ELA ADVERTISING’S CEO ANDRE FILIP INTRODUCES THE AWESOMER

Awesomer

What do you when you have two items and you only have room for one solution?

You create an unexpected product mash-up.

There are many situations in life and business when you have the opportunity to combine two seemingly opposite things to create an even better item. These items are everywhere in life, and sometimes there is no need to re-invent the wheel. In fact, you simply improve such wheel.

Even the restaurant chain Slaters 50/50 recently launched an advertising campaign promoting their popular 50% bacon, 50% beef patty burger utilizing such analogies to deliver this unique point of view. Everyone loves bacon and burgers. So it was almost destiny that a burger featuring such mixture would one day be conceived.

“The most obvious answers are usually the most effective ones, and in our campaign for Slaters 50/50 we simply pointed out 3 awesome mash-ups that deliver this message.” Said Andre Filip, CEO of EverythingLA. (ELA Advertising)

Andre Filip refers to using in his campaign a keytar, a spork and a centaur as examples of unexpected mash-ups in life that can be used to create unique marketing messages.

What else is out there that you can mash-up to create your very own unique solutions?

BBC, a Target of Conservatives, Faces a Review of Its Mission

The review by an outside panel could leave the broadcaster, seen as too liberal by the right, as smaller, less costly and less competitive with newspapers and private television.


Disney Princess Hair Makeovers – These Short-Haired Princess Shots Show Disney Stars with Short Cuts (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Disney princesses have been re-invented in a vast landscape of body-positive images, gender-diminishing roles and now images have been created to show what pixie-styled princess hair looks like. As…

Ad Grunts Want To Work for Pay, Time Off and Coffee (Not Trophies)

Advertising is a glamorous industry. Or so it may seem to some from the outside looking in, partly due to how the industry is portrayed in TV shows, film and lifestyle press. Of course, there are ad people enjoying a corner office with views of the San Francisco Bay or the equivalent, but they’re in […]

The post Ad Grunts Want To Work for Pay, Time Off and Coffee (Not Trophies) appeared first on AdPulp.

Rope-a-dope

I feel worked over — not knowing if I can keep up the pace of the caffeine infused all-night drift through a world-wide cataloging of every failure of imagination.

by

From Adbusters #120: Manifesto for World Revolution PT.III

During the second round of the 1974 epic boxing match billed as the Rumble in the Jungle, Mohammad Ali leaned extraordinarily far back upon the ropes as George Foreman relentlessly bludgeoned Ali’s body and arms. It looked much like the devastating beating Ali took at the hands of Joe Frazier in 1971. Foreman’s notoriously powerful punches were sure to do Ali in as he languished on the ropes round after round. But in the eighth — with Foreman’s stamina sapped — Ali got off the ropes, and went on the attack, winning the bout with a knockout. He called it the “rope-a-dope.”

I feel worked over — not knowing if I can keep up the pace of the caffeine infused all-night drift through a world-wide cataloging of every failure of imagination — large and small — the war, disease, simple stupidity, the latest meme designed to bring a smile all the way to your eyes — brought not only into your living room, but also the kitchen, the bedroom. It seems we&rsquo—re always peering deep into our glowing box, trying to sort out the trouble and hop to the next possible potential of some game-changing inspiration in the incessant production-line flow of recycled mediocrity. But the troubles are never through. The work is never done. That breakthrough — that genius sabot insight never comes.

But the metaphor of production-line work — already passé when McLuhan made us aware of so many similarly irrelevant tropes — is based on psychological responses and concepts conditioned by the former technology — mechanization — of the factory. There is something comforting in the nostalgic ease with which Lucille Ball or Charlie Chaplin revealed the absurdity of Fordist efficiency, the worker as a mere appendage of the machine. Although laughable even then — that was a time in which the worker still had a genuine role to play; being more than an option cheaper than automation. That time is gone.

