Twix: It's time to DeSide


Film
Twix

Advertising Agency:BBDO, New York, USA
Chief Creative Officer:David Lubars, Greg Hahn
BBDO Worldwide:David Lubars
BBDO New York:Greg Hahn
Executive Creative Directors:Gianfranco Arena, Peter Kain
Creative Directors:Peter Alsante, Kim Baskinger
Senior Copywriter:Bryan Stokely
Senior Art Director:Martins Zelcs
Director Of Integrated Production:David Rolfe
Group Executive Producer:Amy Wertheimer
Executive Producer:Alex Gianni, Holly Vega
Executive Music Producer:Melissa Chester
Social Media Creator:Jeff Regan
President:Kirsten Flanik
Global Account Director:Susannah Keller
Account Directors:Lisa Piliguian, Tani Corbacho
Account Manager:Aparna Joshi
Account Executive:Danee Fields
Group Planning Director:Annemarie Norris
Planning Director:Christina Stoddard
Senior Communications Planner:Sean Stogner
Production:Biscuit
Director:Aaron Stoller
DoP:Bob Yoeman
Production Designer:Samantha Gore
Managing Director:Shawn Lacy
Head Of Production:Mercedes Allen Sarria, Rachel Glaub
Producer:Cindy Becker, Laura Molinaro
Production Supervisor:Ash Marshall
Editorial:N06
Editor:Jason Macdonald
Editors:Ryan Bukowski, Ling Chua
Ep:Corina Dennison
Flame:Ed Skupeen, Mark Reyes
Fxs:Ed Skupeen
VFXs Artist:Mark Reyes
Audio:Sound Lounge
Mixer:Tom Jucarons

Hebrew University: Jigsaw billboard


Outdoor
Hebrew University

Advertising Agency:Gefen Team, Tel-Aviv, Israel

Cian: We check everything in person


Film
Cian

Advertising Agency:Miguelivanov, Moscow, Russia
Creative Director:Miguel Ivanov, Daria Sherstobitova
Copywriter:Daria Sherstobitova
Production House:Sheriff, Oslo Norway
Producer:Eivind Saether
Directors:Nic & Sune

Hangar Gym: Kids swim

Print
Hangar Gym

Advertising Agency:Artcom, Vitória, Brazil
Creative Director:Jorge Pedrosa
Art Director:Igor Monteiro

Nestle: Panda Style, Hippo


Film
Nestlé

Following the initial contest portion of the Pure Life campaign, in which children submitted drawings for a chance to be printed on the brand’s labels, two of those labels were chosen for Aardman Nathan Love to feature in their animations. The studio aimed to preserve the kids’ original drawing styles while incorporating their own unique CG and 2D animation.

Advertising Agency:360i, USA
Group Creative Director:Aaron Sedlak
Senior Art Director:Mario Licato
Senior Copywriter:Megan Adamson-Jackes
Executive Producer:Lauren Dobkin, Jon O’Hara, Casey Unterman
Senior Content Producer:Alanda Fellows
Integrated Producer:Anthony Lee
Technical Director:Wesley Donaldson
Associate Account Director:Kendall Reyes
Account Supervisor:Meaghan Morris
Account Manager:LC Staten
Director Of Strategy:Leslie Turley
Strategist:Monica Villar
Social Marketing Supervisor:Amy Donnelly
Social Marketing Manager:Alexis Madison
Production Company:Aardman Nathan Love
Executive Creative Director:Joe Burrascano
Creative Director:Anca Risca
Head Of Production:James Elio
Cg Director:Eric Cunha
Design:Ellen Su, Jim McKenzie, Yi Ju Tsai
Storyboards:Tim Probert
Modeling:Jin Fang Jiang
2D Animation:Kevin Li, Ellen Su
3d Animation:Tom Shek
Lighting:Jin Fang Jiang
Compositing:Jeff Dragon, Elijah Vanaver
Live Action Production Company:Black Powder Works
Director Of Photography:Bob Blankemeier

Flamengo: This is Flamengo


Film
Flamengo

Flamengo, a world champion in the 80’s and the biggest football club in a Brazil, is arguably the team with the biggest fan base in the whole world: around 35 million people. Based on their passion and devotion, the spot shows that the club has already crossed the defining boundaries of football to become something much bigger, almost mythical.

