Hunter Who Killed Cecil the Lion is Facing the Wrath of the Internet


Social media is responding to the killing of a Zimbabwe lion with a roar.

As news reports surfaced that a beloved 13-year-old male lion was killed, people took to the web to express frustration and anger. Minnesota dentist Walter Palmer was part of a group that reportedly killed Cecil, a collared lion that lived in Hwange National Park. According to the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, the hunting was illegal and the hunters will face poaching charges.

An uncharacteristicially somber Jimmy Kimmel called the dentist’s actions “just vomitous” on his show. After mentioning a wildlife organization for those who want to donate funds, a visibily upset Mr. Kimmel said, “Maybe we can show the world that not all Americans are like this jackhole, here” as he showed a picture of Mr. Palmer. WildCru referred donors to a donation page on the University of Oxford’s site, but as of this afternoon, the page was down for “essential maintenance.”

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barrettSF Channels Terminator 2 for 2K’s WWE 2K16

This Ludicrously Awesome KFC Bucket Takes Your Selfies and Prints Them Out

Have you ever thought to yourself, “You know what would be really cool? What if when I’m hanging with my hipster friends later, eating fried chicken in the park, we could immediately print out photos of our fun times together!”?

If this sounds like something you’d do, well, KFC Canada and agency Grip Limited have just the novelty for you! Introducing the “Memories Bucket”—a KFC bucket filled with chicken that pairs with your phone and prints out pictures.

 

Agency copywriter Jeff Collins and social content strategist Matthew Stasoff tell AdFreak that the idea for the Memories Bucket came about while they were working on the campaign for the brand’s 60th anniversary in Canada. The campaign is all about “celebrating 60 years of memories in Canada, one meal at a time.”

“Many fans have told us that throughout the years, so many of their family memories have been celebrated around a KFC bucket,” Collins and Stasoff said in an email. “But when we looked at our newest generation of fans and thought about how their memories are shared today, we realized that so many are stored on phones and online, and very few are tangible. We started thinking of ways to offer them the same sort of physical memories their parents might have had, but in a way more relevant to them.”

They said they produced “multiple prototypes” to get the bucket right, but just one bucket was made for the shoot “with some fans of the brand.” But maybe someday soon they’ll be available to the public—and you can realize your dream of changing the photo paper cartridge and troubleshooting your phone’s bluetooth settings after wiping your fingers off on your jorts because you forgot the wet naps.

“Inherently our buckets are much better when they’re filled with our world famous chicken,” Collins and Stasoff say. “So we’re currently looking to work with some franchise owners to facilitate surprise and delight deliveries of the Memories Buckets to some of our more passionate fans.”

CREDITS
Client: KFC
Agency: Grip Limited
Art Director: Anton Ratinsky
Copywriter: Jeff Collins
Account Director: Sascha von Nickisch-Rosenegk
Account Manager: Shawna Powell
Account Coordinator: Nicholas Hillier
Social Content Strategist: Matthew Stasoff
Social Content Strategist: Jacquie Kostuk
Editor: Ben Badger
Producer: Katherina Villa

Google Paints Stunning Portraits of Disability Rights Heroes on Washington, D.C., Steps

In 1990, a group of disabled people pulled themselves up the steps at the U.S. Capitol building to advocate for the Americans With Disabilites Act, protesting delays in an event that became known as the Capitol Crawl.

Now, a new outdoor ad campaign from Google and 72andSunny marks the 25th anniversary of the landmark legislation by featuring painted portraits of key figures in the disability rights movement on the steps of major cultural buildings in Washington, D.C.

Posted from July 24-27, the billboards featured a range of notable activists—like Claudia Gordon, the first deaf female African American attorney in U.S. history, and Ed Roberts, a leader in the drive for the ADA as well as the movement more broadly—at buildings like Gallaudet University and the National Portrait Gallery, respectively. They also celebrated legislators like former U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa and U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island.

A quote accompanied each portrait. “This vital legislation will open the door to full participation by people with disabilities in our neighborhoods, workplaces, our economy, and our American Dream,” reads Harkin’s, posted on steps in the Newseum.

The steps leading up to the Carnegie Library also feature a quote—sans portrait—from President George H.W. Bush, who signed the ADA into law.

