Lumen et Fides: Saddam

Lumen et Fides: Saddam

Raro! was invited to create an institutional campaign for Lumen at Fides, a philanthropic entity that take care of children with autism and neuromotor deficiency. The biggest goal of communication was to collect financial donations to the entity, which needs them too much. The creative team chose to bring to the pieces the “evil” leaders, however doing the good. A proof that a better world is possible when each one does his part. The work impacted people who have started to make difference in artist and neuromotor deficiency children´s lives.

Lumen et Fides: Bin Laden

Lumen et Fides: Bin Laden

Raro! was invited to create an institutional campaign for Lumen at Fides, a philanthropic entity that take care of children with autism and neuromotor deficiency. The biggest goal of communication was to collect financial donations to the entity, which needs them too much. The creative team chose to bring to the pieces the “evil” leaders, however doing the good. A proof that a better world is possible when each one does his part. The work impacted people who have started to make difference in artist and neuromotor deficiency children´s lives.

Lumen et Fides: Hitler

Lumen et Fides: Hitler

Raro! was invited to create an institutional campaign for Lumen at Fides, a philanthropic entity that take care of children with autism and neuromotor deficiency. The biggest goal of communication was to collect financial donations to the entity, which needs them too much. The creative team chose to bring to the pieces the “evil” leaders, however doing the good. A proof that a better world is possible when each one does his part. The work impacted people who have started to make difference in artist and neuromotor deficiency children´s lives.

Elena Ferrante’s Naples Novels to Make Their Way to TV

The Italian director Saverio Costanzo has signed on to direct and help write a TV series that would air starting in fall 2018.

Disney Chief: My Role on a Trump Panel Is ‘Not an Endorsement’

Robert A. Iger told shareholders who want him to quit the president’s business policy forum that he was using it to share his values with Mr. Trump.

VITRO Offers a ‘Free’ Room In Its Austin Office for CMOs Attending SXSW

  • Are you attending SXSW in Austin this weekend?
  • Are you somehow both a powerful marketing executive and a cheap bastard?
  • Do you really need a place to stay, but also don’t want to pay any money and can’t get your employer to expense it?

If you answered “yes” to all of these questions, then VITRO has a sweeeet fucking Airbnb deal for you.

The MDC Partners agency, which announced plans to open in Austin just over a year ago, would love to give a depressingly empty room in said office to a “CMO or higher level executive from a nationally known brand with an annual marketing budget of at least one million dollars” for a few days for the low low price of FREE. Or $10 per night, depending on which section of the listing you’re referencing.*

The listing claims to include “a real bed” and a bathroom, but there’s an important disclaimer:

Enjoy a truly immersive and elusive “millennial experience” sleeping in an empty room just to be part of the buzz of a city lavishing itself in hedonistic celebrations of creative commerce. There are actually currently no beds, but you can drag a couch in from the lobby, or we’re always happy to provide an extra IKEA desk to shelter under.

The whole thing is kind of amusing, and it could theoretically eliminate the universal complaint from everyone who visits Austin for SXSW or any other event: the awful, interminable traffic.

Is VITRO simply desperate for new business?? Of course they are! They’re an ad agency.

“SXSW has grown so much, it seems like each year is a new exercise in what agency or publication or brand can out do everybody else with something bigger, newer or even more outlandish,” said CEO Tom Sullivan. “We wanted to take the opposite approach. To go scrappy rather than big. So rather than reinventing something, we used  an existing, highly popularized platform to make a point around an undeniable SXSW truth—that it’s impossible to find a place to stay. Plus, it never hurts to have a little fun with the (admittedly awesome) ridiculousness that is Austin during South By.”

vitro logo skullA key question remains: what should one do at SXSW? Joe Biden or Ke$ha? Mastodon or Special Agent Dale Cooper? Whatever, just make sure you go to the GSD&M party. We hear Matthew McConaughey will definitely not show up.

Finally, check out that logo.

*VITRO promises to totally refund the lame $10 minimum fee required by the corporate suits at Airbnb.

