Jonathan Hooker Launches Oblio: A Creatively Technical Digital Agency

Award-winning digital innovator Jonathan Hooker is pleased to announce the launch of Oblio, a highly technical digital production agency that straddles the line between technology and art. As an inventor and self taught digital artist, Hooker is best known for his ability to execute complex projects with a focus on interactive experiences.

Prior to founding Oblio, Hooker was partner and creative director for five years at digital agency The Flock, which he co-founded with Eduardo Valdivieso in 2010. There, the duo produced award-winning work for over 50 major motion pictures, adding Warner Brothers, Sony, Paramount, and other major studios to their client roster. His accolades include FWA Site of the Day and Mobile of the Day, Webby Official Honoree and Webby People’s Voice awards, and many more. His past experience also includes a role as lead developer at Trigger LLC, where as a young up-and-comer, his ambition was rewarded with a number of high profile projects for 20th Century Fox, Dreamworks, Lionsgate Entertainment, and Nike.
In addition to his impressive body of client-focused work, Hooker is passionate about creating new techniques and contributing to a constantly evolving digital industry, which he looks forward to continuing at Oblio. Most notably, he developed a method to capture video so that the footage can be realistically relit or textured in an online environment. The process involved building a sophisticated LED and camera rig, rigorous testing and experimenting, and stands as a testament to Hooker’s dedication to improving and innovating. This technique, along with several other innovations, is utilized in Oblio’s interactive Facebook Connect-enabled haunted house built for Insidious: Chapter 3.
Hooker plans to implement his vision for a nimble and entrepreneurial company culture at Oblio. “I want to create a culture of learning,” Hooker proudly admits. “Whether it’s picking up new technologies, practicing illustration, or tinkering with electronics, I intend to set aside a portion of employee time for their independent studies. I think we thrive when we’re doing something we’re passionate about. It’s this philosophy that distinguishes us, and enables us to produce such a unique end product.”

About Oblio:
Oblio is a digital agency specializing in the use of technologies as a design tools, combining and applying them in interesting ways for projects ranging from HTML, WebGL, VR, video, to even physical installations. Our award winning team of inventors, artists, designers, and developers has worked on countless projects including over fifty major motion picture campaigns.

Droga5 Delights in Potty Humor for Quilted Northern

Droga5 launched a new campaign for Quilted Northern, billing the toilet paper as “Designed to be Forgotten.”

The approach is based on research the brand’s research indicating that people only think about toilet paper when it fails to do its job properly, according to Adweek. It’s a bit strange as a selling point, but Droga5 takes it in a memorable and often hilarious direction with a series of spots about those who, unlike the people who use Quilted Northern and forget all about their bathroom experience, “see all and forget nothing.” There’s Daddy Gator, forever beached on a bathroom sink with a clear view of the loo, who opines that “This is no place to raise a child.” Little Miss Puffytail, meanwhile, desperately wants to be smashed into a million pieces, and toilet paper holder Sir Froggy has his eyes fixed in a most unfortunate position. The agency changes pace a bit with “Great Grandpa Thaddeus,” replacing the children’s toys of the other spots with a portrait of an old family patriarch doomed to witness the excretions of future generations. It may be the funniest of the bunch, thanks to well-worded copywriting and perfectly delivered voiceover. All of the spots benefit from the unexpectedly dark comedic tone (which stands in stark contrast to the more silly potty humor of rival Charmin), while still managing to work in the product organically, which makes them far more memorable, and entertaining, than any toilet paper ads we can recall.

Credits:

Client: Quilted Northern
CMO: Douwe Bergsma
General Manager, Tissue: Vivek Joshi
Senior Brand Director: Jason Ippen
Senior Brand Manager: Ann V Anderson
Senior Marketing Director, Brand Center; Shari Neumann

Campaign: Designed to be Forgotten

Agency: Droga5 NY
Creative Chairman: David Droga
Chief Creative Officer: Ted Royer
Creative Directors: David Gibson, Nathan Lennon, Mike Long, Alex Lea
Art Director/Copywriters: Molly Jamison, Eric Dennis
Chief Creation Officer: Sally-Ann Dale
Head of Broadcast Production Ben Davies
Senior Broadcast Producer: Anders Hedberg
Global Chief Strategy Officer: Jonny Bauer
Group Strategy Director: Matt Springate
Senior Strategist: Nick Maschmeyer
Head of Communications Strategy: Colleen Leddy
General Manager/Head of Account Mgmt: Susie Nam
Group Account Director: Brett Edgar
Account Director: Michael Arani
Account Manager: Jasmine Moesel