72andSunny hired artist Darren Booth to illustrate the campaign. An accompanying website features more in-depth tellings of each figure’s role in the movement, including, in most cases, video interviews with the subjects themselves. It also ties more directly back into the brand’s products, with a Google Map offering a “tour” of the locations that hosted the portraits.

Here are all the paintings and their locations:

 
Claudia Gordon at Gallaudet University

 
Tom Harkin at the Newseum

 
Patrick Kennedy at Woodrow Wilson Plaza

 
Justin Dart Jr. at Woodrow Wilson Plaza

 
Tia Nelis at the National Museum of American History

 
Kathy Martinez at the National Museum of American History

 
Ed Roberts at the National Portrait Gallery

 
Judy Heumann at the National Portrait Gallery

 
Tatyana McFadden at the National Portrait Gallery

CREDITS
Client: Google
Agency: 72andSunny
Artwork: Darren Booth

Yahoo's Livetext May Be More of a Fix for Texting Than Video Chat


Yahoo has a new mobile messaging app that it thinks will fix the biggest problem with video chat. But it might actually address one of the bigger shortcomings with text messaging.

Yahoo thinks it can fix video chat with a simple formula: Take a text-messaging conversation and overlay it atop a live video feed of the two people having the conversation but mute the audio.

Yahoo has created Livetext, a mobile messaging app that overlays a texting conversation atop a live video feed of both parties with the sound turned off. The company unveiled the app during an event in New York City on Wednesday. It has been testing the app in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Ireland and will roll out Livetext to Apple’s and Google’s mobile app stores on July 30 in the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom, Germany and France.

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La-Z-Boy's Spot Brings Soap Opera Drama To 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, La-Z-Boy brings the drama back to the living room in its new spot, “As the Room Turns.” Stavros returns from his face transplant and luckily for Brooke Shields, it was a success. But when Stavros sits on the couch, surprise overcomes his new face, especially when Brooke reveals it’s from La-Z-Boy. And Dunkin’ Donuts continues to fuel Americans whether it’s night or day from West Coast to East Coast in its new spot.

SafeAuto’s new spot “Ladies Night” shows just how much fun your car is looking to have. But she’s not happy when Stacy is invited to only awkwardly fifth-wheel the night out on the town for the girls and their talking red convertible.

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The Works Creates the ‘Ultimate Death Scene’ for Sea Shepherd

The Samaritans: Laugh

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy & Mather, Vietnam
Executive Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Art Directors: Len Cheeseman, Todd McCracken, Hoang Sa Nguyen
Copywriters: Malcolm Pryce, Craig Love, Bianca de Silva
Retoucher: Andy Salisbury
Typographer / Designer: Gill Clark

The Samaritans: Halfway down

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy & Mather, Vietnam
Executive Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Art Directors: Len Cheeseman, Todd McCracken, Hoang Sa Nguyen
Copywriters: Malcolm Pryce, Craig Love, Bianca de Silva
Retoucher: Andy Salisbury
Typographer / Designer: Gill Clark

The Samaritans: Depression

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy & Mather, Vietnam
Executive Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Art Directors: Len Cheeseman, Todd McCracken, Hoang Sa Nguyen
Copywriters: Malcolm Pryce, Craig Love, Bianca de Silva
Retoucher: Andy Salisbury
Typographer / Designer: Gill Clark

The Samaritans: Dog suicide

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy & Mather, Vietnam
Executive Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Art Directors: Len Cheeseman, Todd McCracken, Hoang Sa Nguyen
Copywriters: Malcolm Pryce, Craig Love, Bianca de Silva
Retoucher: Andy Salisbury
Typographer / Designer: Gill Clark

The Samaritans: The man in my bed

Advertising Agency: Ogilvy & Mather, Vietnam
Executive Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Creative Director: Todd McCracken
Art Directors: Len Cheeseman, Todd McCracken, Hoang Sa Nguyen
Copywriters: Malcolm Pryce, Craig Love, Bianca de Silva
Retoucher: Andy Salisbury
Typographer / Designer: Gill Clark

Ad Age Introduces Brand Summit in Los Angeles


Ad Age is introducing the Brand Summit in Los Angeles on Nov. 3 and 4.

