Audi "The comeback" (2016) 1:26 (Germany)
Posted in: UncategorizedSo simple and yet it takes you on a really nice journey to get there. This totally made my morning.
Mr. Albee, the Pulitzer-winning writer of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” “The Zoo Story” and “Three Tall Women,” among other plays, charted the gap between self-delusion and truth in contemporary life.
Film
Georg Jensen
Advertising Agency:Forsman & Bodenfors, Stockholm, Sweden
Art Directors:Kim Cramer, Karina Ullensvang
Copywriter:Rikke Jacobsen
Account Supervisor:Viktoria Wallner
Account Executive:Jenni Füleki
Agency Producer:Magnus Kennhed
Artwork:Karin Nolmark, Camilla Häggman
Pr:Robert Johnsson
Media Agency:Be On
Director:Laerke Herthoni
Director Of Photography:Mattias Rudh
Editor:Peter Brandt
Production Company:Folke Film
Executive Producer:Joi Persson
Producer:Morgan Röhl
Local Production:Story, Barcelona
Post Production:Glassworks, The Talent Group
Music:Seinabo Sey, Magnus Lidehäll
Styling:Karin Smeds
Interview Film:Ruben Sznajderman
Quote Cred:Danielle LaPorte
Hailed by the music industry as a major victory, the judge’s decision says the Justice Department misinterpreted a regulatory document that governs the performing-rights agencies BMI and Ascap.
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, FedEx promotes the convenience of its services for e-commerce businesses, with a punchline involving Groucho Marx glasses and a questionable Kiwi accent; PlayStation presents a show reel of its new and upcoming PS4 game releases, including “Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare”; and Bud Light asks fans of the New York Jets and Buffalo Bills if they are ready for “Thursday Night Football.”
TD Ameritrade recruits Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck to show how the greatest returns can be from unexpected sources and the best investments are the ones most important to customers.
Primetime NFL games continue to experience a bit of a ratings slump, as deliveries for CBS’s first “Thursday Night Football” broadcast of the 2016 season were down significantly versus the year-ago results.
According to Nielsen live-plus-same-day data, the Jets-Bills game averaged a cumulative 15.4 million viewers and a 9.5 household rating across CBS and NFL Network, which marked a 26% decline compared to the 21.1 million viewers and 12.9 household rating notched by last year’s Broncos-Chiefs opener.
The Jets’ 37-31 win over former head coach Rex Ryan’s Bills delivered a 6.3 rating among adults 25 to 54, and a 5.4 among adults 18 to 49, both of which were down 28% compared to the year-ago demos.
After Mr. Trump’s campaign barred an ABC News producer from a tour of his new hotel, news executives refused to cover it, uniting in an unusual act of defiance.
The video-sharing app Musical.ly seems to be popular with children well under the age of 13, which leads to questions over how to monitor young people on the web.
When last we heard from Grey New York and auto loan company Ally Financial, the agency had designed a bunch of colognes that smelled odd and probably not so impressive automobiles. Who wouldn’t want to smell like a muscle car??
Last week, the two launched Ally’s very first unified brand campaign under the “Do It Right” tagline, which refers to the way Ally treats its customers: right. Also, nothing stops them. Not even one thing.
The anthem spot “Ally Team Huddle” shows us just how far that principle can go with a little help from the old Motley Crue.
We like the guy hanging from the balcony at :17. How did he get there and, more importantly, who will help him down?!
In the next spot, “Swimming Pool,” the always reliable Brian Posehn helps an Ally employee return to the land of the living. But that guy just can’t resist slipping back into the darkness in order to reveal some more details about the future life of the former star of the sadly missed Mr. Show. (The Netflix reboot was not good, dudes. Now let’s argue about it on reddit.)
“Wishing Well” shows us that Ally employees’ dedication to their clients goes beyond the job itself. That won’t stop attitude extends to dates and ill-advised treks into public bodies of water.
For more on that “going places you definitely shouldn’t go” theme, one Ally employee braves all sorts of painful and potentially fatal pitfalls to score that deal.
Things take a turn toward the freaky in “Hitchhiker,” one of fiction’s most reliable sources of guaranteed mischief. This actor reminds us of a young Buscemi…
The last spot in the series, “Go Spartans,” doesn’t quite have the punchline or concept of the other ads, but its heart is in the right place. It’s just a bit more straightforward in that Bad News Bears sort of way.
The print ads also cover the snarky/earnest dichotomy. First, Kimmy might be just a little too enthusiastic. We wouldn’t want to cross her.
Troy, on the other hand, simply cares about his community. Does he really need another reason??
The campaign launch included the six spots above, the first half of which are broadcast. New print ads will also debut in the fall to highlight products, employees and customers.
CMO Andrea Riley says, “The launch of ‘Do It Right’ marks an important milestone for Ally, because it brings together all of our financial services offerings under one unified brand promise that truly reflects our company and our relentless focus on doing things right for our customers. The creative includes photos of Ally teammates and customers and incorporates powerful narratives to illustrate the ways that we do things right.”
The punchier ones definitely stood out. And if one agency can make an endless series of sometimes-funny ads about car insurance, another can do the same with auto loans. (We know that auto finance is only one part of the Ally portfolio as they also do bank and credit card stuff, but that would dilute our point.)
W+K London launched a new campaign for Lurpak, telling people who enjoy preparing and eating food (we refuse to use the word “foodie”) that it’s “Game On, Cooks.”
Like the agency’s April, 2015 “Freestyle” spot, the ad celebrates home cooking. This time around, though, the message is less purely celebratory. It’s more of a challenge for the food-obsessed but somewhat kitchen-averse, who watch cooking shows, follow and like obsessively on social media but haven’t made a home cooked meal in awhile. You know who you are!
“It”s time to get your hands dirty again, ” says the voiceover (presumably with some Lurpak butter), “smell the magic, hear the crackle.”
“So what are you going to be, spectator or player?” the voiceover asks at the conclusion of the spot, challenging viewers to get to know their kitchens again and devote themselves to home cooking.
The foodie challenging tone makes the spot a call to action and something of a wake-up call to foodies who have come to neglect their own kitchens. It was motivated, Adweek points out, by the insight that people are consuming more media surrounding food and cooking than ever, but actually cooking less.
It seems a fair assumption that at least some of those people will be motivated by being called out for their behavior and the spot does a good job of inspiring such viewers, showing the rewards inherent in a home cooked meal, while not shying away from the difficult tasks that are part of the job.
–See, Chinese agencies make kinda cheesy promos too, like this one celebrating Omniwomen (video above).
-Pepsi launched a digital review. Barbarian Group will defend.
–BBH New York launched a continuation of its “How New York Eats” campaign for Seamless.
–Does your brand’s logo look like genitals? You should probably know the answer to this question.
–Chipotle’s top marketing exec Mark Crumpacker is back at work, still facing cocaine charges.
–Trump winning the presidential election could be bad for ad agency profits…and just about everybody else
–Mode Media closed its doors this week while still owing a bunch of money to all of its freelance writers. The business model is doing okay!
–Former Havas, RAPP and DDB executive Louis-Philippe Cavallo joined “digital content creator and marketing solutions platform” CreativeDrive as its new chief financial officer.
-MDC Partners hired Lotta Malm Hallqvist as its first managing director.