsev believes he has seen many classic propaganda techniques at work in Moscow, and in Russia’s treatment of Ukraine.

    SS+K Salutes the Hard-Working for Jackson Hewitt

    SS+K launched a new integrated campaign for Jackson Hewitt in anticipation of tax season, introducing the brand positioning, “Working Hard for the Hardest Working.”

    A 30-second anthem ad  celebrates “Quttin’ Time” as it pictures cashiers, waitresses, construction workers, teachers, nurses and more ending a hard day of work over the Pete Seeger song “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad.” The voiceover delivers the “working hard” line before promising “the biggest refunds” and “100 percent accuracy.” The spot’s footage works with the song selection to evoke the mood of a hard day’s work just ended before promising that Jackson Hewitt is on your side and will do whatever it can to earn you that maximum refund. Two 15-second spots — “Cashier” and “Waitress” — support the effort.

    Bobby Hershfield, partner and chief creative officer at SS+K said of the spot’s song selection, “We wanted the music to be something that relates to our message of working hard for the hardest working but is charming and classic. Pete Seeger felt so right for what we were saying and the audience we were talking to.”

    Credits:

    Client: Jackson Hewitt

    Project: “Working Hard for the Hardest Working”

     

    Agency: SS+K

    Partner, Chief Creative Officer: Bobby Hershfield

    Senior Vice President, Director of Production: John Swartz

    Executive Producer: Christopher McLallen

    Senior Copywriter: Lindsey Lanpher

    Senior Art Director: Alyssa Georg

    Vice President, Account Director: Katie Dahill

    Senior Account Executive: Keri Cook

    Account Coordinator: Cameron Reilly

     

    Production Company: Believe Media

    Director: Bruce Dowad

    Executive Producer: Jannie McInnes

    Producer: Jane Thomson

    Director of Photography: John Houtman

     

    Service Company: The Capital Media Company

    Executive Producer: Christian Allen

     

    Editorial: Lost Planet

    Executive Producer: Krystn Wagenberg

    Producer: Taylor Colbert

    Editor: Jacks Genega

    Assistant Editor: Kyle Grandmaison

     

    Colorist: Sofie Borup for Company 3

     

    Finishing by Nice Shoes

    An Ad Agency Punked Kanye West From Its Offices During Last Night's Flatiron Show

    Kanye West held an outdoor concert in front of the Flatiron Building in New York on Thursday night, but not everyone was completely welcoming. In fact, Partners + Napier’s NYC office (at 11 East 26th St.) spelled out a message for the rapper on its windows—obviously a reference to Kanye’s latest Grammys antics.

    Agency execs Matt Dowshen and Jason Marks told Gothamist: “We are an agency actively researching the effects of out-of-home advertising. We found out Kanye was playing outside our building, and we wanted to make a point about being in the right place at the right time with the right message, and how that can be amplified through digital channels. And … don’t fuck with Beck.”

    In other words, those who troll will get trolled back.
     



    Microsoft's Valentine's Advice: Break Up With Siri and Start Seeing Cortana

    Ever since Microsoft introduced Cortana, its personal assistant for the Windows Phone, it’s been slamming Siri for her vanity and uselessness. Now, for Valentine’s Day, it’s proposing that you give Siri the old heave-ho for good—and begin a torrid affair with her archrival.

    Check out the two new spots below, from m:united. The second one has a particularly cute subtext, although Siri would tell you to watch out—that this is one suitor with a menacing agenda under all the sweetness.

