It's No Joke: 'A Deadly Adoption' Scares Up Solid Ratings


The Lifetime movie Will Ferrell and Kristen Wiig never wanted you to see put up strong numbers Saturday night, as the puzzling drama “A Deadly Adoption” averaged 2.06 million viewers.

According to Nielsen live-plus-same-day data, the two-hour flick delivered a 0.6 rating in the adults 18-to-49 demographic, making it the night’s highest-rated cable program. “Adoption” also out-delivered nearly everything on the broadcast dial, falling only to Fox’s third-round coverage of the U.S. Open (0.8) and NBC’s “Premier Boxing Champions” card (0.7).

“Adoption” tied a repeat of CBS’ “48 Hours” in the demo, although it didn’t draw anywhere near as big of an overall audience. “48 Hours” averaged just under 4 million total viewers.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Google Debuts Ad-Supported Radio Service Week Before Apple Music's Release


Google’s suite of music streaming services is starting to look a lot more like the one Apple will roll out next week.

On Tuesday, Google added a Pandora-style free, ad-supported radio service to its Spotify-like on-demand music service Google Play Music. Previously Google Play Music charged people $9.99 a month to listen to any of the more than 30 million songs in Google’s library on any device whenever they want.

Google’s free radio service — which is launching first in the U.S. through a website and mobile apps for smartphones and tablets running Google’s Android or Apple’s iOS operating systems — seems to be primarily a sales tactic to get people to subscribe to its paid, ad-free service.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Starbucks Spot Shows Rare Hipster Who Prefers Instant Coffee


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, Jordin Sparks talks about the migraine struggle for Excedrin, and Sir Patrick Stewart aka Professor X aka Captain Jean-Luc Picard is upstaged by ice in a Strongbow Hard Cider spot.

Meanwhile, a hipster sips Starbucks VIA Instant coffee from a hand-thrown mug, most likely in secret because no self-respecting urbanite would abandon her French press for instant coffee.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Jay-Z’s Music Streaming Service, Tidal, Loses Another Chief

Peter Tonstad, who was installed as interim chief executive in April after the departure of Tidal’s last chief, has left after two months on the job.




UN Woman – Give mom back her name: #MyMothersNameIs – #Glasslion shortlist

UN Woman - Give mom back her name: #MyMothersNameIs - #Glasslion shortlist
When my daughter was born I made her a t-shirt that had her name on it, and myself a T-shirt that read “Mother of Perl” because pun. Soon I grew accustomed to being “MotherofPerl” to every child in the neighbourhood, while other adults knew my name. But in Egypt, it’s different. Mothers don’t have a name. They’re literally “Mother of (first sons name)”, to everyone, not just small children. Impact BDDO ad Un Women wanted to change this with the #MyMothersNameIs social campaign.

Alex Bogusky Still Wants You to Stop Drinking Soda

May we now call Alex Bogusky the anti-Draper?

Lumenati, which Bogusky himself describes as “a not-very secret society of film makers in Denver,” just released an answer of sorts to the old McCann ad that your dad kept singing after last month’s Mad Men finale.

You know this isn’t the first time Bogusky has attacked Coca-Cola: back in 2012 he and Jason Mraz introduced us to “The Real Bears,” and this time the Center for Science in the Public Interest wants to make sure the message hits a bit closer to home.

This latest stop on Bogusky’s apologies for advertising tour follows the March launch of Fearless, a sponsored content project created in partnership with media company Fusion. The question preceding “Change the Tune” is simple: what happened to the millions who chose to sing in perfect harmony with Coca-Cola and its competitors over the past 40-plus years?

The answer is even simpler: obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Hear the choir sing: “Please drink soda less/this is not happiness.”

From CSPI Executive Director Michael F. Jacobson:

“For the past 45 years, Coca-Cola and other makers of sugar drinks have used the most sophisticated and manipulative advertising techniques…It’s a multi-billion-dollar brainwashing campaign designed to distract us away from our diabetes with happy thoughts.”

No word on the promotion of these sugary drinks by other corporations like, say, Burger King.

For context, Big Soda officially peaked in 1998, and per capita consumption of carbonated syrup water has declined consistently every year since then. A majority of Americans now actively avoid the stuff even though 20 percent of us still drink (and, hopefully, recycle) at least one can every day.