Advertising Agency:NBS Dentsu Aegis Network, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Creative Director:André Lima
Head Of Art:Andre Havt
Creatives:André Lima, Andre Havt, Rodrigo Dorfman, Luiz Cesar
Director:Salsa
Production Company:Stink Films
DoP:Daniel Venosa
Editor:Danilo Abraham
Production Design:Magno Alves
Sound:Satelite Audio

Now AT&T Halts YouTube Ad Buys Over Brand Safety Concerns


AT&T has halted its advertising with Google for anything but keyword search, becoming the latest major marketer to pull back after an uproar over ads running beside offensive videos on YouTube.

y”We are deeply concerned that our ads may have appeared alongside YouTube content promoting terrorism and hate,” a spokeswoman for AT&T said in a statement. “Until Google can ensure this won’t happen again, we are removing our ads from Google’s non-search platforms.”

A spokeswoman for Google did not immediately return requests for comment.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

This Watch Ad Came to Life on a Bus Shelter to Reveal It Was Selling Something Better

Imagine you’re waiting for the bus, and the guy in the watch ad next to you suddenly starts talking to you. A handful of straphangers in Israel recently enjoyed (if that’s the word) such an experience, thanks to a campaign from Samsung and Leo Burnett Tel Aviv for the Gear S3 smartwatch. The billboard–actually a…

Gyproc: The Gyprocs

Video of The Gyprocs

Wall Street Journal Editorial Harshly Rebukes Trump

The editorial said President Trump was damaging his presidency with “exaggerations, evidence-free accusations, implausible denials and other falsehoods.”

Goodby Silverstein & Partners, Adobe Foil Bank Heist…with Customer Service

We last checked in on Goodby Silverstein & Partners’s ongoing “How’s Your Customer Service” campaign for Adobe when the agency launched a pair of spots this past September: “Billion Dollar Contract” and “Secret Agent.” Those efforts promoted Adobe Sign and Adobe Marketing Cloud utilizing what has become the campaign’s familiar formula: humorous examples of what can go wrong with bad customer service resulting from not using Adobe products.

GS&P’s latest effort for Adobe, “The Heist,” turns the formula on its head: showing a situation going wrong (from one perspective, at least) as the result of good customer service.

When several masked bandits rob a bank, they certainly don’t count on being identified. But, thanks to Adobe Experience Cloud, the teller is not only able to identify two of them, she’s aware that one of them is looking to buy a house while the other is interested in consolidating his student loans.

The spot concludes with the new tagline, “Make experience your business.”

It’s a nice change of direction for the campaign, retaining a similar humorous approach to previous efforts while switching up the formula enough to feel fresh.

“For a few years, we have been showing what happens when digital marketing goes wrong, as a sort of cautionary tale to marketers,” Adobe vice president, experience marketing Alex Amado told AdFreak. “As the campaign evolves, we wanted to switch up the creative strategy and start to show the potential of great experiences.”

“We’re employing the age-old ‘Show the benefits, not the features’ tactic,” he added. }The technology is powerful and flexible, and not well-suited for explanation within a commercial spot. So, we tell a much more interesting and relevant story by speaking in a language that our audience is very responsive to—the language of their own customers’ experiences.”