    CREDITS
    Client: Microsoft
    Agency: m:united
    Co-Chief Creative Officers: Andy Azula John Mescall
    Executive Creative Director: Yo Umeda
    Senior Copy Writer: Thom Woodley
    Senior Art Director: Trinh Pham
    Director of Creative Technology: David Cliff
    Head of Integrated Production: Aaron Kovan
    Executive Producer: Carolyn Johnson
    Junior Producer: Monique Fitzpatrick
    Managing Director: Kevin Nelson
    EVP Group Account Director: Tina Galley
    SVP Group Account Directors: Darla Price, Jason Kolinsky
    Account Director: Melissa Trought
    Account Supervisor: Greg Masiakos
    Assistant Account Executive: Emily Glaser
    Project Management: Stella Warkman
    Production & Post-Production: CRAFT
    Director of Photography: Larry Kapit
    Editors: Nate Troester Carlos Hernandez
    Music: “Big Top Polka” Erin Gemsa
    Media Agency: EMT



    Geometric Pattern Installation

    Depuis près de 25 ans, l’artiste plasticien autrichien Peter Kogler réalise de gigantesques installations avec des motifs géométriques qui remettent sans cesse en question l’espace dans lequel le visiteur évolue. L’artiste bouscule, casse nos repères visuels et nous plonge dans un cadre en dehors de toute ordinaire.

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    Six Things You Didn't Know About Iris Worldwide's Sean Reynolds


    Sean Reynolds is joint global creative director and a founding partner of Iris Worldwide. The agency has created notable work for Adidas, including a punchy ad in which soccer pro Luis “The Biter” Suarez takes on the haters and a clever outdoor moving projection that captured Lionel Messi’s “return” to Barcelona after the World Cup. The agency was also behind the fantastic Robinsons space-themed stunt that saw astronauts drinking the juice beverage in zero gravity.

    Mr. Reynolds has been instrumental in building out the agency’s creative across a global network of 17 offices. Since 2007, Mr. Reynolds has been based in New York, where he’s developed the agency’s creative across the Americas and Asia. He’s also responsible for developing integrated creative programs for clients including Diageo, Reckitt Benckiser, Adidas, Coca-Cola, Heineken, Sony, Coty, Reebok and Saks Fifth Avenue.

    But not everyone is aware of the magnitude of his duties, as you’ll see in this edition of Six Things.

    Continue reading at AdAge.com

    An All-Star Tear-Jerker From American Express


    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, American Express calls on a handful of NBA stars, and their emotional voiceovers, in its latest ad before All-Star weekend. Foot Locker takes a different route, with Cavaliers guard Kyrie Irving hamming it up for the retailer. The PGA promotes its website with a miniature golf buddy comedy.

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

    Continue reading at AdAge.com

    David Carr on Video: Selections



    In Lester Holt, NBC May Get the Calm After the Brian Williams Storm

    Known as an unflappable pro, the newsman tapped to fill the anchor’s chair at “NBC Nightly New” for the next six months is also a strong contender to keep the job.

    50 Lighting Project DIYs – From Plastic Cup Chandeliers to Illuminated Wall Displays (TOPLIST)

    (TrendHunter.com) These lighting project DIYs range from plastic cup chandeliers to illuminated wall displays that are designed to resemble expensive marquis lights. Fans of crafty home decor will fall in love with…

    180LA Goes All Out for Adidas

    With rival Under Armour going all-in on its “Book of Will” campaign, Adidas is throwing its weight behind a new campaign of its own, courtesy of 180LA.

    Entitled “Sport15,” the campaign launches with a 60-second spot called “Take It,” celebrating the mental toughness exhibited by professional athletes of all stripes. “The last goal doesn’t matter,” begins the voiceover, “The last victory, already forgotten.” Going on to feature footage from many star athletes, including DeMarco Murray, Derrick Rose, Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez (who really hopes a certain bite is forgotten) the ad elaborates on this philosophy, making it the backbone of the new campaign. The spot will make its debut tomorrow during coverage of NBA All-Star Weekend in New York.

    “As a brand that has a legacy with sports more than anybody historically, and across all sports, it’s something that we see. It’s something we wanted to start communicating to our audience,” Simon Atkins, vice president of brand activation at Adidas, explained in Adweek, adding that the best athletes have the “ability to use all of their experiences—good, bad or indifferent—to empower them for the future.”