We may debate how much advertising influenced this change and how many people thought twice about drinking a Coke after watching the Real Bears. We can, however, agree on one thing: “Change the Tune” is better than the Oasis version of Matthew Weiner‘s favorite ad.

ESPN Talks Tradition, Taking Sides to Promote Wimbledon

wimbledon-espn-4a6883c8d29d6a1bIn an effort to hype its annual two weeks’ worth of Wimbledon coverage (which begins next Monday), ESPN launched a promo to herald the fortnight of tennis’s most prestigious tournament.

The Disney-owned, self-proclaimed “worldwide leader in sports” has re-teamed with creative agency 77 Ventures (remember this?) for the new ad, which poses the question “Which Side Are You On?” in what is almost certainly NOT a nod to the history of the organized labor movement.

In a matter of 30 seconds, ideally cast British actor Alexander Campbell takes us around the All England Club’s hallowed Center Court while discussing the traditions and nuances of the tournament such as the all-white attire, the strawberries and cream consumption and again, the term “fortnight.”

While exploring Wimbledon history, our protagonist touches on player contrasts amid interspersed footage of your usual suspects including Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and Maria Sharapova.

ESPN appears to have your Wimbledon tournament itself covered with 140 hours of action on TV and 1,500 (!) more on ESPN3.

The network will also run five more ads in this series; each promises to offer viewers “a study in contrasts” between the players’ fierce on-court displays and the “revered, pristine nature” of the event itself.

Client: ESPN
Campaign: ESPN Wimbledon
Agency: Seventy Seven Ventures
Chief Creative Officer: Galen Bernard
President / Writer: Michael Haje
Creative Director: Rachel Heussenstamm
Producer: Hyde Harper
Production Co: Gorgeous
Director: Tom Carty
Exec. Producer: Maddi Carlton
Producer: Ciska Faulkner
Director of Photography: Daniel Landin
Post Production Co: Molehouse
Editor: Andrew Jenson
Sound: Eric Brown

Giant Pigeons Murals Street Art

Le street artiste hollandais Stefan Thelen (aussi connu sous le pseudonyme Super A) s’inspire de l’animal le plus détesté des grandes villes, le pigeon, afin d’en faire le héros de ses fresques murales géantes. Des portraits de pigeons surplombent la ville en étant affichés sur la façade de grands immeubles.

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Sculptural Wood Tables – The Waiho by Robert Scott is Visually Striking and Begging to be Touched (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Robert Scott has designed a visually striking table that looks more like a work of art than a piece of furniture. It takes on a sculptural cantilevered aesthetic that looks as though it were…

Industrial Exoskeletons – The Robo-Mate is the World's First Industrial Exoskeleton (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Robo-Mate is the world’s first industrial exoskeleton, and is designed to help lighten the load of industrial workers engaged in heavy lifting tasks. The exoskeleton, unveiled in Stuttgart…

Verizon Completes AOL Takeover

The completion of the deal paves the way for the start of Verizon’s mobile-first video service.




Snapchat Joins Daily Mail and WPP Agency in Marketing Venture

The messaging app, the website and the advertising agency are forming a company called Truffle Pig to create social content for brands.




KAFA Vote For Us. We'll Vote For You #Glasslion shortlist (2015)

KAFA Vote For Us. We'll Vote For You #Glasslion shortlist (2015)
Using red inked thumbs and social media, they spread the word and show their numbers so Kafa makes the national parliament of Lebanon understand that they need to vote to create the anti domestic violence law if they want to stay in parliament.

SMFB Hopes to ‘Keep Summer Going’ With Everyday Solutions for Statoil

statoil10It’s been nearly a year since we last heard from SMFB, but the Oslo-based agency has returned with a timely summer campaign for Norwegian multinational oil/gas company, Statoil. In an effort to “Keep Summer Going,” SMFB has teamed up with Dutch content creation shop Made.For.Digital to produce several 45-second videos based on the improvisational techniques known as “life hacks.”

Perhaps you’re familiar…

In the series of 10 clips–which were shot in the always-pleasant Ibiza–we’re shown a variety of simple tips and techniques to make your summertime revelry that much more pleasant.

Whether it’s turning dental floss into a makeshift knife to cut cake at a picnic (above) or opening a bottle with a few folded sheets of paper (below), the life hacks presented by the rather adept couple in the videos are clever, efficient and–most importantly–helpful!