Production Company: Smuggler
Director: Bennett Miller
Executive Producer: Patrick Milling Smith, Brian Carmody, Shannon Jones
Producer: Suzie Greene Tedesco
DP: Adam Kimmel

Editorial: Exile
Editor: Conor O’Neill
Assistant Editor: Rex Lowry
Executive Producer:  CL Weaver
Producer: Denice Hutton

Post Production: Method NY/Atlanta
Flame Artists: Mike Wardner, Glen Bennett, Jay Tilin
Head of Production: Jennifer Hargreaves
Producer: Natalia Wroble

Music: Adelphoi (“Daddy Gator,” “Great Grandpa Thaddeus,” “Sir Froggy,” “Conductor Randy” Adelphoi, “Birds”)
Composers: Jamie Masters, Andrew Sherriff, Ashley Bates, Stephen Patman
Producers: Jonathan Watts, Lotte Bowser

Music: Manners McDade (“Little Miss Puffytail”)

Deutsch NY Shares ‘The Last Family Portrait’ for WATERisLIFE

Deutsch New York launched a new campaign for WATERisLIFE, in which the agency and photographer Neil DaCosta traveled to the Omo Valley in Ethiopia to provide families there with framed family portraits.

“Most people go into these rural areas of Ethiopia, snap a picture of the tribes and then leave…This is the first time anyone has physically printed, framed and given them a family portrait,” explained WATERisLife president Kristine Bender. “You could see the gratitude on their faces. Knowing we are making a difference by capturing an important moment in their life, the project’s goal isn’t just to give family portraits, it’s to keep these families alive.”

Since in the area somebody dies from water-related disease every 20 seconds, many of these portraits could provide the families with documentation of a lost loved one, making them all the more meaningful. It’s a sad reality that the photos are likely not only the first but also “The Last Family Portrait” for these families, but it’s also uplifting seeing each family’s joy and gratitude at having the photo. Although only a dozen or so families are featured in the ad, over one hundred families in the area had their photos taken. Print ads featuring the portraits and a call to action will run in publications including Forbes, The Economist and Bloomberg. Donations from the effort will be used for “digging wells that will give Omo Valley families and others the clean water, sanitation and hygiene they so desperately need.”

Credits:

Agency: Deutsch New York

Chief Creative Officer: Kerry Keenan
Executive Creative Director: Menno Kluin
Creative Directors: Sam Shepherd, Frank Cartagena, Julia Neumann
Art Director: Brittany Rivera
Copywriter: Kevin Meagher
Photographer: Neil DaCosta
Design Director: Juan Carlos Pagan
Designer: Brian Gartside
Retoucher: James Cullinane
Director of Integrated Media: Karen Benson
Director of Integrated Production: Joe Calabrese
Director of Digital Production: Suzanne Molinaro
Asst. Digital Producer: Libby Carespodi
Print Producer: Donald Odell
Producer: Joe Pernice
Post Producer: Francess Tom-Sahr
Senior Editor: Eric Grush
Editor: Pete Slife, Marcus Land
Digital Designer: Alex Miller
Developer: Shane Akins

Fashion Art Beauty Photography

Basé entre Munich et Londres, Daniel Sannwald réalise des clichés pour de célèbres magazines de mode. Le photographe accorde une grande importance à l’esthétique du maquillage tantôt subtile, tantôt criarde voire complètement surréaliste. Plus d’infos en images et sur le site de l’artiste.

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Little Minx Signs Multitalented Young Director Caleb Slain

Little Minx is pleased to welcome rising directorial talent Caleb Slain to their diverse team of acclaimed filmmakers.