    According to Atkins, “Book of Will” will be the brand’s largest-ever ad spend in the U.S. and its biggest brand campaign since “All In or Nothing” in 2011. It seems that with something of an ad war with rival Under Armour underway, the brand is taking its strategy from the title of that campaign, attempting to go all out to regain ground lost to Under Armour (who overtook Adidas as runner-up to Nike in the athletic apparel market).

    “What you’re seeing is Adidas rewriting our playbook about how we want to express our brand, week in, week out,” Atkins said.

    W+K Amsterdam Tells One Man’s Life Story for Booking.com

    The latest campaign from Wieden+Kennedy Amsterdam for client Booking.com goes well beyond the service of booking a hotel itself and tells the story of (most of) one man’s life starting with the fateful moment he decided to use the service.

    Booking Hero — an aimless guy in his mid-late 20’s — becomes husband, father, writer, shut-in, celebrity, and semi-retiree in less than a minute:

    The release tells us that the campaign will also include four :30 spots, “five contextual online films that match user Google key word searches with a world of possible Booking.com stays,” and the standard social/digital/OOH/print materials.

    The spot above is merely the first component in a campaign that launches on Sunday, when everyone is still comfortable in his or her not-quite-drunk post-Valentine’s Day cocoon.

    W+K CD Genevieve Hoey writes:

    “Our first campaign for Booking.com in 2013 established the brand and brought to life the ‘door moment’ of crazy relief and delight that occurs when you open the door of your Booking accommodation, to find its exactly what you wanted.

    In this year’s campaign, Booking Right, we’re elevating our Booking.com consumers to accommodation hero status…It’s these people who understand that the power of a well-booked Booking accommodation can be life-changingly awesome.”

    WIEDEN+KENNEDY AMSTERDAM

    Executive Creative Director
    Mark Bernath & Eric Quennoy

    Creative Director
    Genevieve Hoey & Sean Condon

    Art Director
    Victor Monclus

    Copywriters
    Will Lowe, Scott Smith

    Head of Content
    Joe Togneri

    Executive Producer
    Tony Stearns

    Broadcast Production Assistant
    Eleni Karathanasi

    Director of Interactive Production
    Kelsie Van Deman

    Interactive Copywriter
    Jake Barnes

    Interactive Art director
    Jeffrey Lam

    Planner
    Emma Wiseman

    Comms Planner
    Josh Chang

    Group Account Director
    Jordi Pont

    Account Director
    Aitziber Izurrategui

    Account Manager
    Caroline Melody Meyer

    Retoucher
    Dario Fusnecher

    Studio Artist
    Noa Redero

    Project Manager
    Stacey Prudden

    Business Affairs
    Michael Graves

     

     

    FILM PRODUCTION

    PRODUCTION COMPANY 
    MJZ

    Director
    Dante Ariola

    Director of Photography
    Benoît Delhomme

    Producer
    Natalie Hill

    Executive Producer
    Debbie Turner

    EDITORIAL
    PEEPSHOW

    Editor
    Andrea MacArthur

    Executive Producer
    Jason Kremer

    POST PRODUCTION / VFX
    GLASSWORKS AMSTERDAM

    Managing Director
    Olivier Klonhammer

    Senior Producers
    Anya Kruzmetra, Christian Downes

    Lead Flame
    Morten Vinther

    Flame
    Kyle Obley, Urs Furrer

    Nuke
    Jos Wabeke

    AFX
    Ben Stoner

    GRADE
    COMPANY 3 LA / GLASSWORKS AMSTERDAM

    Colorist
    Stefan Sonnenfeld (Company 3)

    Colorist
    Scott Harris (Glassworks)

    AUDIO POST
    WAVE STUDIOS AMSTERDAM

    Sound Designer/Mixer
    Alex Nicholls-Lee

    MUSIC
    MUTATO MUZIKA

     

    PHOTOGRAPHY
    Neil Massey