180LA and Mitsubishi Battle Gender, Car Enthusiast Stereotypes

180LA launched an International Women’s Day effort for Misubishi entitled “Who Run The Lane” which takes a look at the owner behind a tricked out 2012 Outlander Sport posted to social media last week.

It’s sort of like a very brief episode of MTV’s Pimp My Ride, but not completely fake.

The spot opens with a look at some of the responses to the posting. In shouts out to the car, people on social media overwhelmingly make the assumption that its owner is a “bro,” “bruh” or “dude.” So, to combat stereotypes about auto culture, the spot reveals the vehicle’s proud owner: Phylicia Lofton.

“People automatically think that this is a guy’s world, this is a guy’s car,” Lofton says, citing the assumptions made by viewers of her Instagram page when they see her vehicle.

She encourages other women to push back against the stereotypes, saying, “feel free to do different things.”

The auto industry is undeniably male-centric, as are the ads supporting it. Even Audi, who shared a feminist message in its Super Bowl spot by VB+P, came back with a stereotypically masculine “Monster” ad to promote the Audi S5. So it’s refreshing to see Mitsubishi and 180LA give passionate women drivers a shoutout for International Women’s Day, even if the execution isn’t exactly captivating.

20 QSR Consumer Loyalty Innovations – From Celebratory Donut Giveaways to AR Fast Food Promotions (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) These QSR consumer loyalty innovations range from celebratory donut giveaways to AR fast food promotions. Marketed towards tech lovers, the recent mobile Monopoly promotion by McDonald’s aims…

John Hancock, Manulife Launch Global Creative Review


Financial services company Manulife, which operates as John Hancock in the U.S., is reviewing its worldwide creative business as it looks to align its brand strategy around consumer needs.

Hill Holliday has worked on the U.S. business for 32 years, having stayed on board through numerous CEO changes at the company, a demutualization and an IPO. Dentsu works on creative for Manulife in international markets like Asia and Canada.

Even though Gretchen Garrigues, who joined Manulife about six months ago as global CMO, said the company is inviting the incumbents to participate in the review, Hill Holliday is opting out.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Congratulations! Your Uplifting, Unifying Ads Have Succeeded!


Have I told you what’s been going on with my friend Ted? No? Oh, well, let me tell you about it, because it’s pretty amazing.

So, Ted used to be kind of a jerk. Don’t get me wrong, I love the guy, but how can I put this gently? He tended to hold certain views that you might call … old-fashioned.

Like, he used to be pretty xenophobic and he was a total hardliner about immigration policy. But then something happened: He saw an ad for a building materials supply company that told the powerful, inspiring and harrowing story of some courageous immigrants, and just like that, Ted had a change of heart. Now he understands that immigrants are just like you and me — except with better backstories — and they aren’t coming here to steal our jobs, they’re here to pursue the American dream and contribute to our country’s rich, diverse cultural tapestry.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

John Hancock, Manulife Launch Global Creative Review


Financial services company Manulife, which operates as John Hancock in the U.S., is reviewing its worldwide creative business as it looks to align its brand strategy around consumer needs.

Hill Holliday has worked on the U.S. business for 32 years, having stayed on board through numerous CEO changes at the company, a demutualization and an IPO. Dentsu works on creative for Manulife in international markets like Asia and Canada.

Even though Gretchen Garrigues, who joined Manulife about six months ago as global CMO, said the company is inviting the incumbents to participate in the review, Hill Holliday is opting out.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Watch the Newest Ads on TV From Starbucks, Infiniti, Yellow Tail 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, Starbucks serves up another in its series of “Made With Love” commercials starring its employees — this time a barista named Ashley who enthuses about what goes into a caramel macchiato. Infiniti shows off the self-parking capabilities of the QX30 in a funny spot featuring carpooling coworkers. And wine brand Yellow Tail declares that “We believe in binge watching responsibly.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Jeep: Bridge, 2

Jeep: Bridge, 2

Jeep: Bridge, 3

Jeep: Bridge, 3

Jeep: Bridge

Jeep: Bridge

Nippon Express: Ninja baseballer

Video of NINJA BASEBALLER – ????/Nippon Express

Zambezi’s New CEO Closes Agency for International Women’s Day

Zambezi recently promoted Jean Freeman, who took majority ownership of the agency two years ago and previously served as COO, to the role of chief executive officer. Freeman replaced co-founder Chris Raih, who will continue to lead new business efforts as president,  in the role.