Slain is a tireless creator who spent his childhood tinkering with cameras and obsessively editing footage. He received early recognition at age 19 for his debut film, The Lost & Found Shop, a vivid and dreamy short that won Best Short Film at NFFTY. His next short, a stylized and cinematic portrait of a terminally ill man titled It Ain’t Over, premiered at SXSW 2012 and won Audience Awards at the Santa Cruz and Heartland film festivals.
By establishing a reputation for perfectionism and a nuanced style with his short films, Slain quickly attracted the attention of major brands including Nike, Ford, Riot Games, Johnsonville, to name a few. Most notably, Microsoft brass came to him at the ripe age of 22 to direct their “Surface” launch spot, where his highly textured and modern style garnered media attention in publications such as Business Insider and The Huffington Post. Soon after, Slain won Volvo’s 2012 international brand contest with his short film Designed Around You, adding them to his impressive client list.
Slain is as comfortable in the edit suite as he is behind the camera. His 2014 supercut of Philip Seymour Hoffman’s career, P.S. Hoffman, stands as a stunning tribute and was celebrated by Time, NPR, and USA Today.
“It’s rare and exciting to find such a young, fresh talent,” comments Little Minx President Rhea Scott. “Caleb has both natural ability and a ferocious work ethic: he puts in countless hours and is not afraid to experiment. We’re excited to see what he has in store while with us at Little Minx.”
Little Minx welcomes Slain as the company continues to build its reputation as one of the foremost creative groups in the industry. They recently added internationally renowned filmmaking duo Los Perez.

About Little Minx:
Little Minx has defined itself as a production company that fosters the creative growth of its talent. Specializing in commercials, award-winning films, branded content, and high-profile music videos, the company embraces artists who possess the excellence and expertise to innovate with intelligence and exceptional creativity.

Chobani Moves on After AOR Breakup

Last month, Chobani became one of a series of clients to announce that it would be moving away from the AOR model in favor of “more in-house and project-based agency partners.” The most recent was Best Buy this week.

Today, via Stuart Elliott’s replacement Sydney Ember, the company publicized its first campaign after the breakup with Droga5 in The New York Times.

CMO Peter McGuinness explains his company’s strategy:

“We’re going to have one foot squarely in the Greek yogurt space…and we’re going to have one foot leaning into a more aspirational lifestyle space.”

Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

The first ad “Love This Life” is heavy on the indie-folk and light on anything remotely related to yogurt:

The second, “Kids,” hits a bit closer to home with the “brothers being dicks” theme while relaying a bit of the story behind the client’s product:

The most interesting part of the interview concerns the 2014 lawsuit filed over the use of the word “how” in the company’s ads:

Mr. McGuinness said the decision to introduce a new campaign had “nothing to do with the pending litigation.” He added that the company was no longer working with Droga5.

McGuiness never gets around to explaining who actually made the new campaign, though. (It was Opperman Weiss.)

CREDITS
Client: Chobani
Chief Marketing and Brand Officer: Pater McGuiness

Agency: Opperman Weiss
Art Director: Jeff Weiss
Copywriter: Paul Opperman
Executive Producer: Mark Johnston
Managing Director: Julian Shiff

Production company: RSA Films
Director: Laurence Dunmore
Executive Producer: Marjie Abrahams
President: Jules Daly
Line Producer: Michele Abbott
DOP: Brendan Galvin

Editorial: Bug Editorial
Editor: Andre Betz
Executive Producer: Caitlin Grady

Music: Duotone
Executive Producer: David Leinheardt
Creative Director: Jack Livesey
Producer: Giovanni Lobato
Musical Talent: Eef Barzelay
Songwriter: Paul Opperman

Telecine: The Mill
Head of Production: Sean Costelloe
Colorist: Fergus McCall
Color Producer: Natalie Westerfield

Audio Post: Heard City
Executive Producer: Gloria Pitagorsky
Mixer: Cory Melious

VFX: Blacksmith
Executive Producer: Charlotte Arnold
2D Lead: Daniel Morris
2D Artist: Iwan Zwarts

Incredible Pedigree Film Profiles Ex-Cons Who Find Their Way by Adopting Dogs

“You save a dog. A dog saves you.”

That’s the poignant message of “First Days Out,” a four-minute online film for Pedigree by Almap BBDO in Brazil that follows Joey and Matt, two former inmates who begin to turn their lives around after they adopt rescue dogs.

Joey, who served 12 years for armed robbery, finds the world transformed, and in some ways unrecognizable, after his release. At first he’s alone, confused and frightened about his future, but a trip to the pound changes everything.

“Having a dog with me in this house was so much better,” he says. “Sadie became my family.” Soon, he’s training kennel dogs for adoption.