The event will feature top brand builders discussing how they’ve established a unique place in the market and are navigating the fast-changing media and consumer landscape. Brand Summit combines and expands upon the popular CMO Strategy Summit and Digital events, which have been held in San Francisco the last two years.

Creating and protecting brand value is more critical than ever, given today’s constant state of disruption and renewal. We’re bringing together a carefully curated roster of top marketing, technology and creative leaders to share how they’re making the tough decisions as marketing responsibilities evolve far beyond traditional advertising.

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They Came, They Saw but Did They Shop? At Costco and Dollar Stores, They Did


Costco shoppers spend 149% more per visit than at the average retailer, and dollar store shoppers are around 30% more likely to make a purchase than when visiting other retailers. The data is based on a new attribution- measurement offering from mobile-location firm Placed.

Its media agency partners and their restaurant and retail brand clients will use the metrics to standardize the way they gauge their online and brick-and-mortar sales, and to better show the impact of mobile ads on offline consumer behavior.

“Clients have asked us “Can you figure out, did [consumers] buy something and how much did they spend?'” said David Shim, Placed CEO, noting that agency clients want physical store metrics that match digital ones, such as cost per store visit and average order size.

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The Eight Most Awkward Celebrity Tech Product Launches


Technology companies often lean on celebrity appearances to build buzz for their glitzy product events, and Microsoft has traditionally been one of the worst offenders. But for the Windows 10 debut on Wednesday, the company made a conscious decision to eschew a big-budget keynote with lamely scripted visits by starlets and rockers. Given past results, that’s probably a good call.

Microsoft couldn’t bring itself to completely swear off celebrities. The company is hosting big-name athletes, such as USA women’s soccer champion Megan Rapinoe, at some of its stores around the U.S. But Microsoft’s decision to spare us from another uncomfortable bro hug from Ryan Seacrest in front of a large audience is cause for celebration. So here are eight of the most awkward onstage performances by celebrities and executives at tech conferences.

8. Bill Gates meets the Rock

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Periscope Raises Awareness for Gillette Children’s Specialty Healthcare

These Might Be the First Condom Ads That Try to Make You Less Excited

Most condom ads are all about sensual pleasure, but what if the product is just too good at delivering that? That’s the theme of three 15-second spots for Okamoto condoms from Cleveland agency Marcus Thomas. The ads suggest a remedy for the problem, and it brings some levity to an often overwrought category. Via AgencySpy.

Nissan Backs Away From Dealer Ad Attacking Donald Trump


Nissan Motor Co. is distancing itself from a controversial ad created by one of its Southern California dealerships that shows store managers whacking away at a Mexican piata resembling Republican Party presidential candidate Donald Trump.

The video appears to have been created in response to derogatory statements Mr. Trump made when he entered the race for president and promised to overhaul U.S. immigration policy.

In his campaign kickoff speech in June, Mr. Trump said that Mexican immigrants to the United States are “bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime. They’re rapists.”

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The Devil Shares Prada: Consumers Want Experiences, Not Products


Experiences over possessions. The luxury market’s new mantra has penetrated everything from travel and hospitality to retail and technology. According to a 2013 study by The Boston Consulting Group, $460 billion was spent on unique travel adventures, compared with $170 billion spent on personal luxury goods.

With the experiential luxury sector consistently outperforming any other sector of luxury goods, luxury brands are challenged to become purveyors of self expression and lifestyle.

The sharing economy can help

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PETA wants to kill people. Literally.

Yesterday it was discovered A dentist named Walter Palmer killed Cecil the lion, a beloved lion in Zimbabwe. While the rest of social media dog piled on the troll bandwagon, trashing his company name on every site from yelp reviews , to google images, and of course on twitter where the dentist office’s name was hijacked by a jokester with a lot of lion-gifs.

A lot of actors and celebrities had choice words for him, like Sharon Osbourne.

I hope that #WalterPalmer loses his home, his practice & his money. He has already lost his soul…— Sharon Osbourne (@MrsSOsbourne) July 28, 2015

Others without verified accounts took it one step further by calling for terrorist acts against him. Like this gentleman.

Can someone deliver a lit Molotov cocktail each to the house & Clinic of #WalterPalmer? Despicable inbred psychopath.— Spitfire (@SickPuppyDawg) July 28, 2015