I feel over worked. But I’ve never worked at the mill. I’ve never done a 12-hour stint keeping pace with cogs and conveyer belts. I’m not being over worked. I’m being worked over — as we all are — not by a craftwork mechanized pace that drives us to exhaustion — but by an alluring rhythm — a rhythm that can at once lull us into acquiescence while at the same time keeping us off balance — all the better mobilized for each permutation of familiar themes. We are mesmerized by the rhythm of electrostatic transmissions coded through glitches of the cybernetic network and the fragments of old media. Cycling through neoclassic postmodern motifs destructured and reformulated into predictably surprising combinations — this rhythm — this aesthetic — makes us move —and more importantly, buy. Consumers at heart, the rhythm sucks us in and incorporates us more completely than any machine ever could. Somehow thinking that we are breaking free from the autonomic conditioning of a youthful wasteland, we wait in eager anticipation for the next issue of a magazine devoted to the pure form of advertising —though in its pages there is none to be found. It makes our consumer heart skip a beat. Like Victorians who wouldn’t dare indulge in such an unsavory act — but nonetheless cannot stop talking about it — we swoon, sway and jerk with the rhythm of the spliced (dis)tasteful image juxtaposed by words of a hopeful, anxious, elliptical cant — breakdown and breakthrough.

I get the breakdown. Where’s the breakthrough? We talk and all the while we’re being worked over. And this is no massage. This is a beat down. In the expanded edition of his vintage Politics and Vision, Sheldon Wolin argued that the particular rhythm of our contemporary aesthetic has been put to expert use by the new corporate form of governance he called “inverted totalitarianism.” Perhaps Wolin really put his finger on our fatal flaw when he suggested that the “cascades of ‘critical theory’ and their postures of revolt, and the appetite for theoretical novelty, function as support rather than opposition” to capitalism, because this sort of frenetic, syncopated, decentering only “encourages its rhythms.” Like a prizefighter — agile, yet made of solid, consolidated muscle. The centralized corporate entity gets in step with our fancy footwork — bobs and weaves into every new channel of communication and community, coopts every sophistication of critique, adopts the most non-hierarchical, horizontal stance of organization and deployment — moving with the rhythm — adapting the rhythm to its own purpose — waiting for the opportunity to unload its notoriously devastating punch — coming in on the trash talker of dissent — Muhammad Ali stumbling back on the ropes, body blow after wicked body blow — pummeled — worked over completely.

I don’t want to go down on the ropes. Where’s the rope-a-dope? Where’s the rope-a- dope?!

— Rodney Swearengin is a student of mathematics and philosophy in Long Beach, California.

Source

Advertising Jobs: Spark44, Pace, iCrossing

Toshiba desafia artista a criar exposição em apenas 17 horas

toshiba

E sua única ferramenta é um ultrabook Portégé Z20t

> LEIA MAIS: Toshiba desafia artista a criar exposição em apenas 17 horas

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no B9
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Millennials Want to Stay in Agencies

Category: Beyond Madison Avenue
Summary: When we were still in undergraduate studies, we were very active in looking at marketing careers. As we talked to and interviewed marketing and public relations professionals, they all gave us at least one consistent piece of advice: Make sure you know if you are a brand/company person or an agency person.

Google Ad Revenue Climbs; Once Again Blames YouTube for Ad-Price Declines


Google’s quarterly earnings reports have been a broken record since the fourth quarter of 2011. For fifteen straight quarters heading into the second quarter of 2015, Google has increased the amount of money it makes from advertising and the number of ads it sells despite making less money on average per ad.

Nothing changed when Google posted its second-quarter earnings on Tuesday, even though the company has tried to reverse its ad-price declines and until this year seemed close to success.

Google has lately blamed its ad price declines on YouTube’s skippable TrueView ads that it says don’t bring in as much money as search ads, and once again faulted those ads for the latest quarter’s ad-price declines.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

National Journal Ends Print Run After More Than Four Decades


National Journal, the 46-year-old political magazine, is leaving print at the end of the year, owner Atlantic Media said Thursday.