In a statement, Freeman, who last year introduced a revamped benefits package for the agency including three months of paid parental leave, “baby bonuses” for new and current parents and “unlimited paid time-off,” said that Zambezi aims “to become the most admired and progressive independent agency in the country.”

In one of her first decisions as CEO, Freeman decided to close the Los Angeles agencies offices today in honor of International Women’s Day and in support of “A Day Without A Woman,” a “one day demonstration of economic solidarity” in support of women’s rights and the rights of “all gender-oppressed people.”

In an internal memo Freeman sent to staff last Friday, she wrote that rather than solely have women participate in “A Day Without A Woman,” the agency was extending the effort to its men as well and that “Men and women need to be united to support this effort together.”

Here’s the internal memo in full:

Our company will be closed Wednesday, March 8th.
In support of  A Day Without A Woman, a movement to highlight the impact that women have on our society, Zambezi will be closed.
The movement has asked businesses to stand with women by giving them a day off to participate in solidarity.
Instead of just allowing women to have the day off to engage in this effort, we are extending this to the entire company. Men and women need to be united to support this effort together.

DDB Changes Name to DDB&R for International Women’s Day

In honor of International Women’s Day, DDB is temporarily changing its name to DDB&R for the day, in honor of the agency’s first chief copywriter, Phyllis Robinson.

“The move to add Phyllis’ name to the door is a symbolic reminder of the contributions many women of her generation and later generations have made to the ad industry,” DDB North America CEO Wendy Clark said in a statement. “It also signals to our own employees our continued non-negotiable belief that talent has no gender.”

Robinson joined DDB in 1949 after starting her career with Bresnick & Solomont and Grey. She was the copywriter behind iconic campaigns for Levy’s Jewish Rye, Ohrbach and Polaroid.

In addition to the name change, which will appear on social media and on email signatures, as well as on DDB’s door and in its meeting rooms, the effort also includes a social media initiative riffing on some of Robinson’s most famous ads. A famous print ad for Levy’s, for example, is changed to “You don’t have to be male to change advertising.”

There’s also a video riffing on Robinson’s Polaroid campaign which starred Candice Bergen.

While most of the efforts honoring Robinson will only be around for International Women’s Day, Adweek reports that a quote appearing in DDB meeting rooms today, “Do the kind of work nobody else is doing,” will remain permanently.

Progressive’s Flo Gets More Animated Than Ever, Robot Chicken Style

So, which is more annoying: Progressive’s Flo in real life or rendered as a stop-motion animated character by the team behind Adult Swim’s Robot Chicken? Decide for yourself after watching the ads below. They feature everybody’s (least?) favorite insurance salesclerk and her sidekick Jamie, presented Robo-style by Stoopid Buddy Stoodios, which developed the campaign with…

Les Moonves: Broadcast Will Persevere in Looming NFL Rights Battle Against Big Tech


The current NFL broadcast rights package isn’t due to expire until 2022, but Les Moonves has already resigned himself to the idea that the next bidding war will pit the networks against the likes of Google and Facebook.

Speaking yesterday at the Deutsche Bank 2017 Media & Telecom Conference, the CBS Corp. chairman, president and CEO said that while a battle with the cash-rich digital overlords is all but inevitable, the NFL will very much remain a TV staple.

“Look, the tech giants all want to be involved in the NFL. It’s the best product in television,” Mr. Moonves said. “There’s going to be a lot of activity. As we head toward that large deal, I think these companies are going to be part of it, [but] I think the NFL still believes in the sanctity of broadcasting.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com