Regarding the digitally-driven campaign, SMFB creatives Pia Ølstad and Sveinung Arnestad write:

“The 2015 Statoil summer campaign is about getting the most out of summer time, or as we say: Keep Summer Going. For Statoil’s Facebook page we wanted to make something that could actually help our customers. Good, informative content told in a fun and unpretentious tone.

We came up with a package of life hacks designed for the life on the road. Small tips and tricks that can make any road trip a little more comfortable. With a mix of photos and video we show a couple on a summer road trip. Faced with small challenges they come up with imaginative solutions, using things they already have in their car or can find at a Statoil station.

Hopefully, the summer of 2015 can be the summer of life hacks.”

You can click here to view several more of the clips from the SMFB Statoil campaign, which launched across Europe in eight markets including Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Poland.

3D Printed Bridge by Robots

La start-up hollandaise MX3D et le designer Joris Laarman ont imaginé un nouveau pont pour la ville d’Amsterdam. Ce dernier serait entièrement imprimé en trois dimensions et ce, directement sur le lieu. Pour y parvenir, six bras robotisés seront utilisés et connectés à distance à un programme d’impression 3D. L’achèvement de la construction est prévue pour 2017.

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Gillette Takes Synchronized Swimming to a Whole New Level


What do green masks, cardboard boxes and synchronized swimming have in common? Not much, unless you’re talking about the latest spot from Gillette. A new addition to the Viral Video chart — which tracks views of campaigns in the week ending each Sunday, as compiled by Visible Measures — “Shave Forth,” flaunts the confidence-boosting body razor as men in green masks and cardboard box heads swim it out to battle. Plus, it’s all set to dubstep.

Meanwhile, Google snags two spots on our chart, earning No. 2 for returning spot “The Google App,” and No. 10 for its new commercial “Questions.” Following a similar format to Apple’s debut Siri spot in 2011, “Questions,” introduces “OK Google,” the company’s voice recognition search software by displaying questions and answers throughout the one minute promo. Ending with “a question can take you anywhere,” Google prompts viewers to “search on.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

A world of digital aesthetics

surfing through entire worlds made of contradictions

by

From Adbusters #120:

It is strange to think how,

in spite of so many young artists now playing with digital aesthetics, it was actually Warhol who saw it coming most clearly. The massive shift from depth to surface that Warhol explained with celebrity culture and advertising has now taken hold of language itself and spread across the planet. It’s no wonder that since the 1990s, the political, social and economic aspects of artistic production have become increasingly interchangeable and hard to distinguish from one another. Planetary networks have become places of profound confusion and dislocation. We know from the start that we probably won’t find what we’re looking for, so we learn to search sporadically and asymmetrically just to see where we end up. This might look and feel like drifting and traditional or conservative notions of substance will always try to dismiss its noise, its cat videos and porn, bad techno and bombastic contemporary art, but one should be careful not to underestimate the massive distances being crossed in the meantime.

These distances are themselves very quickly reformatting our consciousness and cognitive capacity to absorb entire worlds made of contradiction—not only in language but far beyond language as well. Some people might already be there: scammers and tricksters, the frazzled post-studio artist and the post-institutional independent militia, political dissidents and unruly journalists who know never to trust their maps. They know that contradictions don’t resolve, rather you surf across them using empathy and solidarity, emotional blackmail, jokes, pranks and vanguardism as norm. Our ability to traverse these contradictions may very well become the backbone of the global telecommunications network we used to think was an Internet.

— From the The Internet Does Not Exist edited by Julieta Aranda, Brian Kuan Wood and Anton Vidokle

Source

Leopard Cubs Born in Tacoma Zoo

Quatre adorables petits léopards ont vu le jour au mois de mai au sein du Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium dans la ville de Tacoma, dans l’Etat de Washington. Ils ont été présentés au public par les employés du parc animalier pour la première fois le 5 juin dernier.

Printed Solar Cells – This Inexpensive and Ultra-Thin Technology is Great for Developing Countries

(TrendHunter.com) These printed solar cells are already making a big impact on the world. Less expensive to produce than more traditional solar cells, they are great for developed nations whose citizens want to…

Modernized Camper Vans – This California Camper Van Features the Latest Engineering and Amenities

(TrendHunter.com) The Transporter T6 California camper van is a Volkswagen creation that harks back to the classic 1950s Volkswagen camper, which offered the convenience of a compact, affordable home on the road….