Credits:
Client: Adobe
Title of Creative Work: “The Heist”

Agency: Goodby Silverstein & Partners

Creative
Co-Chairman, Partner: Rich Silverstein
Creative Director: Will Elliott
Creative Director: Patrick Knowlton
Art Director: Bennett Austin
Copywriter: Dan Berenson

Production
Director of Production: Tod Puckett
Executive Producer: Benton Roman

Account Services
Managing Partner: Brian McPherson
Account Director: Theo Abel
Account Manager: Molly Navalinski
Assistant Account Manager: Lexie Hartnett

Brand and Communication Strategy
Director of Brand Strategy: Bonnie Wan
Brand Strategist: Etienne Ma
Director of Communication Strategy: Christine Chen
Communication Strategy Deputy Director: Dong Kim
Senior Communication Strategist: Victoria Barbatelli
Communication Strategist: Tara Hughes
Jr. Communication Strategists: Catherine Kim, Nicole Bruno
Research & Analytics Director: Cassi Husain

Business Affairs
Business Affairs Manager: Heidi Killeen

Production Company
Company Name: Biscuit Filmworks / Revolver
Director: Steve Rogers
Managing Director: Shawn Lacy
Executive Producer: Holly Vega
UPM: Jay Veal
Head of Production: Rachel Glaub

Head of Production: Mercedes Allen
Director of Photography: Alwin Kuchler
Production Designer: Paul Austerberry

Editorial Company
Company Name: Final Cut LA
Editor: Rick Russell
Assistant Editor: Dillon Stoneburner
EPs: Suzy Ramirez, Eric McCasline
Producer: Barbara Healy

Telecine
Company Name: The Mill NYC
Colorist: Fergus McCall

VFX/Finishing
Executive Producer: Leighton Greer
Senior VFX Producer: Will Unterreiner
Associate Producer: Karina Slater
VFX Supervisor/CD: Tim Davies
2-D Lead Artist: Adam Lambert
2-D Artist: Brett Lopinsky

Music
Company Name: Woodwork Music

Sound Design
Company Name: Lime
Sound Designer: Michael Anastasi

Mix
Company Name: Lime
Mixer: Rohan Young

In a Blizzard of Cellphone Promos, McDonald's Tribute to a Teacher Stands Out on Viral Video Chart


The Viral Video Chart for the week through Monday is dominated, as it is on many weeks, by campaigns for technology products, especially cellphone stuff. There are two distinct campaigns for LG’s new G6 phone, a Samsung campaign teasing a new phone and a Verizon effort for its data plan, not to mention the various Google, Intel and Microsoft campaigns racking up views. (The chart, by Visible Measures, tracks both organic views and paid ad views.)

But there was also the notable standout of a McDonald’s campaign honoring a teacher in the Philippines named Luzminda Santiago, new on the chart at No. 3 and nearly 18 million views.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Upfronts 2017: Cable Nets Remind Advertisers TV Is About More Than Data


For all the talk about how data’s role in the TV upfronts will continue to be more pronounced, two cable networks reminded media buyers and advertisers that TV is more than just buying audiences.

“Environment matters,” said Jon Steinlauf, president-national ad sales, Scripps Networks, at a press breakfast ahead of the company’s upfront presentation on Wednesday evening. “Where the ad lives is just as important as who it reaches, maybe more.”

Mr. Steinlauf went on to say that advertisers who limit themselves just to audience buying run the risk of placing ads in front of people at a time when they aren’t engaging or responding.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Your Ad Is a Lie and I Want You to Cut It Out


“REPORT: SEX DEMANDED FOR PROMOTIONS AT KAY, JARED” –USA Today

“WOMEN CLAIM SEX WAS PREREQUISITE FOR PROMOTION AT KAY, JARED” –Newser

“HUNDREDS ALLEGE SEX HARASSMENT, DISCRIMINATION AT KAY AND JARED JEWELRY COMPANY” –The Washington Post

Continue reading at AdAge.com

New iPhones Raise Funds to Fight AIDS; in China, Apple Doesn't Mention That


Apple is selling red iPhone 7 and 7 Plus models to raise money for the Global Fund to fight HIV and AIDS. In mainland China, oddly, the company’s website makes no mention of the cause. The new products are just presented as special edition red iPhones.