Matt, who served two years for burglary, is initially estranged from his father and reluctant to connect with others. At one point, he draws a heartbreaking parallel between his own life (inside and out of prison) and the lives of the dogs in the animal shelter: “They all looked kind of sad, just like I was—just caged in.” After adopting Jeanie, he feels as if his “future’s bright again,” and he starts going on job interviews and brings the dog to meet his dad.

The immensely moving documentary, directed in a relaxed, naturalist style by Ricardo Mehedff via Hungry Man, is part of Pedigree’s new “Feed the Good” campaign, its first global push in several years.

“By nourishing the lovable innocence in every dog, Pedigree helps feed the good they bring to the world,” explains Leonid Sudakov, CMO of Mars Global Petcare.

That same theme informs all campaign elements, which include TV, print, online, in-store and social media. Of course, interpretations will vary. For example, a 30-second spot by Colenso BBDO in Australia, titled “Good Fight,” feels more like a typical “commercial” than “First Days Out.” Still, its quirky take on an a street fight about to happen is far from typical pet-food ad fare.

We chatted about “First Day Out” with Mehedff and his brother Alex, who produced it.

AdFreak: “First Day Out” sort of takes the “cute puppy” commercial in a fresh, more meaningful direction. Can you speak to that a bit?
Alex: Advertising is moving into this new territory of content storytelling. A more emotional engagement. With this in mind, we need to approach the narrative of the film differently. The creative [idea] behind this film is just brilliant. That moved us in a big way to get involved and tell a moving story.

Anytime you move away from the “typical” creatively—and hats off to the agency for this brilliant idea—it becomes a golden strategy. We’re happy to have been able to deliver up to par with the idea. We hope it will move people, engage emotionally with the audience … and place the brand in a very special place.

Take me through the process of putting the project together.
Alex: The process is just deep character research, where you cast real people and see what they can bring to the story. You definitely need a couple of weeks. If you rush this phase, you’re dead in the water.

Ricardo: We started nationwide, and were able to get many candidates. Some were inmates who had participated in dog training programs while in prison. This is how we found Joey. He’d done 12 years, and in the last four, he got into the dog training program that, in his owns words, changed his life. When he got out, he was truly alone, and since he spoke so well about dogs, Pedigree helped him adopt a dog for himself. And the incredible thing is, you could really see the change in his spirit and mood. Sadie really brought a smile to his face. The job he got as a dog trainer was directly related to his experience in the dog training programs in prison.

Matt never had any contact with dog training programs in prison. He was just a kid going through a rough patch with his father and having a hard time getting adjusted to life on the outside. Pedigree suggested that he adopt a dog and see what would happen.

What were the biggest challenges in making the film?
Ricardo: We found many other good characters in our research, but were limited to only shooting two of them. Then, shooting in a way that could capture the emotion and truth of their stories and experiences. I found that the best way to do this was to shoot them in the most naturalistic way, with as little interference as possible.

What surprised you most?
Ricardo: How the dogs really helped these guys. I thought it would be strong, but their connections were really intense.

From the first day I met Joey, he was always a very serious, soft-spoken guy. He was really nice, but very quiet. Almost never smiled. Sometimes I would kindly ask him to smile, but it just didn’t look right. The moment he adopted Sadie, he was became a different person, a natural smile formed. This guy truly loves dogs. And his facial expressions show this.

It must be tough not to make this kind of material seem overly manipulative.
Ricardo: That was my goal in making this film. I have a strong background in documentary filmmaking, having worked closely with Eduardo Coutinho, one of the most important doc filmmakers in Brazilian cinema. I direct and edit my films, so that really helps in the storytelling process. As I’m directing, I’m usually editing the film in my head.

This film was about capturing the magic that occurs between man and dog. I knew this magic exists. I just wanted to shoot it in a way that was non-invasive and let their relationship flourish and grow naturally.