Its digital operations and events business will continue, with more resources available as a result of the exit from print, according to a company statement:

As the pace of news in Washington and the speed at which the National Journal audience consumes information grows, demands have shifted away from a weekly magazine to the higher-velocity work of the brand’s daily publications National Journal Daily, Hotline, and NationalJournal.com. The decision to close the magazine allows for new investments in this journalism, led by Editor-in-Chief and President Tim Grieve, with enhanced daily and real-time news coverage and a redesigned website.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Damn Yankees: How ESPN Got Ben Affleck to Pay Tribute to Derek Jeter


When you’re brought up in Boston, you learn to hate the New York Yankees in the cradle. So jaws hit the floor from Charlestown to Southie when actor Ben Affleck, a rabid Red Sox fan, presented Yankee great Derek Jeter with the Icon Award during the 2015 ESPYs.

Mr. Affleck’s Yankee-loathing is so profound that he outright refused to wear a Yankee hat in a pivotal scene in the 2014 film “Gone Girl.” So how exactly did ESPN manage to convince him to pay tribute to the man who for 20 years was the face of the Evil Empire?

As it turns out, Mr. Affleck was the first person ESPN approached to present the award to the future first-ballot Hall of Famer. And such is his admiration for Mr. Jeter that he all but jumped at the idea.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

MS Society of Western Australia: Donna, John, Maddy


Print
Ms Society

Every person with MS has their own story. With your help we can tell a better one.

 

Advertising Agency:The Brand Agency, Perth, Australia
Creative Director:Craig Buchanan
Art Director:David Donald
Copywriters:Steve Straw, Kat Mercer
Illustrators:Cristina Guitian, Asphyxia Victoria, Mydeadpony
Account Director:Emma Kerman

Domino´s Pizza: Way


Outdoor, Print
Domino’s Pizza

Advertising Agency:Artplan, Brasilia, Brazil
Chief Creative Officer:Roberto Vilhena
Creative Director:André Sartorelli
Art Director:Alexandre Ferro
Copywriter:Thiago Rezende
Illustrator:Marcello Pereira
Brand Manager:Edwin Junior
Mrketing Manager:André Korenblum

Mundo Livre FM: Are you ready?


Print
Mundo Livre Fm

Advertising Agency:CCZ WOW, Curitiba, Brazil
Creative Director:Rodolfo Amaral
Art Director:Emerson “Morruga” Ferreira, Alexandre Norito
Copywriter:Bruno Trindade, Rodolfo Amaral

Cadbury: Babies, Clowns, Dancers


Print
Cadbury

Advertising Agency:Saatchi & Saatchi, Dubai, UAE
Executive Creative Director:Richard Copping
Creative Director:Simon Raffaghello
Copywriter:Simon Raffaghello
Art Director:Sneha Sathe
Account Director:Nihal Salim

GLS: Cowboy, Dragon, God


Print
GLS

Your parcel in the right place, at the right time.

Advertising Agency:Grenade & Sparks, Paris, France
Creative Director:Guillaume Gamain
Art Director:Romain Benard
Copywriters:Guillaume Gamain, Agathe Soula
Illustrator:Amello Ilustracao

The National Journal to End Print Edition

Atlantic Media, which owns The National Journal, the political magazine, said it would focus its efforts online and on live events instead.


Complications Cloud Possibility of a Movie Based on ‘Watchman’

Several factors affect the possibility that “Go Set a Watchman” by Harper Lee would be made into a film.


McDonald’s, o musical

mcdonalds

Cantora Leslie Grace estrela “Lovin’”, criado pela agência Alma de Miami

> LEIA MAIS: McDonald’s, o musical

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no B9
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Operação Sorriso ajuda crianças a descobrirem como é bom sorrir

sorriso

Campanha arrecada fundos para ajudar vítimas da fissura labiopalatal

> LEIA MAIS: Operação Sorriso ajuda crianças a descobrirem como é bom sorrir

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no B9
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