Tay XIaohan of IDC noticed the discrepancy and tweeted about it. She remarked that AIDS is a sensitive topic in China, and asked whether “Apple may be worried that this message will not resonate well with consumers?” Ms. Tay, senior market analyst with IDC’s Asia/Pacific client devices group, posted a photo of Apple’s mainland China product site next to a shot from its website in Taiwan. Unlike the mainland’s web page, Taiwan’s site bears the branding of Product Red, which contributes to the Global Fund.

A spokeswoman for Apple Inc. did not respond to an email seeking comment. It wasn’t clear whether there might be other complexities in China, perhaps related to donating to a charity outside China. Ad Age checked with a business consultant and a lawyer, and neither were aware of any issue on that front.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Watch the Newest Ads on TV From Chick-fil-A, Southwest Airlines, Dick's Sporting Goods and More


Every weekday, we bring you the Ad Age/iSpot Hot Spots, new and trending TV commercials tracked by iSpot.tv, the real-time TV ad measurement company with attention analytics from 10 million smart TVs. The New Releases here ran on TV for the first time yesterday. The Most Engaging ads are ranked by digital activity (including online views and social shares) over the past week.

Among the new releases, Southwest Airlines is here to help a gentleman who receives a shock when he meets a blonde beauty he spots across the dance floor. Chick-fil-A serves up a spot inspired by social media, showing a family celebrating a special day with its sandwiches. And Dick’s Sporting Goods is on the mind of a college student who sees shoes everywhere, in Dick’s “Always Open” campaign designed to highlight the brand’s digital prowess and ecommerce capabilities, as reported by Ad Age’s Adrianne Pasquarelli.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

In a Blizzard of Cellphone Promos, McDonald's Tribute to a Teacher Stands Out on Viral Video Chart


The Viral Video Chart for the week through Monday is dominated, as it is on many weeks, by campaigns for technology products, especially cellphone stuff. There are two distinct campaigns for LG’s new G6 phone, a Samsung campaign teasing a new phone and a Verizon effort for its data plan, not to mention the various Google, Intel and Microsoft campaigns racking up views. (The chart, by Visible Measures, tracks both organic views and paid ad views.)

But there was also the notable standout of a McDonald’s campaign honoring a teacher in the Philippines named Luzminda Santiago, new on the chart at No. 3 and nearly 18 million views.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

The Connected Life Video: Finding the Magic in the Math


Connected devices are treasure trove of intimate data and insights for marketers.

But what happens when every device is a data point? How do you determine signal from noise?

Here’s how to find the magic in the math in this second installment of The Connected Life.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Culture Jamming. Activism and the Art of Cultural Resistance

Culture Jamming. Activism and the Art of Cultural Resistance, edited by Associate Professor of Communication Studies Marilyn DeLaure and author Moritz Fink. With a foreword by cultural critic Mark Dery.

Find it on amazon USA and UK.

Publisher NYU Press writes: A collaboration of political activism and participatory culture seeking to upend consumer capitalism, including interviews with The Yes Men, The Guerrilla Girls, among others.

Coined in the 1980s, “culture jamming” refers to an array of tactics deployed by activists to critique, subvert, and otherwise “jam” the workings of consumer culture. Ranging from media hoaxes and advertising parodies to flash mobs and street art, these actions seek to interrupt the flow of dominant, capitalistic messages that permeate our daily lives. Employed by Occupy Wall Street protesters and the Russian feminist punk band Pussy Riot alike, culture jamming scrambles the signal, injects the unexpected, and spurs audiences to think critically and challenge the status quo.

The essays, interviews, and creative work assembled in this unique volume explore the shifting contours of culture jamming by plumbing its history, mapping its transformations, testing its force, and assessing its efficacy. Revealing how culture jamming is at once playful and politically transgressive, this accessible collection explores the degree to which culture jamming has fulfilled its revolutionary aims. Featuring original essays from prominent media scholars discussing Banksy and Shepard Fairey, foundational texts such as Mark Dery’s culture jamming manifesto, and artwork by and interviews with noteworthy culture jammers including the Guerrilla Girls, The Yes Men, and Reverend Billy, Culture Jamming makes a crucial contribution to our understanding of creative resistance and participatory culture.