CREDITS
Advertiser: Mars
Agency: AlmapBBDO
Title: First Days Out
Product: Pedigree
General Director Creation: Luiz Sanches
Executive Director Creation: Bruno Prosperi, Renato Simões
Creation Director: André Gola, Pernil
Digital Creative Director: Luciana Haguiara
Creation: Pernil, André Gola, Fabio Cerdeira,  André Sallowicz,  Felipe Cirino, André Leotta
Rtvc: Vera Jacinto, Ana Paula Casagrande, Diego Villas Bôas
Producer: Hungry Man
Managing Partner: Alex Mehedff
Executive Producer: Rodrigo Castello e Renata Corrêa
Direction: Ricardo Mehedff
Photography: Grant Weiss, Mike Alex and Ricardo Mehedff
Line Producer: Mariana Barbiellini
Track: Big Foote
Assembler / Editor: Ricardo Mehedff
Post-production Supervisor: Rodrigo Oliveira
Finishing: Great Studio
Color Grading: Psycho N’Look
Assistance: Fernanda Antonelli, Pedro Fragata, Samantha Kechichian and José Maria Fafe
Planning: Cintia Gonçalves, João Gabriel, Daniel Machado, Augusto Veríssimo and Marília Rodrigues
Media: Flávio de Pauw, Brian Crotty, Fábio Cruz, Juliana Melo and Carolina Pimentel
Digital Media: Kaue Cury, Livia Novaes e Rogério Beraldo
Business Director: Rodrigo Andrade
Approval: Leonid Sudakov, Marina Sachs, Oduvaldo Viana, Fernando Manoel



Crystal Paperweight Design

Située à Copenhague au Danemark, l’agence de design Arhoj présente ici sa collection de presse-papiers. Une série aux motifs visuels et variés, mis en scène de manière très esthétique par le biais de set design aux multiples couleurs, concordant avec le thème de l’objet. À découvrir dans la galerie.

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Wall Street Journal, New York Post Forego Sizzle for a More Casual NewFront


News Corp. offered a fresh take on the NewFronts on Friday, transforming the first floor of the Altman Building in New York into a showroom to bring its digital products and video series to life through various installations.

It was, to borrow a popular buzzword, an experiential NewFront.

Instead of inviting attendees to sit down and watch sizzle reels showing off digital video and listen to executives pitch their wares, News Corp. showed only a short video — broadcast on screens in the event space — highlighting a handful of video efforts from News Corp. brands: The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and Storyful, a platform that identifies and verifies emerging stories across social media. Attendees remained standing while they watched.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Tidal Spot Hypes Members-Only Jay-Z Show


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.

In a spot for Beats’ new Powerbeats2, quarterback Marcus Mariota spends the NFL Draft in Hawaii to share his victorious moment with his family. And Geico’s caveman is good at saving money on his car insurance, but he’s not great at hand-eye coordination.

Amid layoffs and rumors that Tidal isn’t doing so hot, the music streaming service releases a spot touting member-exclusive tickets to a “One Night Only Show” in New York where Jay-Z will perform b-sides — including some he’s never done live before. (Maybe this will quiet critics?)

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Time Inc. Campaign Will Tout Shift From Paper as Spin-Off Anniversary Arrives


Time Inc., the nation’s largest magazine publisher, is rolling out an advertising campaign to show that it does more than just print magazines.

A goal of the campaign, which carries the tagline “Open the Experience,” is to “illustrate the extraordinary transformation taking place at Time Inc.,” according to Time Inc. CEO Joe Ripp.

The campaign also aims to show that Time Inc. connects brands with audiences on multiple platforms, the company said.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

The Inevitable Spectacle of Mayweather vs. Pacquiao

The cultural, financial and technological convergence that produced a billion-dollar bout.



Ogilvy Brazil Creates HIV-Positive Poster for GIV

Ogilvy Brazil launched a provocative campaign for the NGO Life Support Group (GIV) featuring HIV-positive posters.

Each poster, placed around São Paulo contains  a drop of blood from an HIV-positive individual. Since HIV can’t survive for more than an hour outside the human body, the posters are completely harmless, the idea being to show that, like the poster, individuals with HIV are not to be feared. This is exemplified in the tagline, “If prejudice is an illness, information is the cure.”

“The poster humanizes the problem and brings people together for the cause, showing that it’s possible to live in a prejudice-free society,” said Aricio Fortes, chief creative officer at Ogilvy Brazil. “And this thought is supported by the emotive reactions from people on the streets who read the poster and sympathized with it.”

In addition to the posters, the campaign also included an “HIV Positive Print Ad” in the Metro newspaper in São Paulo. Ogilvy Brazil wasn’t the only one to realize that HIV positive blood could be used in an awareness campaign. Vangardist, “a progressive men’s magazine based in Vienna and published in both English and German,” is running a limited-edition issue featuring a cover printed with HIV positive blood.

Blue Ballpoint Pen Drawings

Kevin Lucbert est un artiste français basé à Berlin. Dans sa série de création intitulée « Blues Lines », il dessine uniquement à l’aide d’un stylo à bille bleu. L’importance accordée aux petits détails tels que les perspectives, les ombres ou encore le mouvement à donner au coup de stylo, offre un rendu très graphique et impressionnant de réalisme.

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No-Wait Coffee Shops – The Starbucks Line is Eliminated with an Efficient Location in New York City (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) How often have you found yourself in a Starbucks lineup when you’re in a hurry, and particularly when you’re expected back at the office? Well, the global coffee chain has decided to…

Deadline Extended for Ad Age's Women to Watch


Ad Age is now accepting submissions for its annual Women to Watch list honoring the most accomplished and up-and-coming women in marketing today. Who do you think should join the list of nearly 500 outstanding women (including Donna Speciale, Linda Sawyer, Carolyn Everson and Karen Quintos) recognized with this powerful honor since its inception almost 20 years ago? We want to know. Deadline has been extended to May 7.

Click here to nominate today.

Nominate your peers and colleagues who are making names for themselves at media companies, brands, tech companies and agencies of all stripes. We’re looking for groundbreakers, forward-thinkers and rainmakers blazing trails with new solutions, awesome creative, data insights and business-building initiatives.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

McCann Announces New Creative Hires

As we told you two days ago, McCann has indeed poached Senior Creative Director Grant Smith, best known for his work on AT&T, from BBDO.

The press release gives us a few additional details: it appears that Smith will indeed be working under newly-minted North American CCO Eric Silver–and he’s not the only creative McCann hired.

In addition to Smith, Caprice Yu will also join the agency as ECD.

Yu had been freelancing for McCann for the past several months after leaving her ECD position at Sid Lee New York. She served as art director at 180 Amsterdam and BBH New York before leaving for an interactive ACD role at CP+B in 2010 along with Tim Geoghegan (currently creative director at New York’s TM Creative). After just over a year with Crispin, she returned to BBH, which promoted her to CD in 2012 before she left for Sid Lee.

The McCann release also included a new headshot for Smith:

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The money quote from Silver:

“We are truly excited to welcome Grant and Caprice. They both have an amazing history of answering creative briefs in thoughtful and provocative ways.”

The two new ECDs will presumably work across multiple accounts and report to Silver, who in turn reports to McCann Worldgroup Creative Chairman Rob Reilly.

DDB, Tribal Provide Easy Access to Thieves for Dutch Insurance

Forget ADT: what you need is Dutch insurance company’s Central Beheer Achmea’s proof that ignorance pays off for would-be thieves in a new spot from DDB and Tribal Amsterdam.

To play off the theory that hi-tech can ring hollow at times, the agency and brand’s 57th collaboration, called “Just Call Us,” spoofs a Tim Cook Apple presentation while making things a little easier for would-be thieves.

DDB Tribal Amsterdam ECD Joris Kuijpers notes in a statement that the campaign was “…An amazing collaboration with the client from the start has enabled us to really make this film the best it can be. We also wanted to give our own team the opportunity to develop their skills in new areas.”

The marketing effort, which also includes pre-roll and other forms of digital advertising, stakes the claim that a simple phone call to Beheer can alleviate home theft woes.

Agency: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
Account: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
Concept: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
Creative Direction: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
RTV Producer: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
Production Company: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
Director: DDB & Tribal Amsterdam
D.O.P.: Philip van Volsem
Producer: Arjan Oosterveer & Vanessa Janssen
Editor: Marc Bechtold
Grading: Captcha
Online: Captcha
Sound Studio: Studio de Keuken

Branded Food Photography – Carmel Wineries Arranged Extremely Instragrammable Dining Events (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) A series of dining events called FOODOGRAPHY were held specifically so expert Instagrammers could take appetizing pictures of their meals. Catering to foodies and social media influencers, the…

Car Emergency Kits – This Automotive Safety Device Can Save You After All Sorts of Accidents (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Rolling into the sea in your vehicle isn’t a high risk for many motorists, but if your local roadways and geography make it a possibility, you’d certainly want this automotive safety…