Reverend Billy, BP Exorcism of BP at Tate Modern in London, 2011. Photo: Sophie Molins, via art.350


Alan Abel‘s hoax The Society for Indecency to Naked Animals, 1958–1963

This collection of key texts about culture jamming takes as its starting point Mark Dery’s 1993 seminal pamphlet Culture Jamming: Hacking, Slashing, and Sniping in the Empire of Signs in which the author portrayed, analyzed and popularized the guerrilla movement that disrupted or subverted mass media culture.

The other contributors of the book then take over and examine how culture jamming has evolved and morphed into a practice that is still anchored into 1990s tactics and ideals but has to deal with a whole new set of tools, challenges and conditions. The most conspicuous of these changes being that television has lost much of its power while the internet has emerged and demonstrated time and time again how it can be harnessed by citizens to spread messages far and wide and at fairly low costs.

The greatest strength of the book is the way many of the authors critically dissect and examine some of the strategies deployed by culture jammers. What triggered their actions, what worked but also what unexpectedly failed. Particularly insightful was Anna Baranchuk’s analysis of Pussy Riot’s “punk prayer” and how the performance further polarized the Russian public instead of inspiring them to resist the authoritative power of Putin state. Andrew Boyd from Billionaires for Bush also shared some insightful remarks on how the network protesting the corporate elite had to accept at some point that it was difficult to mobilize Americans against the super wealthy when nearly 40 percent of Americans are actually identifying with the richest 1 percent, in some form or another.


Michelle Obama’s campaign #BringBackOurGirls to raise awareness of schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram hijacked by twitter users protesting Obama’s drone strikes with the hashtag #BringBackYourDrones and #WeCantBringBackOurDead. Image via Al Arabiya

The book contains cases studies of and interview with icons of culture jamming such as The Guerrilla Girls, Banksy and The Yes Men. But it also looks at groups and figures that you don’t immediately associate with the movement: The Simpsons sitcom that brings corporate satire to a massive audience, the Harry Potter Alliance that orchestrated a 4 year long compaign to force Warner Brothers to use only Fair Trade chocolate in their Potter-branded sweets and the many people who use hashtags, memes and other internet devices to raise awareness of issues that remain under discussed in mainstream media.

RTMark, Barbie Liberation Organization

In conclusion:
It seems that each week sees the release of a new paper publication about creativity and activism. I’ve read and reviewed (or sometimes avoided to waste everyone’s time with a review) several of these publications.

Culture Jamming. Activism and the Art of Cultural Resistance is an excellent reference book for anyone interested in disrupting the information flow. It doesn’t drown the reader into heavy theory, favors texts written by people who have been directly involved under one guise or another into cultural jamming and because it consists of a collection of interviews and essays, you can dip in and out of it and read the texts depending on your whim of the moment.

A few notes of warning though: it is very U.S.-centric. Most of the contributors are Americans, most of the examples given and situations analyzed are American. That’s not a bad thing of course, plenty of lessons to learn from the U.S. but i thought you should know about the geographic focal point. Also there’s no image. It’s frustrating. Not just because i revel in seeing the cheerful face of Reverend Billy popping up in books but also because a large part of culture jamming practice relies on visual culture.

Photo on the homepage: Reverend Billy leads mass exorcism in Tate Modern Turbine Hall over ‘taint’ of BP sponsorship.

Source

Caritas: Christmas tree

Caritas: Christmas tree

Carla is a second-hand shop and part of Caritas, Austria’s largest social service and non-profit organisation. Currently, there are two stores in Vienna, selling everything from donated shoes and clothing to furniture, toys and books. The money raised from selling these objects goes to fund various Caritas aid projects.